Memristive devices, or memristors, are a new type of switching devices with an electrically switchable device resistance. Memristive devices are both scientifically and technically interesting, and hold promise for non-volatile memory (NVM) and other fields. With today's flash memory technology reaching its scaling limit, there is an urgent need for new memory technologies that can meet the storage capacity and speed demanded by future applications. Memories using resistive switching devices, such as memristors, are a promising candidate for meeting that need. For NVM applications, many nanoscale resistive switching devices can be formed in a two-dimensional array, such as a crossbar structure, to provide a very high storage capacity. Nevertheless, it has been a major challenge to reliably read the resistance state of a selected resistive switching device in an array, due that existence of other switching devices in the array that may form paths for leakage current, which can significantly reduce the signal/noise ratio of the read operation.
The following description provides a circuit for reading the resistance state of a resistive switching device in an array of switching devices, and a corresponding method for performing the read operation. In some embodiments, the reading circuit may provide a digital output to represent the resistance state of switching device. For instance, a digital “0” may indicate that the device is in a high resistance state, or an “OFF” state, while a digital “1” may indicate that the device is in a low resistance state, or an “ON” state.
In some embodiments, the resistive switching device may be a bipolar memristive device (or memristor). As used herein, a memristive device is a switching device with its resistance representing its switching state, and the resistance depends on the history of the voltage and current applied to the device. The term “bipolar” means that the device can be switched from a low-resistance state (“LRS”) to a high-resistance state (“HRS”) by applying a switching voltage of one polarity, and from a high-resistance state to a low-resistance state by applying a switching voltage of the opposite polarity.
Many different materials with their respective suitable dopants can be used as the switching material. Materials that exhibit suitable properties for switching include oxides, sulfides, selenides, nitrides, carbides, phosphides, arsenides, chlorides, and bromides of transition and rare earth metals. Suitable switching materials also include elemental semiconductors such as Si and Ge, and compound semiconductors such as III-V and II-VI compound semiconductors. The listing of possible switching materials is not exhaustive and do not restrict the scope of the present invention. The dopant species used to alter the electrical properties of the switching material depends on the particular type of switching material chosen, and may be cations, anions or vacancies, or impurities as electron donors or acceptors. For instance, in the case of transition metal oxides such as TiO2, the dopant species may be oxygen vacancies. For GaN, the dopant species may be nitride vacancies or sulfide ions. For compound semiconductors, the dopants may be n-type or p-type impurities.
The nanoscale switching device 100 can be switched between ON and OFF states by controlling the concentration and distribution of the oxygen vacancies in the switching material in the active region 122. When a DC switching voltage is applied across the top and bottom electrodes 120 and 110, an electric field is created across the active region 122. The switching voltage and current may be supplied by a switching circuit 200. The electric field across the active region 122, if of a sufficient strength and proper polarity, may drive the oxygen vacancies to drift through the switching material towards the top electrode 120, thereby turning the device into an ON state.
By way of example, as shown in
If the polarity of the electric field is reversed, the dopants may drift in an opposite direction across the switching material and away from the top electrode 120, thereby turning the device into an OFF state. In this way, the switching is reversible and may be repeated. Due to the relatively large electric field needed to cause dopant drifting, after the switching voltage is removed, the locations of the dopants remain stable in the switching material. The switching is bipolar in that voltages of opposite polarities are used to switch the device on and off. The state of the switching device 100 may be read by applying a read voltage to the bottom and top electrodes 110 and 120 to sense the resistance across these two electrodes. The read voltage is typically much lower than the threshold voltage required to induce drifting of the ionic dopants between the top and bottom electrodes, so that the read operation does not alter the resistance state of the switching device.
Memristive switching devices may be formed into an array for various applications that benefit from having a high density of switching devices.
As mentioned above, one challenge that results from the use of a crossbar memory structure is that it can be difficult to reliably read the resistance state of a selected device in the array. To sense the resistance state of the selected device, a sensing voltage may be applied to the device via the row line and column line of the device, and the current flowing through the selected device may be monitored to determine the resistance of the device. There are, however, other switching devices connected to the selected row line or the selected column line. Those devices, referred to as “half-selected” devices, can form paths for leakage current, and it can be difficult to isolate the current flowing through the selected device from the leakage current, which can be rather large if there are many devices on each row line or column line.
