Abstract

An electrically writable resistive memory with optical readout based on silicon nanophotonic structure is proposed. Hybridization of optical and surface plasmonic modes in the device enables nanoscale optical confinement to efficiently detect the resistive memory effect in a 13nm thick SiO2 layer sandwiched between p-type silicon and gold. Electrical write and optical readout capabilities of the proposed device are experimentally demonstrated with well-defined optical and electrical hysteresis curves at a wavelength of 1550nm. The p-type silicon carries multifold benefits-it provides low propagation loss and a defect-free interface resulting from thermally (locally) grown oxide; the combination of p-silicon, SiO2, and gold results in a self-rectifying operation to enable the realization of a memory stack. An on-off extinction ratio of 10dB is demonstrated for a 5mm long device. The proposed device shows an inherent stochastic property where the set (writing) voltage reduces in each set-reset cycle, which can be used for optical readout of synaptic weight for neuromorphic computations.

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