The invention relates to the field of rewritable memories, and more particularly non volatile rewritable memories.
The invention applies in particular to CBRAM non volatile rewritable memories.
According to the target applications and performance, different types of memories are used.
When very fast writing times are required (such as for a microprocessor calculation, for example), SRAM memories consisting of arrangement of several transistors are used.
The drawback of these memories is that they are volatile and the memory point size, relatively large, does not have a large storage capacity.
In order to have a large storage capacity, DRAM memories are used, consisting of storing electric loads on a capacitance.
These memories have longer writing times (some 10 ns) and they also are volatile, with an information retention time of about some 10 ms. Lastly, for applications requiring information storage even turned off, EEPROM memories or FLASH memories are used, allowing loads to be stored on a field effect transistor floating grid. These memories are non volatile. The drawbacks of this type of memory are the long writing times (some microseconds) and a limited cyclability at 10E6 writing cycles.
The operation principle of currently used rewritable non volatile memories (EEPROM or FLASH memories) is to store electric loads on a field effect transistor floating grid.
Each memory point is thus made of one or more silicon components having a reduced size leading to a reduction of the reading signal and a reduction of the information retention time. It is thus understood that the density of such memory type is limited.
In addition, these memories have relatively long writing times (some microseconds) because it is the time required for the electrons to cross the floating grid by a tunnel effect.
These memories also have a limited cyclability (106). Indeed, the retention reduces as writing cycles take place because the creation of defects in the oxide allows electrons to leak from the floating grid.
Different memory concepts are considered for new generations of rewritable non volatile memories.
Active materials may be ferroelectric (FERAM memories), or magnetic (MRAM memories), or phase changing (PC-RAM memories) or ionic conduction (PMC memories) materials.
The invention more particularly relates to the field of CBRAM and PMC memories. A PMC memory cell according to the prior art is shown in
The operation principle of PMC memories is based on ion (for example Ag+) migration in a solid electrolyte 4 (for example GeSe) positioned between a cathode 6 (for example of Ni) and a soluble anode 8 (for example of Ag).
Reference 14 refers to an insulating medium.
The reading signal results from the electric resistivity difference between two states ON and OFF.
In the OFF state, ions are dispersed in the array 4, providing a large resistivity phase. By applying a potential difference of some 100 mV between the anode 8 and the cathode 6, as a pulse of some 10 ns, ions migrate towards the cathode 6, providing a metal deposition. A low resistivity ON state is thus achieved.
By applying a potential difference of the same intensity and time but also with opposed signs, the metal deposition is dissolved again as ions in the electrolyte 4 and the OFF state is achieved again.
The major advantage of PMC memories is that writing voltages, smaller than 1V, are low in comparison with the voltages of other non volatile memories (EEPROM, MRAM, PCRAM).
In order to achieve reliable CBRAM memory point arrays, a homogeneous distribution of the anodic material 8 is sought. This is very difficult because Ag+ ions are very mobile, particularly when they are subjected to electric stresses.
The inventors have found that on manufacturing such a layer, for example of Ag by sputtering, thermal gradients will appear in layer 4 of chalcogenide material: the upper surface, subjected to the bombardment, receives a certain amount of energy which dissipates as heat and causes a temperature rise. The temperature rise is different according to the substrate thermal conductivity which comprises different structures in the considered area (a metal portion corresponding to the cathodes 6 on the one hand and the side insulator on the other hand). The chalcogenide materials based on Se having very strong thermal electric coefficients (˜1 mV/K for Se), the thermal gradients induce potential differences, with the colder areas charging negatively and thus attracting Ag+ ions.
It can be shown that these areas are, for example, the surface of tungsten plugs (providing the cathodes 6), as illustrated in
As illustrated in
The problem is thus to find a new process allowing such problems to be cancelled, or at least reduced.
The invention tries to solve this problem.