To facilitate a better understanding of the issue of leakage current in a crossbar and how it can complicate the operation of reading a selected resistive switching device (or the “target device”),
An effective solution to the leakage current problem is to bias all the unselected row lines in the crossbar to substantially the same voltage that is applied to the selected column line during the read operation. As illustrated in
For setting up the reference voltage V_Ref, the circuit 250 has reference voltage setting components which include a feedback switch 272 and a sample-and-hold capacitor 274. The circuit utilizes feedback to set the reference voltage V_Ref. The feedback path of the circuit includes a current comparator 280, which in general evaluates the current I_SC passed by the equipotential preamplifier 260 against a reference current generated by the reference current source 270. The output of the current comparator 280 may be used in the setup stage as a feedback signal, and may be used in the sensing stage to indicate the resistance state of device being read. Specifically, in the embodiment shown in
The process of reading the target device 202 in the crossbar 210 using the read circuit 250 is now described with reference to the flowchart in
Thereafter, the setup operation is carried out by closing the feedback switch 272 to close the feedback loop (step 302). As a result, the output voltage V_C of the current comparator 280 is connected to the positive input 264 of the operational amplifier 262, thereby modifying the output voltage of the operational amplifier 262. This changes the current passing through the transistor Qn_pass, which is controlled by the operational amplifier output. The current passed by the transistor Qn_pass is duplicated by means of a current mirror 286, which in the embodiment also provides current amplification. In the example shown, the amplifying factor A is 10. Thus, the current mirror 286 amplifies the transistor current by ten times before feeding it to the current comparator 280 as one input. The current comparator 280 takes the current passed by the reference current source 270 as a second input. The output voltage V_C of the comparator 280 changes based on the difference between the output of the current mirror 286 and the output of the reference current source 280. The change in V_C is fed back to the operational amplifier 262.
This feedback process is left on for a sufficient time until the voltages and current transients settle (step 304). At the end of this feedback-controlled process, the equipotential preamplifier reference voltage V_Ref on the positive input of the operational amplifier 264 is close to the sense voltage V_S applied to the row lines, but with a slight difference such that the current I_SC flowing to the selected column SC is about the setup reference current I_setup_ref divided by the amplifying factor A of the current mirror 286. By way of example, if I_setup_ref is 100 nA and the amplifying factor A is 10, then the amount of current_I_setup going to the array 210 at the completion of the setup stage will be close to 10 nA. The amplitude of the current I_setup is chosen to be sufficient to ensure that equipotential preamplifier is in its linear operating range, but small enough so that it does not overwhelm the current signal during the read operation, as described below. After the reference voltage V_Ref is set, the feedback loop is opened by opening the switch 272 (step 306). The reference voltage V_Ref is held by the sample-and-hold capacitor 274 and applied to the positive input of the operational amplifier 262.
To initiate the sense operation, the output I_Ref of the reference current source 270 is set to be the sum of I_setup_ref and I_hrsRef (step 308). The current I_hrsRef is a reference for determining whether the target device 202 being read is in the ON or OFF state. It is selected such that its magnitude divided by the amplifying factor A of the current mirror 286 is sufficiently higher than the average amount of current I_hrs_ave a device in the high-resistance state (i.e., OFF state) will pass under the voltage V_S, but sufficiently lower than the average current I_lrs_ave the device will pass in the low-resistance state (i.e., ON state). In other words, I_hrs_ave<I_hrsRef /A<I_lrs_ave.
To carry out the sensing operation, the selected row SC of the target device 202 is connected to the ground potential (step 310). This causes a read current I_R_Device to flow through the target device 202 under the voltage V_Ref held by the equipotential preamplifier 260. The current I_SC now passed by the equipotential preamplifier 260 to the array 210 includes the device current I_R_Device and the bias current I setup set during the setup stage. This sum, referred to as I_Sense, is amplified by the current mirror 286 and sent to the current comparator 280 for comparison. In this example, the amplifying factor is 10, so the current comparator 280 compares I_Sense*10 with I_Ref (step 312). If I_Sense*10 is smaller than I_Ref, the comparator output V_C goes to a value close to Vdd. On the other hand, if I_Sense*10 is larger than I_Ref, then V_C goes to a value close to ground. The voltage V_C is fed to the 1-bit A/D converter 288 to generate a digital output of either 0 or 1. For instance, if V_C is close to Vdd, the converter output has a digital value of 0, indicating that the device is in the high-resistance (OFF) state (step 314). If V_C is close to ground, the converter 288 generates a digital output of 1, indicating that the device is in a low-resistance (ON) state (step 316).
Also shown in
In the foregoing description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details. While the invention has been disclosed with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2011/044967 | 7/22/2011 | WO | 00 | 1/14/2014 |