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We present a multifunctional and multistate permanent memory device based on lateral electric field control of a strained surface. Sub-coercive electrical writing of a remnant strain of a PZT substrate imprints stable and rewritable resistance change s on a CoFe overlayer. A proof-of-principle device, with the simplest resistance strain gage design, is shown as a memory cell exhibiting 17-memory states of high reproducibility and reliability for nonvolatile operations. Magnetoresistance of the film also depends on the cell state, and indicates a rewritable change of magnetic properties persisting in the remnant strain of the substrate. This makes it possible to combine strain, magnetic and resistive functionalities in a single memory element, and suggests that sub-coercive stress studies are of interest for straintronics applications.
310 - B. Kundys , V. Iurchuk , C. Meny 2014
Ferroelectric devices use their electric polarization ferroic order as the switching and storage physical quantity for memory applications. However, additional built-in physical quantities and memory paradigms are requested for applications. We propo se here to take advantage of the multiferroic properties of ferroelectrics, using ferroelasticity to create a remnant strain, persisting after stressing the material by converse piezoelectricity means. While large electric fields are needed to switch the polarization, here writing occurs at subcoercive much lower field values, which can efficiently imprint multiple remnant strain states. A proof-of-principle device, with the simplest and non-optimized resistance strain detection design, is shown here to exhibit 13-memory states of high reproducibility and reliability. The related advantages in lower power consumption and limited device fatigue make our approach relevant for applications.
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