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Designing nonvolatile multi-level resistive devices is the necessity of time to go beyond traditional one-bit storage systems, thus enhancing the storage density. Here, we explore the electronic phase competition scenario to design multi-level resistance states using a half doped CE-type charge ordered insulating bulk manganite, $Sm_{0.5}Ca_{0.25}Sr_{0.25}MnO_3$ (SCSMO). By introducing electronic phase coexistence in a controllable manner in SCSMO, we show that the system can be stabilized into several metastable states, against thermal cycling, up to 62 K. As a result the magnetization (and the resistivity) remains unaltered during the thermal cycling. Monte Carlo calculations using two-band double exchange model, including super-exchange, electron-phonon coupling, and quenched disorder, show that the system freezes into a phase coexistence metastable state during the thermal cycling due to the chemical disorder in SCSMO. Using the obtained insights we outline a pathway by utilizing four reversible metastable resistance states to design a prototype multi-bit memory device.
Cells store information in DNA and in stable programs of gene expression, which thereby implement forms of long-term cellular memory. Cells must also possess short-term forms of information storage, implemented post-translationally, to transduce and
Recently, based on the refined crystal structure of Pr0.6Ca0.4MnO3 from neutron diffraction, Daoud-Aladine et al.[PRL89,97205(2002)] have proposed a new ground state structure for the half-doped manganites R0.5Ca0.5MnO3, where R is a trivalent ion li
Thermal comfort of textiles plays an indispensable role in the process of human civilization. Advanced textile for personal thermal management shapes body microclimates by merely regulating heat transfer between the skin and local ambient without was
Reconfigurable photonic systems featuring minimal power consumption are crucial for integrated optical devices in real-world technology. Current active devices available in foundries, however, use volatile methods to modulate light, requiring a const
We present a piezoelectric-driven uniaxial pressure cell that is optimized for muon spin relaxation and neutron scattering experiments, and that is operable over a wide temperature range including cryogenic temperatures. To accommodate the large samp