
Perovskite light-emitting memories promise next-gen technologies
By integrating a light-emitting electrochemical cell with a resistive random-access memory that are both based on perovskite, the researchers reported that they achieved parallel and synchronous reading of data both electrically and optically in a “light-emitting memory.” The development, say the researchers, represents a step toward a future of higher performance memory devices.
At the most fundamental level, digital data is stored as a basic unit of information known as a bit, which is often represented as either a “one” or a “zero.” Thus, the pursuit of better data storage comes down to finding more efficient ways to store and read these ones and zeros.
While flash memory has become extremely popular, researchers have been searching for alternatives that could further improve speed and simplify fabrication. One such candidate is nonvolatile resistive random-access memory (RRAM), which, instead of storing charge in transistors like flash memory does, uses materials that can switch between states of high and low resistance to represent ones and zeros.
“However,” says Chun-Chieh Chang, professor at National Taiwan Normal University and one of the authors of a paper on the study, “the electrical measurements needed to check the resistance and read zeros and ones from RRAM can limit the overall speed. Recently, to overcome this issue, RRAMs have been combined with LEDs to develop something called light-emitting memories. In this case, the data can also be read by checking if the LED is on or off. This additional optical reading also opens new routes for carrying large amounts of information.”
However, previous versions of such light-emitting memories required the integration of two separate devices with differing materials, complicating fabrication. To overcome this, the researchers turned to perovskite, a type of material with a crystalline structure through which ions can migrate to give it unique physical, optical, and even electrical properties. By controlling the ion migration, perovskite researchers have been constructing new materials with unique properties.
“Using just one perovskite layer between contacts,” says National Taiwan Normal University’s Ya-Ju Lee, who also led the study,” we could fabricate a device that works both as a RRAM and a light-emitting electrochemical cell. By taking advantage of the fast, electrically switchable ionic motion that enables this dual functionality in a single layer of perovskite, we were able to connect two devices together and develop an all-inorganic perovskite light-emitting memory.”
Using perovskite consisting of cesium lead bromide (CsPbBr3), the researchers demonstrated that data can be electrically written, erased, and read in one of the perovskite devices acting as an RRAM. Simultaneously, the second perovskite device can optically transmit whether data is being written or erased through light emission by working as a light-emitting electrochemical cell with a high transmission speed.
In addition, the researchers used perovskite quantum dots of two different sizes for the two devices in the light-emitting memory to achieve different emission colors depending on whether the memory was being written or erased, providing a real-time indicator of the ones and zeros.
“This demonstration,” says Kaoru Tamada, a distinguished professor at Kyushu University’s Institute for Materials Chemistry and Engineering who was also involved in the project, “significantly broadens the scope of applications of the developed all-perovskite light-emitting memory and can serve as a new paradigm of synergistic combination between electronic and photonic degrees of freedom in perovskite materials. From multicast mesh network to data encryption systems, these findings have the potential for numerous applications in next-generation technologies.”
For more, see “All-inorganic perovskite quantum dot light-emitting memories.”
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