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Standards for the Characterization of Endurance in Resistive Switching Devices
Author(s) -
Mario Lanza,
Rainer Waser,
Daniele Ielmini,
J. Joshua Yang,
Ludovic Goux,
J. Suñé,
Anthony J. Kenyon,
Adnan Mehonić,
Sabina Spiga,
Vikas Rana,
Stefan Wiefels,
Stephan Menzel,
Ilia Valov,
Marco A. Villena,
E. Miranda,
Xu Jing,
F. Campabadal,
Mireia Bargalló González,
Fernando Aguirre,
Félix Palumbo,
Kaichen Zhu,
J.B. Roldán,
Francesco Maria Puglisi,
Luca Larcher,
TuoHung Hou,
Themistoklis Prodromakis,
Yuchao Yang,
Peng Huang,
Tianqing Wan,
Yang Chai,
K. L. Pey,
Nagarajan Raghavan,
S. Dueñas,
Tao Wang,
Qiangfei Xia,
Sebastián Pazos
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.1c06980
Subject(s) - reliability (semiconductor) , computer science , neuromorphic engineering , electronics , electronic circuit , characterization (materials science) , resistive touchscreen , point (geometry) , field (mathematics) , artificial neural network , artificial intelligence , electrical engineering , engineering , materials science , nanotechnology , mathematics , power (physics) , physics , geometry , quantum mechanics , pure mathematics , computer vision
Resistive switching (RS) devices are emerging electronic components that could have applications in multiple types of integrated circuits, including electronic memories, true random number generators, radiofrequency switches, neuromorphic vision sensors, and artificial neural networks. The main factor hindering the massive employment of RS devices in commercial circuits is related to variability and reliability issues, which are usually evaluated through switching endurance tests. However, we note that most studies that claimed high endurances >10 6 cycles were based on resistance versus cycle plots that contain very few data points (in many cases even <20), and which are collected in only one device. We recommend not to use such a characterization method because it is highly inaccurate and unreliable ( i . e ., it cannot reliably demonstrate that the device effectively switches in every cycle and it ignores cycle-to-cycle and device-to-device variability). This has created a blurry vision of the real performance of RS devices and in many cases has exaggerated their potential. This article proposes and describes a method for the correct characterization of switching endurance in RS devices; this method aims to construct endurance plots showing one data point per cycle and resistive state and combine data from multiple devices. Adopting this recommended method should result in more reliable literature in the field of RS technologies, which should accelerate their integration in commercial products.

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