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  1. Memristive devices can offer dynamic behaviour, analogue programmability, and scaling and integration capabilities. As a result, they are of potential use in the development of information processing and storage devices for both conventional and unconventional computing paradigms. Their memristive switching processes originate mainly from the modulation of the number and position of structural defects or compositional impurities—what are commonly referred to as imperfections. While the underlying mechanisms and potential applications of memristors based on traditional bulk materials have been extensively studied, memristors based on van der Waals materials have only been considered more recently. Here we examine imperfection-enabled memristive switching in van der Waals materials. We explore how imperfections— together with the inherent physicochemical properties of the van der Waals materials—create different switching mechanisms, and thus provide a range of opportunities to engineer switching behaviour in memristive devices. We also discuss the challenges involved in terms of material selection, mechanism investigation and switching uniformity control, and consider the potential of van der Waals memristors in system-level implementations of efficient computing technologies. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 17, 2024
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  3. Abstract

    Surface plasmons, collective electromagnetic excitations coupled to conduction electron oscillations, enable the manipulation of light–matter interactions at the nanoscale. Plasmon dispersion of metallic structures depends sensitively on their dimensionality and has been intensively studied for fundamental physics as well as applied technologies. Here, we report possible evidence for gate-tunable hybrid plasmons from the dimensionally mixed coupling between one-dimensional (1D) carbon nanotubes and two-dimensional (2D) graphene. In contrast to the carrier density-independent 1D Luttinger liquid plasmons in bare metallic carbon nanotubes, plasmon wavelengths in the 1D-2D heterostructure are modulated by 75% via electrostatic gating while retaining the high figures of merit of 1D plasmons. We propose a theoretical model to describe the electromagnetic interaction between plasmons in nanotubes and graphene, suggesting plasmon hybridization as a possible origin for the observed large plasmon modulation. The mixed-dimensional plasmonic heterostructures may enable diverse designs of tunable plasmonic nanodevices.

     
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  4. Interacting electrons confined in one dimension are generally described by the Luttinger liquid formalism, where the low-energy electronic dispersion is assumed to be linear and the resulting plasmonic excitations are non-interacting. Instead, a Luttinger liquid in one-dimensional materials with nonlinear electronic bands is expected to show strong plasmon–plasmon interactions, but an experimental demonstration of this behaviour has been lacking. Here, we combine infrared nano-imaging and electronic transport to investigate the behaviour of plasmonic excitations in semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes with carrier density controlled by electrostatic gating. We show that both the propagation velocity and the dynamic damping of plasmons can be tuned continuously, which is well captured by the nonlinear Luttinger liquid theory. These results contrast with the gate-independent plasmons observed in metallic nanotubes, as expected for a linear Luttinger liquid. Our findings provide an experimental demonstration of one-dimensional electron dynamics beyond the conventional linear Luttinger liquid paradigm and are important for understanding excited-state properties in one dimension. 
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