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10/11/20051 Low voltage, scalable nanocrystal FLASH memory fabricated by templated self assembly  Presented by:  Michael Logue  Pierre Emelie  Zhuang.

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Presentation on theme: "10/11/20051 Low voltage, scalable nanocrystal FLASH memory fabricated by templated self assembly  Presented by:  Michael Logue  Pierre Emelie  Zhuang."— Presentation transcript:

1 10/11/20051 Low voltage, scalable nanocrystal FLASH memory fabricated by templated self assembly  Presented by:  Michael Logue  Pierre Emelie  Zhuang Wu  J.R. Edwards

2 10/11/20052 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

3 10/11/20053 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

4 10/11/20054 Introduction to Flash Memory  Flash memory is a type of EEPROM chip  EEPROM (Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory)  Flash memory chips don’t have to be removed from the circuit board and exposed to UV light to be erased  Flash memory is “non-volatile” memory  Meaning that the data stored in memory is retained even when it is not being powered

5 10/11/20055 How Flash Memory Works  A Flash chip has a grid of columns and rows with a cell that has two transistors at each intersection  The transistors are separated from each other by a thin oxide layer. One is known as the floating gate and the other is the control gate.  The floating gates only link to the row, or wordline, is through the control gate. As long as this link is in place, the cell has a value of 1. To change the value to a 0 requires a curious process called Fowler-Nordheim tunneling.  Tunneling is used to alter the placement of electrons in the floating gate.

6 10/11/20056 How Flash Memory Works  Tunneling (continued)  An electrical charge, usually 10-13 V, is applied to the floating gate. The charge comes from the column, or bitline, enters the floating gate and drains to ground  This charge causes the floating gate transistor to act like an electron gun. The excited electrons are pushed through and trapped on other side of the thin oxide layer, giving it a negative charge. These negatively charged electrons act as a barrier between the control gate and the floating gate.  If the flow through the gate is greater than 50 percent of the charge, it has a value of 1. When the charge passing through drops below the 50-percent threshold, the value changes to 0.

7 10/11/20057 How Flash Memory Works  Erasing  The electrons in the cells can be returned to normal ("1") by applying an electric field. Flash memory uses in-circuit wiring to apply the electric field either to the entire chip or to predetermined sections known as blocks. Flash memory works much faster than traditional EEPROMs because instead of erasing one byte at a time, it erases a block or the entire chip, and then rewrites it.  Flash chips are made on silicon wafers using a process that takes 6-12 weeks and hundreds of manufacturing steps. The process requires multiple uses of photolithography, etch, diffusion, thin film deposition, planarization, and ion implantation.  The width of the Control/Floating Gates will average between 12 and 25nm, depending on the process technology and the density of the number of cells on a chip (measured in megabytes)

8 10/11/20058 Benefits of Flash Memory  Provides a shock insensitive, non-volatile form of data storage.  Has miniscule energy requirements  Flash is small, light and relatively inexpensive  Flash is noiseless, has no moving parts, and allows faster access than a hard disk

9 10/11/20059 Limitations of Flash memory  Cost per megabyte of a hard disk is drastically cheaper and capacity is substantially more  Tolerates a limited number of write cycles  This is because electrical charges provide permanent retention of transistor states. These charges are isolated by oxide layers, which help maintain consistent state, but also dissipate over time.

10 10/11/200510 Common Failure Mechanisms  Improperly specified speed ratings used in flash card  Poor interconnects and construction in card  Flash card connector failure  Flash card structural failure due to excessive stress  Inserting card and applying a voltage while the card is wet  Tunnel oxide degradation-ultimate wear out mechanism  Package interconnect failure

11 10/11/200511 Types of Flash Memory  Cell Types  The way the cells actually work depend on whether they are NOR or NAND types. NOR flash is linearly addressable using a conventional processor, and thus also works for delivering executable code. However it’s slower than NAND, and requires more energy to read and write. It’s used primarily for burning and accessing programs in firmware.  NAND also scales better than NOR, allowing for 4 and 8 GB products, and works from a command-based bus interface. However memory controller overhead is higher and more complex, and conventional processors require translation routines to enable them to read and write to NAND flash memory  Chip Types  Computers BIOS chip, SmartMedia, CompactFlash, Memory Stick, PCMCIA Type I and II, memory cards for video game consoles

12 10/11/200512 Applications  Computer BIOS Chip  Digital Cameras  Appliances  Video and stereo equipment  Automobiles

13 10/11/200513 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

14 10/11/200514 Device Fabrication of Scalable Nanocrystal Flash Memory  Silicon nanocrystals were defined using diblock copolymer thin film self assembly  Process involves spin-coating a dilute polymer solution and annealing to promote phase separation into nanometer-scale polymer domains  The diblock copolymer was composed of polystyrene (PS) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA). Their molecular weight ratio produces hexagonally-closed- packed PMMA cylinders in a PS matrix.  The PMMA is removed with an organic solvent, leaving a porous PS film. This film is used as a sacrificial layer to define nanocrystals at sub- lithographic dimensions.

