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Information technologies require entangling data stability with encryption for a next generation of secure data storage. Current magnetic memories, ranging from low-density stripes up to high-density hard drives, can ultimately be detected using routinely available probes or manipulated by external magnetic perturbations. Antiferromagnetic resistors feature unrivalled robustness but the stable resistive states reported scarcely differ by more than a fraction of a percent at room temperature. Here we show that the metamagnetic (ferromagnetic to antiferromagnetic) transition in intermetallic Fe0.50Rh0.50 can be electrically controlled in a magnetoelectric heterostructure to reveal or cloak a given ferromagnetic state. From an aligned ferromagnetic phase, magnetic states are frozen into the antiferromagnetic phase by the application of an electric field, thus eliminating the stray field and likewise making it insensitive to external magnetic field. Application of a reverse electric field reverts the antiferromagnetic state to the original ferromagnetic state. Our work demonstrates the building blocks of a feasible, extremely stable, non-volatile, electrically addressable, low-energy dissipation, magnetoelectric multiferroic memory.
This paper presents a novel resistive-only Binary and Ternary Content Addressable Memory (B/TCAM) cell that consists of two Complementary Resistive Switches (CRSs). The operation of such a cell relies on a logic$rightarrow$ON state transition that enables this novel CRS application.
The magnetoelectric effects in multiferroics have a great potential in creating next-generation memory devices. We conceive a new concept of non-volatile memories based on a type of nonlinear magnetoelectric effects showing a butterfly-shaped hystere
Recent experiments on layered {alpha}-In2Se3 have confirmed its room-temperature ferroelectricity under ambient condition. This observation renders {alpha}-In2Se3 an excellent platform for developing two-dimensional (2D) layered-material based electr
DNA sequencing is the physical/biochemical process of identifying the location of the four bases (Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Thymine) in a DNA strand. As semiconductor technology revolutionized computing, modern DNA sequencing technology (termed Nex
Planar electrodes patterned on a ferroelectric substrate are shown to provide lateral control of the conductive state of a two-terminal graphene stripe. A multi-level and on-demand memory control of the graphene resistance state is demonstrated under