D.H. Lu, M. Schmidt, et al.
Journal of Low Temperature Physics
Thin oxide films with perovskite or related structures and with transition metal doping show a reproducible switching in the leakage current with a memory effect. Positive or negative voltage pulses can switch the resistance of the oxide films between a low- and a high-impedance state in times shorter than 100 ns. The ratio between these two states is typically about 20 but can exceed six orders of magnitude. Once a low-impedance state has been achieved it persists without a power connection for months, demonstrating the feasibility of nonvolatile memory elements. Even multiple levels can be addressed to store two bits in such a simple capacitor-like structure. © 2000 American Institute of Physics.
D.H. Lu, M. Schmidt, et al.
Journal of Low Temperature Physics
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Zeitschrift fur Physik B-Condensed Matter
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Physica C: Superconductivity and its applications
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Physica C: Superconductivity and its Applications