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A Flexible Carbon Nanotube Sen‐Memory Device
Author(s) -
Qu TingYu,
Sun Yun,
Chen MaoLin,
Liu ZhiBo,
Zhu QianBing,
Wang BingWei,
Zhao TianYang,
Liu Chi,
Tan Jun,
Qiu Song,
Li QingWen,
Han Zheng,
Wang Wei,
Cheng HuiMing,
Sun DongMing
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201907288
Subject(s) - materials science , wearable technology , electronics , flexibility (engineering) , computer data storage , nanotechnology , non volatile memory , optoelectronics , flexible electronics , carbon nanotube , electronic circuit , wearable computer , dynamic random access memory , computer science , electrical engineering , computer hardware , semiconductor memory , embedded system , statistics , mathematics , engineering
In a modern electronics system, charge‐coupled devices and data storage devices are the two most indispensable components. Although there has been rapid and independent progress in their development during the last three decades, a cofunctionality of both sensing and memory at single‐unit level is yet premature for flexible electronics. For wearable electronics that work in ultralow power conditions and involve strains, conventional sensing‐and‐memory systems suffer from low sensitivity and are not able to directly transform sensed information into sufficient memory. Here, a new transformative device is demonstrated, which is called “sen‐memory”, that exhibits the dual functionality of sensing and memory in a monolithic integrated circuit. The active channel of the device is formed by a carbon nanotube thin film and the floating gate is formed by a controllably oxidized aluminum nanoparticle array for electrical‐ and optical‐programming. The device exhibits a high on–off current ratio of ≈10 6 , a long‐term retention of ≈10 8 s, and durable flexibility at a bending strain of 0.4%. It is shown that the device senses a photogenerated pattern in seconds at zero bias and memorizes an image for a couple of years.

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