15 10/11/200515 Device Fabrication of Scalable Nanocrystal Flash Memory  Fig 1-(a )form porous PS film on thermal oxide hardmask; (b) etch PS pattern onto oxide; (c) grow program oxide (2-3nm) and conformally deposit a:Si; (d) etch a:Si using an anisotropic RIE process  The nanocrystals’ dimensions are the same as the original polymer film, 20nm(+/-10%), and a center-center spacing of 40nm  The nanocrystal density was found to be 6.5*10 10 /cm 2. Using polymers with lower molecular weight can produce smaller dimensions

16 10/11/200516 Device Fabrication of Scalable Nanocrystal Flash Memory  The devices are completed by depositing a control oxide (7-12nm) on top of the nanocrystal array, then depositing, doping and patterning the polysilicon gate. A single metal layer is used to contact the gate.

17 10/11/200517 Device Fabrication of Scalable Nanocrystal Flash Memory

18 10/11/200518 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

19 10/11/200519 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  “Writing”: injection of charges into the nanocrystals  “Erasing”: expelling charge from the nanocrystals  High frequency CV measurements are shown for device E  Stored charge shifts the device flat band voltage V FB  V W = -4 V → ΔV FB > 0.5 V  Potentially low voltage operation

20 10/11/200520 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Larger V FB shifts are achieved using larger V W (read voltage -2 V and write time of 20 s)  Magnitude and slope of ΔV FB depend on: - program oxide thickness t prog - control oxide thickness t ctrl  Control of the fabrication leads to control of device performance  Control device F (with no nanoctrystals) show no ΔV FB at |V W | < 9 V

21 10/11/200521 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  At high |V W |, charge begins to leak through the control oxide  ΔV FB saturates Device breakdown is set by the control oxide thickness t ctrl Device breakdown is set by the control oxide thickness t ctrl  Again, control of the fabrication leads to control of device performance

22 10/11/200522 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Effect of the program oxide thickness t prog (for fixed t ctrl ) is shown on this figure  Devices with t prog = 3 nm (C and D) show larger ΔV FB than t prog = 2 nm (A and B)  Due to the larger voltage on the floating gate for the same V W ΔV FB increases with write time for a fixed V W ΔV FB increases with write time for a fixed V W Write time of 50 µs → ΔV FB ~ 0.2 V Write time of 50 µs → ΔV FB ~ 0.2 V Devices are fully erased with a 100 µs erase voltage pulse of +4 V Devices are fully erased with a 100 µs erase voltage pulse of +4 V

23 10/11/200523 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Stability of the written and erased memory states is measured on this figure (V W = -6 V and V E = +4 V)  Small signal capacitance at -2 V is measured as a function of time and converted to ΔV FB by tracking along a CV curve  Up to 500 s, ΔV FB remained larger for t prog = 3nm (C and D) than for t prog = 2 nm (A and B)  Logarithmic fit for A and B devices projects retention time > 10 6 s

24 10/11/200524 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Device endurance is measured using (V W = -6 V, 50 µs) and (V E = +4 V, 50 µs)  Read voltage of -2 V  Write/erase window remains unchanged out to 10 9 cycles

25 10/11/200525 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory - Conclusion  Charge is stored in small islands of Si rather than in a continuous floating gate  Precise control of nanocrystal size and position can be achieved  Control of the device fabrication (especially the dielectric thickness) makes things easier in terms of manufacturability, scalability and control of the device performance  Devices exhibit low voltage memory operation with promising retention and endurance properties => Nanocrystal FLASH memory may improve reliability in FLASH devices

26 10/11/200526 Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory - Limitations  Nanocrystal storage does not change the transistor physics: it’s the same mechanism for read and write  It does not solve all the problems associated with FLASH devices mentioned earlier It will probably not help FLASH memory scale to smaller geometries It will probably not help FLASH memory scale to smaller geometries It will probably never be used for FLASH memory devices but it shows a novel fabrication technique with promising applications It will probably never be used for FLASH memory devices but it shows a novel fabrication technique with promising applications FLASH memory will probably be replaced in the next ten years by other emerging non-volatile memory technologies FLASH memory will probably be replaced in the next ten years by other emerging non-volatile memory technologies

27 10/11/200527 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

28 10/11/200528 CBRAM Conductive Bridging RAM

29 10/11/200529 Basic principles  On/off states correspond to presence or lack of a conductive bridge between electrodes.  Writing/erasing follows the formation and removal of the bridge;  Reading is done by measuring resistance between electrodes.

