MXene Quantum Dot/Polymer Hybrid Structures with Tunable Electrical Conductance and Resistive Switching for Nonvolatile Memory Devices

Huiwu Mao, Chen Gu, Shiqi Yan, Qian Xin, Shuai Cheng, Peng Tan, Xiangjing Wang, Fei Xiu, Xiaoqin Liu, Juqing Liu, Wei Huang, Linbing Sun

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

64 Scopus citations

Abstract

Low-dimensional MXene materials including MXene quantum dots (MQDs) and nanosheets have attracted extensive attention owing to their unique structures and novel properties, but their most attractive features are still less explored than expected. A systematic study of the memory effects of MQD-based electronics is reported. Monodisperse MQDs are prepared by using a one-step facile hydrothermal synthetic method. By varying the MQD content in polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) hybrid composite films, the electrical conductance of an indium tin oxide (ITO)/MQD-PVP/gold (Au) sandwich structure can be tuned precisely from insulator behavior to irreversible resistive switching, reversible resistive switching, and conductor behavior. These irreversible and reversible resistive switches are capable of exhibiting write-once-read-many times (WORM) and flash memory effects, respectively. Both types of devices operate stably under retention testing, with a high on/off current ratio up to 100. The tunable memory and transient features of these hybrid films are likely due to MQD charge trapping due to their quantum confinement and dissolvability of memristive components. The results suggest that MXene nanomaterials are promising as resistive switching trigger for emerging nonvolatile memories for data storage, specially data storage security.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1900493
JournalAdvanced Electronic Materials
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2020

Keywords

  • MXene quantum dots
  • charge trapping
  • flash memory
  • nonvolatile memory
  • resistive switching
  • write-once-read-many memory

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