Materials and Processes for Non-Volatile Memories
Autor: | Roberto Bez, Agostino Pirovano, Emilio Camerlenghi |
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Rok vydání: | 2008 |
Předmět: |
Magnetoresistive random-access memory
Materials science business.industry Mechanical Engineering Reading (computer) Transistor Electrical engineering Condensed Matter Physics Flash memory law.invention Flash (photography) CMOS Mechanics of Materials law Ferroelectric RAM General Materials Science Node (circuits) business |
Zdroj: | Materials Science Forum. 608:111-132 |
ISSN: | 1662-9752 |
Popis: | The development of the semiconductor industry through the CMOS technology has been possible thanks to the unique properties of the silicon and silicon dioxide material. Nevertheless the continuous scaling of the device dimension and the increase of the integration level, i.e. the capability to follow for more than 20 years the so-called Moore’s law, has been enabled not only by the Si-SiO2 system, but also by the use of other materials. The introduction of new materials every generation has allowed the integration of sub-micron and now of nanometer scale devices: different types of dielectrics, like Si3N4 or doped-SiO2, to form spacer, barrier and separation layers; conductive films, like WSi2, TiSi2, CoSi2 and NiSi2, to build low resistive gates; metals, like W, Ti, TiN, to have low resistive contacts, or like Al or Cu, to have low resistive interconnects. Although the technology development has been mainly driven by the CMOS transistor downscaling, other devices and most of all Non-Volatile Memories (NVM) have been able to evolve due to the large exploitation of these materials. NVM today represent a large portion of the overall semiconductor market and one of the most important technologies for the mobile application segment. In particular the main technology line in the NVM field is represented by the Flash Memory. Flash memory cell is based on the concept of a MOS transistor with a Floating-Gate (FG). The writing/reading operations of the cell are possible thanks again to the unique properties of the SiO2 system, being a quasi-ideal dielectric at low electric field, enabling the Flash memory to store electrons for several years, and becoming a fair conductor at higher electric field by tunnel effect, thus allowing reaching fast programming speeds. Flash have now reached the integration of many billions of bits in one monolithic component with cell dimension of 0.008um2 at 45nm technology node, always based on the FG concept. Nevertheless Flash have technological and physical constraint that will make more difficult their further scaling, even if the scaling limits are still under debate. In this contest there is the industrial interest for alternative technologies that exploit new materials and concepts to go beyond the Flash technology, to allow better scaling, and to enlarge the memory performance. Hence other technologies, alternative to floating gate devices, have been proposed and are under investigation. These new proposals exploit different physical mechanisms and different materials to store the information: magnetism and magnetoresistive materials (e.g. Co, Ni, Fe, Mn) in magnetic memories or MRAM; ferroelectricity and perovskite materials (e.g. PbTixZr1-xO3 or SrBi2Ta2O9 or BaxSr1-xTiO3) in ferroelectric memories or FeRAM; phase change and chalcogenide materials (e.g. Ge2Sb2Te5 or AsInSbTe) in phase-change memory or PCM. Among these alternative NVM, PCM are one of the most promising candidates to become a mainstream NVM, having the potentiality to improve the performance compared to Flash - random access time, read throughput, direct write, bit granularity, endurance - as well as to be scalable beyond Flash technology. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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