30 10/11/200530 How to achieve the bridges  a redox reaction drives metal ions in the chalcogenide glass forming metal-rich clusters that lead to a conductive bridge between the electrodes.  Writing voltage 250mV, writing current 2µA

31 10/11/200531 How to remove a bridge  The memory element can be switched back to the OFF-state by applying a reverse bias voltage. In this case metal ions are removed and due to that size and number of metal-rich clusters are reduced resulting in an erased conductive bridge  Here, the erasing voltage is -80mV

32 10/11/200532 CBRAM cell resistance and threshold voltage as a function of storage material area.

33 10/11/200533 CBRAM data retention measured at elevated temperatures.

34 10/11/200534 The Ferro-electric RAM  FRAM is an array of ferroelectric capacitors, with a thin ferroelectric film in between, which is typically made of lead zirconate titanate (PZT).

35 10/11/200535  The bit is read by applying an electric field on the memory capacitor. The amount of charge needed to flip the memory cell to the opposite state is measured and the previous state of the cell is revealed.

36 10/11/200536 Re-write  The read operation destroys the memory cell state, and has to be followed by a corresponding write operation, in order to write the bit back.

37 10/11/200537 Magneto-resistive RAM  A cell is made up of three major parts  One of the two plates is a permanent magnet set to a particular polarity, the other's field will change to match that of an external field

38 10/11/200538  Data is written to the cells by creating an induced magnetic field in a grid of write lines above and below the cells  current creates an induced magnetic field, which flips the polarity of the "writable" plate to match the induced field  if the two plates have the same polarity this is considered to mean "0", while if the two plates are of opposite polarity the resistance will be higher and this means "1".

39 10/11/200539  By measuring the resistance along the read lines, the state (field) of any particular cell can be determined

40 10/11/200540 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

41 10/11/200541 ORAM  Organic Random Access Memory  Reversible resistive operation by voltage application  Requires boosted voltage for WRITE operation

42 10/11/200542 ORAM Scaling  Resistance ratio decrease with device area  Extrapolation indicates a resistance ratio of >10 at 20x20nm 2  Switching voltages are independent of device area

43 10/11/200543 ORAM Performance  Promising distribution functions for threshold voltage

44 10/11/200544 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

45 10/11/200545 PCRAM  Phase Change Random Access Memory  Chalcogenide glass (Ge x Sb y Te z )  Same material family as used in rewritable CD/DVD disks  Rather than laser beam, uses current to heat material

46 10/11/200546 Basic PCRAM Structure

47 10/11/200547 PCRAM Characteristics  Short, high current pulse to make amorphous state (high resistance RESET state)  Longer, medium current pulse to make polycrystalline state (low resistance SET state)  Low current pulse to differentiate state (READ state)

48 10/11/200548 PCRAM RESET Pulse  Temperature of programmed volume of phase-change material exceeds the melting point  Eliminates the polycrystalline ordering  Device quenches to “freeze in” the disordered structural state Cho et al., http://www.epcos.org/pdf_2004/17paper_cho.pdf

49 10/11/200549 PCRAM SET Pulse  Temperature of programmed volume of phase-change material maintained in rapid crystallization range  Maintained for a sufficient time for crystal ordering

50 10/11/200550 PCRAM READ Pulse  Low current pulse, with essentially no joule heating  Current used to sense resistance

51 10/11/200551 PCRAM Scaling

52 10/11/200552 PCRAM Scaling  Normalized radial temperature distribution  Heat plume scaled down with device diameter

53 10/11/200553 Outline  Traditional Flash Devices  Introduction to Flash memory  Performances, Applications, Limitations  How to improve Flash memory  Nanocrystal Device fabrication  Performance of Nanocrystal FLASH memory  Emerging Nonvolatile Memory Technologies  CBRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, ORAM, and PCRAM  Final Conclusions

54 10/11/200554 Conclusion


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