info:eu-repo/semantics/article
YBCO-based non-volatile ReRAM tested in Low Earth Orbit
Fecha
2020-08Registro en:
Acha, Carlos Enrique; Barella, Mariano; Sanca, Gabriel Andrés; Gomez Marlasca, Fernando; Huhtinen, H.; et al.; YBCO-based non-volatile ReRAM tested in Low Earth Orbit; Springer; Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics; 31; 19; 8-2020; 16389-16397
0957-4522
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Acha, Carlos Enrique
Barella, Mariano
Sanca, Gabriel Andrés
Gomez Marlasca, Fernando
Huhtinen, H.
Paturi, P.
Levy, Pablo Eduardo
Golmar, Federico
Resumen
An YBCO-based test structure corresponding to the family of ReRAM devices associated with the valence change mechanism is presented. We have characterized its electrical response previous to its lift-off to a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) using standard electronics and also with the dedicated LabOSat-01 controller. Similar results were obtained in both cases. After about 200 days at LEO on board a small satellite, electrical test started on the memory device using the LabOSat-01 controller. We discuss the results of the first 150 tests, performed along a 433-day time interval in space. The memory device remained operational despite the hostile conditions that involved launching, lift-off vibrations, permanent thermal cycling, and exposure to ionizing radiation, with doses 3 orders of magnitude greater than the usual ones on Earth. The device showed resistive switching and IV characteristics similar to those measured on Earth, although with changes that follow a smooth drift in time. A detailed study of the electrical transport mechanisms, based on previous models that indicate the existence of various conducting mechanisms through the metal–YBCO interface showed that the observed drift can be associated with a local temperature drift at the LabOSat controller, with no clear evidence that allows determining changes in the underlying microscopic factors. These results show the reliability of complex-oxide non-volatile ReRAM-based devices in order to operate under all the hostile conditions encountered in space-borne applications.