This invention relates to systems for storing information.
Software developers continue to develop steadily more data intensive products, such as ever-more sophisticated, and graphic intensive applications and operating systems (OS). Each generation of application or OS always seems to earn the derisive label in computing circles of being “a memory hog.” Higher capacity data storage, both volatile and non-volatile, has been in persistent demand for storing code for such applications. Add to this need for capacity, the confluence of personal computing and consumer electronics in the form of personal MP3 players, such as iPod®, personal digital assistants (PDAs), sophisticated mobile phones, and laptop computers, which has placed a premium on compactness and reliability.
Nearly every personal computer and server in use today contains one or more hard disk drives for permanently storing frequently accessed data. Every mainframe and supercomputer is connected to hundreds of hard disk drives. Consumer electronic goods ranging from camcorders to TiVo® use hard disk drives. While hard disk drives store large amounts of data, they consume a great deal of power, require long access times, and require “spin-up” time on power-up. FLASH memory is a more readily accessible form of data storage and a solid-state solution to the lag time and high power consumption problems inherent in hard disk drives. Like hard disk drives, FLASH memory can store data in a non-volatile fashion, but the cost per megabyte is dramatically higher than the cost per megabyte of an equivalent amount of space on a hard disk drive, and its therefore sparingly used. Consequently, there is a need for solutions which permit higher density data storage at a reasonable cost per megabyte.
Further details of the present invention are explained with the help of the attached drawings in which:
Scanning capacitance microscopy (SCM) is a method for direct imaging of submicron devices performed in an Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) with an ultrahigh frequency (UHF) resonant capacitance sensor connected by way of a transmission line to a grounded probe tip extending from a cantilever. The probe tip acts as a metal and a layer of insulting oxide is grown on top of a semiconductor sample to take advantage of characteristics of a metal-oxide semiconductor (MOS) structure. The probe tip-sample capacitance and variations in the capacitance load the end of the transmission line and change the resonant frequency of the system. The probe tip-sample capacitance can be probed by modulating carriers with a bias containing alternating current (AC) and direct current (DC) components. A quadrature lock-in amplifier is used to measure the capacitance sensor output with a high signal-to-noise ratio. The magnitude of the SCM output (dC/dV) signal is a function of carrier concentration.
SCM can operate in two different modes: differential capacitance mode (also referred to herein as open loop mode) and differential voltage mode (also referred to herein as closed loop mode). In open loop mode, an AC bias (e.g. 0.2-2Vpp, 10-100 kHz) is superimposed on a DC sample bias (e.g. −2 to 2V), and the probe tip is at a DC ground. The AC bias will alternatively deplete and accumulate the semiconductor surface. The change in capacitance is recorded using a lock-in technique. When large AC bias voltages are used, the measured value of the change in capacitance is the value across the current-voltage curve. When smaller AC bias voltage is used, the differential capacitance (dC/dV) is measured. When the tip is scanning over a lightly doped region, the spatial resolution is degraded. This is because it leads to a large depletion depth and a larger change in capacitance. Closed loop mode can provide a higher resolution for providing dopant profiles. In closed loop mode, the magnitude of the AC bias voltage applied to the sample is adjusted by a feedback loop to maintain a constant capacitance change. The capacitance or the depletion width is kept constant regardless of dopant density. A small bias is required for lightly doped area, which is easily depleted, and a high bias is required for highly doped area.
Embodiments of probe storage devices and methods of high density data storage in accordance with the present invention can include one or more probe tips (referred to herein as tips) adapted to electrically communicate with a surface of a media for writing and/or reading electric charges within the media. The media can comprise a charge-trapping material electrically isolated and accessible to the tip by way of tunneling. A charge-trapping material can preferably be a dielectric material that can hold stored charges and resist spontaneous leakage. The charge-trapping material preferably includes will-defined and high-density regions of trap sites for electrons and/or holes. Charge-trapping material can further comprise multiple different binary (e.g., SixNy, AlxOy, AlxNy, HaxOy, TixOy, etc.) or ternary materials (e.g., SixOxNy and etc.) of various stoichiometry. Various combinations of triple or double stacks of such dielectrics can further be employed as charge-trapping material based rewritable media.
Referring to
Information is written to the media by injecting charges, either electrons or holes, into the charge-traps of the trap layer 112 by way of the tip 102. Referring again to
Information stored in the media in the form of trapped charges can be read as a digital bit signal corresponding to a voltage potential profile and/or a charge distribution. Systems in accordance with the present invention can measure properties of the capacitive structure (and/or electric field/potential distribution). Referring to
The process of reading out a data bit by way of a charge amplifier allows the media and the tip to be held at a ground potential. As a result, a data bit is free from input disturbance and thus retains the stored information longer than conventional methods that rely on signal response to input perturbation such as DC voltage, AC voltage, current, light, etc., to read out the stored information.
Embodiments of systems and methods in accordance with the present invention can comprise a tip platform including a plurality of cantilevers extending from the tip platform, the plurality of tips platform including a plurality of cantilevers extending from the tip platform, can be associated with a media platform. One or both of the tip platform and the media platform can be movable so as to allow the tips to access an amount of the media desired given the number of tips employed. Systems and methods having suitable structures for positioning a media relative to a plurality of tips are described, for example, in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/553,435 entitled “Memory Stage for a Probe Storage Device”, filed Oct. 6, 2006 and incorporated herein by reference.
The foregoing description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in the art. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with various modification as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents.