Breaking the Quantum PIN Code of Atomic Synapses


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Date

2020-02-12

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

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Abstract

Atomic synapses represent a special class of memristors whose operation relies on the formation of metallic nanofilaments bridging two electrodes across an insulator. Due to the magnifying effect of this narrowest cross section on the device conductance, a nanometer-scale displacement of a few atoms grants access to various resistive states at ultimately low energy costs, satisfying the fundamental requirements of neuromorphic computing hardware. However, device engineering lacks the complete quantum characterization of such filamentary conductance. Here we analyze multiple Andreev reflection processes emerging at the filament terminals when superconducting electrodes are utilized. Thereby, the quantum PIN code, i.e., the transmission probabilities of each individual conduction channel contributing to the conductance of the nanojunctions, is revealed. Our measurements on Nb2O5 resistive switching junctions provide profound experimental evidence that the onset of the high conductance ON state is manifested via the formation of truly atomic-sized metallic filaments.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

20 (2)

Pages / Article No.

1192 - 1200

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Resistive switching; Memristor; Superconductivity; Atomic junction; Niobium; Niobium oxide

Organisational unit

02635 - Institut für Elektromagnetische Felder / Institute of Electromagnetic Fields

Notes

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