4.4 Article

The Design of Rewritable Ultrahigh Density Scanning-Probe Phase-Change Memories

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 900-912

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNANO.2010.2089638

Keywords

GeSbTe; phase-change materials; phase-change RAM; phase-change memories; scanning-probe memories

Funding

  1. European Commission [2005-IST-5-34719]

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A systematic design of practicable media suitable for rewritable, ultrahigh density (>1Tbit/sq.in.), high data rate (>1Mbit/s/tip) scanning-probe phase-change memories is presented. The basic design requirements were met by a Si/TiN/Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST)/diamond-like carbon structure, with properly tailored electrical and thermal conductivities. Various alternatives for providing rewritability were investigated. In the first case, amorphous marks were written into a crystalline starting phase and subsequently erased by recrystallization, as in other already established phase-change memory technologies. Results imply that this approach is also appropriate for probe-based memories. However, experimentally, the successful writing of amorphous bits using scanning electrical probes has not been widely reported. In light of this, a second approach has been studied, that of writing crystalline bits in an amorphous starting matrix, with subsequent erasure by reamorphization. With conventional phase-change materials, such as continuous films of GST, this approach invariably leads to the formation of a crystalline halo surrounding the erased (reamorphized) region, with severe adverse consequences on the achievable density. Suppression of the halo was achieved using patterned media or slow-growth phase-change media, with the latter seemingly more viable.

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