A switching-type power converter providing an accurate
and stable
switching output voltage against line/load variations and power supply
ripple is mostly complicated in system-on-chip power management integrated
circuits (PMICs) within a limited occupation area. Here we fabricated
domain wall (DW) nanodevices using an X-cut LiNbO3 thin
film on silicon. The domain switching event occurs after a delay time
predicted by Merz’s law under the applied voltage. But the
output current is irrespective of the applied voltage and can be adjusted
by conducting wall width as well as input resistance in the circuit.
The regulating currents appear repetitively across the volatile interfacial
domains between the nanodevice and electrode under intermittently
applied voltages. A wall-current-limited domain switching model is
developed to explain the phenomenon. The multifunctional DW nanodevices
with smaller occupation areas can serve as compact low-dropout regulators
in PMICs, time-domain delayers in energy-efficient neural network
systems, and on-chip electrostatic discharge protection besides nonvolatile
memories and selectors