R. Jin, Yu. Zadorozhny, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids
Materials showing reversible resistive switching are attractive for today's semiconductor technology with its wide interest in nonvolatile random-access memories. In doped SrTiO3 single crystals, we found a dc-current-induced reversible insulator-conductor transition with resistance changes of up to five orders of magnitude. This conducting state allows extremely reproducible switching between different impedance states by current pulses with a performance required for nonvolatile memories. The results indicate a type of charge-induced bulk electronic change as a prerequisite for the memory effect, scaling down to nanometer-range electrode sizes in thin films. © 2001 American Institute of Physics.
R. Jin, Yu. Zadorozhny, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids
J.G. Bednorz, T. Takashige, et al.
EPL
J.K. Gimzewski, A. Humbert, et al.
Surface Science
V. Scagnoli, U. Staub, et al.
Conference on Magnetism (ICM) 2003