posted on 2019-02-05, 00:00authored byZheng-Dong Luo, Dae-Sung Park, Ming-Min Yang, Marin Alexe
The light control
of nonvolatile nanoscale memories could represent
a fundamental step toward novel optoelectronic devices with memory
and logic functionalities. However, most of the proposed devices exhibit
insufficient control in terms of the reversibility, data retention,
photosensitivity, limited-photoactive area, and so forth. Here, in
a proof-of-concept work, we demonstrate the use of the tip-enhanced
bulk photovoltaic (BPV) effect to realize programmable nanoscopic
writing of nonphotoactive electronic devices by light control. We
show that electronic properties of solid-state memory devices can
be reversibly and location-precisely manipulated in the nanoscale
using the BPV effect in combination with the nanoscale contact connection,
that is, atomic force microscopy (AFM) probe technique in this work.
More than 105% reversible switching of tunneling electroresistance
of ferroelectric tunnel junctions is exclusively achieved by light
control. Using the same light-controlled AFM probe technique, we also
present precise nanoscopic and multiple-state writing of LaAlO3/SrTiO3 two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG)-based
field-effect transistors. The tip-enhanced BPV effect can offer a
novel avenue for reversible and multistate light control of a wide
range of electronic memory devices in the nanoscale and may lead to
more sophisticated functionalities in optoelectronic applications.