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Voltage-time dilemma of pure electronic mechanisms in resistive switching memory cells
110
Citations
10
References
2010
Year
Voltage-time DilemmaNon-volatile MemoryEngineeringEmerging Memory TechnologyPhase Change MemoryElectronic DevicesMemory CellsPure Electronic MechanismsMemory DeviceMemory DevicesStable Resistive SwitchingLong Retention TimeSwitching MechanismsElectrical EngineeringElectronic MemoryMicroelectronicsApplied PhysicsSemiconductor MemoryThin Films
Metal/insulator/metal thin film stacks showing stable resistive switching are promising candidates for future use as a nonvolatile resistive random access memory, competitive to FLASH and DRAM. Although the switching mechanisms are not completely understood a lot of theories and models try to describe the effects. One of them postulates the trapping and detrapping of electronic charge in immobile traps as the reason for the resistance changes, also known as Simmons & Verderber model. This contribution shows that this “pure electronic” switching mechanism will face a voltage-time dilemma—general to all switching insulators—at conditions competitive to the state-of-the-art FLASH. There is an incompatibility between the long retention time (10 years) and the short READ/WRITE current pulses (tREAD/WRITE≤100 ns) at high densities (area≤100×100 nm2) at low applied voltages (≤1 V). This general dilemma is exemplified in two detailed scenarios with different electronic band and defect properties.
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