Publication | Closed Access
MIEC (mixed-ionic-electronic-conduction)-based access devices for non-volatile crossbar memory arrays
54
Citations
37
References
2014
Year
Non-volatile MemoryEngineeringMemristive DevicesEmerging Memory TechnologyComputer ArchitectureInherent Nonlinearity3D MemoryNanoelectronicsMemory DeviceMemory DevicesElectrical EngineeringElectronic MemoryAccess DevicesComputer EngineeringMagnetoresistive Random-access MemoryMicroelectronicsMemory ReliabilityDistinct Access DeviceApplied PhysicsSemiconductor MemoryResistive Random-access Memory
Several attractive applications call for the organization of memristive devices (or other resistive non-volatile memory (NVM)) into large, densely-packed crossbar arrays. While resistive-NVM devices frequently possess some degree of inherent nonlinearity (typically 3–30× contrast), the operation of large ( 1000×1000 device) arrays at low power tends to require quite large ( 1e7) ON-to-OFF ratios (between the currents passed at high and at low voltages). One path to such large nonlinearities is the inclusion of a distinct access device (AD) together with each of the state-bearing resistive-NVM elements. While such an AD need not store data, its list of requirements is almost as challenging as the specifications demanded of the memory device. Several candidate ADs have been proposed, but obtaining high performance without requiring single-crystal silicon and/or the high processing temperatures of the front-end-of-the-line—which would eliminate any opportunity for 3D stacking—has been difficult.
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