Zero-static power radio-frequency switches based on MoS2 atomristors

M Kim, R Ge, X Wu, X Lan, J Tice, JC Lee… - Nature …, 2018 - nature.com
Nature communications, 2018nature.com
Recently, non-volatile resistance switching or memristor (equivalently, atomristor in atomic
layers) effect was discovered in transitional metal dichalcogenides (TMD) vertical devices.
Owing to the monolayer-thin transport and high crystalline quality, ON-state resistances
below 10 Ω are achievable, making MoS2 atomristors suitable as energy-efficient radio-
frequency (RF) switches. MoS2 RF switches afford zero-hold voltage, hence, zero-static
power dissipation, overcoming the limitation of transistor and mechanical switches …
Abstract
Recently, non-volatile resistance switching or memristor (equivalently, atomristor in atomic layers) effect was discovered in transitional metal dichalcogenides (TMD) vertical devices. Owing to the monolayer-thin transport and high crystalline quality, ON-state resistances below 10 Ω are achievable, making MoS2 atomristors suitable as energy-efficient radio-frequency (RF) switches. MoS2 RF switches afford zero-hold voltage, hence, zero-static power dissipation, overcoming the limitation of transistor and mechanical switches. Furthermore, MoS2 switches are fully electronic and can be integrated on arbitrary substrates unlike phase-change RF switches. High-frequency results reveal that a key figure of merit, the cutoff frequency (fc), is about 10 THz for sub-μm2 switches with favorable scaling that can afford fc above 100 THz for nanoscale devices, exceeding the performance of contemporary switches that suffer from an area-invariant scaling. These results indicate a new electronic application of TMDs as non-volatile switches for communication platforms, including mobile systems, low-power internet-of-things, and THz beam steering.
nature.com
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