Memory technologies and applications implemented fully or partially using emerging 2D materials have attracted increasing interest in the research community in recent years. Their unique characteristics provide new possibilities for highly integrated circuits with superior performances and low power consumption, as well as special functionalities. Here, an overview of progress in 2D‐material‐based memory technologies and applications on the circuit level is presented. In the material growth and fabrication aspects, the advantages and disadvantages of various methods for producing large‐scale 2D memory devices are discussed. Reports on 2D‐material‐based integrated memory circuits, from conventional dynamic random‐access memory, static random‐access memory, and flash memory arrays, to emerging memristive crossbar structures, all the way to 3D monolithic stacking architecture, are systematically reviewed. Comparisons between experimental implementations and theoretical estimations for different integration architectures are given in terms of the critical parameters in 2D memory devices. Attempts to use 2D memory arrays for in‐memory computing applications, mostly on logic‐in‐memory and neuromorphic computing, are summarized here. Finally, challenges that impede the large‐scale applications of 2D‐material‐based memory are reviewed, and perspectives on possible approaches toward a more reliable system‐level fabrication are also given, hopefully shedding some light on future research.
Although various (bio)fabrication technologies have achieved revolutionary progress in the past decades, engineered constructs still fall short of expectations owing to their inability to attain precisely designable functions. Shrinkable and expandable (bio)materials feature unique characteristics leading to size‐/shape‐shifting and thus have exhibited a strong potential to equip current engineering technologies with promoted capacities toward applications in biomedicine. In this progress report, the advances of size‐/shape‐shifting (bio)materials enabled by various stimuli, are evaluated; furthermore, representative biomedical applications associated with size‐/shape‐shifting (bio)materials are also exemplified. Toward the future, the combination of size‐/shape‐shifting (bio)materials and 3D/4D fabrication technologies presents a wide range of possibilities for further development of intricate functional architectures.
more » « less- Award ID(s):
- 1936105
- PAR ID:
- 10449023
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Advanced Healthcare Materials
- Volume:
- 10
- Issue:
- 14
- ISSN:
- 2192-2640
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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