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Enabling Active Nanotechnologies by Phase Transition: From Electronics

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Phase transitions can occur in certain materials such as transition metal oxides (TMOs) and chalcogenides when there is a change in external conditions such as temperature and pressure. Along with phase transitions in these phase change materials (PCMs) come dramatic contrasts in various physical properties, which can be engineered to manipulate electrons, photons, polaritons, and phonons at the nanoscale, offering new opportunities for reconfigurable, active nanodevices. In this review, we particularly discuss phase-transition-enabled active nanotechnologies in nonvolatile electrical memory, tunable metamaterials, and metasurfaces for manipulation of both free-space photons and in-plane polaritons, and multifunctional emissivity control in the infrared (IR) spectrum. The fundamentals of PCMs are first introduced to explain the origins and principles of phase transitions. Thereafter, we discuss multiphysical nanodevices for electronic, photonic, and thermal management, attesting to the broad applications and exciting promises of PCMs. Emerging trends and valuable applications in all-optical neuromorphic devices, thermal data storage, and encryption are outlined in the end.

Researcher/Author: Chunqi Zheng (NUS), Robert E. Simpson (SUTD), Kechao Tang (Peking University), Yujie Ke (SUTD), Arash Nemati (ASTAR IMRE), Qing Zhang( University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Guangwei Hu (NUS), Chengkuo Lee (NUS), Jinghua Teng (ASTAR IMRE), Joel K. W. Yang (SUTD), Junqiao Wu( University of California), Cheng-Wei Qiu (NUS)

Chem. Rev. 2022, 122, 19, 15450–15500

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