It particularly relates to a process for manufacturing a plurality of CBRAM memories, each comprising a memory cell in a chalcogenide solid electrolyte, an anode and a cathode, wherein the process comprises:
a) providing, on a semiconductor support, an insulating layer,
b) providing, in said insulating layer a set of first contacts, each for one of the memory points,
c) providing, on said layer and said contacts, a sublayer or barrier made of a high thermal conductivity material, higher than 1.3 W/m/K, which covers the set of first contacts,
d) providing, on said sublayer, a triple layer comprising a chalcogenide layer, then an anodic layer, and layer of second contacts,
e) an etching step between the areas located above the first contacts, in order to provide individual memory points, electrically insulated from each other.
During a process according to the invention, the thermal gradients in the chalcogenide material are reduced, by providing a consistent sublayer having high or strong thermal conductivity.
This sublayer, which may function as an inert cathode, may be etched simultaneously with the active stacking. In this configuration, the thermal gradients, and therefore the electric gradients, are lower than in currently known structures. In accordance, less anodic material accumulation on the contacts, and thus less short-circuits in devices are observed.
During step d), a triple layer is provided on said sublayer made of a high thermal conductivity material, said triple layer comprising a chalcogenide layer, then an anodic layer, and a layer of second contacts. At any point of the sublayer, this triple layer is separated from the support, on the one hand by the sublayer of high thermal conductivity material and on the other hand by either the first contacts or by the insulating layer.
The anodic layer is preferably made of pure silver.
According to an embodiment, step b) comprises:
According to another embodiment, steps b) and c) comprise:
The chalcogenide may be based on Se.
It may be doped with a metal; for example, it is of the AgGeSe type or of the AgGeSbSe type or of the AgGeS or AsS or AsSe type.
A CBRAM memory structure achieved by a process according to the invention has an enhanced reliability.
The invention also allows the topography to be reduced at memory points, since the effects resulting of metal clusters at the cathodes are also alleviated.
A first example of a process according to the invention, for manufacturing PMC memories, shall be described in reference to
A substrate 20, for example made of silicon, is first selected (
A layer 22 made of an insulating material, for example a SiO2 oxide layer, or Si3N4 nitride layer, is then provided on this substrate 20. Then, openings 24 are etched in this layer 22 up to the surface of the substrate 20 (
A metal layer 26 then covers the set and metal coatings 28 simultaneously fill in the previously etched openings 24. As a matter of fact, the coating 26 thus made is a conformal coating: the surface 26′ is not uniformly flat; on the contrary, it reproduces the cavities 24 where or above which it can slightly collapse (see areas 26″ of
A polishing step is then carried out, for example, a mechanical chemical polishing (
On such surface 22′, a layer 30 may be consistently provided (
In order to be continuous, the latter has at least the same thickness of an atomic layer, but it preferably has a thickness of at least 1 nm, and even more preferably, larger than 5 nm so that the thermal properties thereof be consistent in the substrate plane on which it is made. The upper limit of the layer 30 thickness is a function of the material thereof, but also of the chalcogenide material used thereafter for the memory points. For example, it is such that the serial resistance it provides does not exceed the on state resistance of the future memory cell, that is some 10 kΩ, for example 20 kΩ, or 50 kΩ. Typically, the thickness thereof is below 50 nm.
The surface 30′ of this layer 30 may function as a starting surface for implementing different steps of providing PMC memory points. A chalcogenide layer 32, then an anodic layer 34, for example of silver (as pure as possible) or of copper, and lastly a layer 36 of contacts (
The stacking thus built may then be subjected to photolithography and etching operations between the areas located at the memory points, that is between the areas, or studs, located just above the contacts provided by the coatings 28 (
An alternative to the above mentioned process shall be explained with
In accordance, whatever the alternative implemented, the chalcogenide layer 32 is deposited on a surface 30 or 26-1 with a consistent temperature and a high thermal conductivity.
The atomic migration of the anodic layer 34 is drastically reduced by a process according to the invention; such process thus allows, in particular, an anodic layer made of the purest possible silver to be manufactured, which avoids the necessity of using, for the anode material, materials such as silver selenide AgSe.
With the calculation below, the distance travelled by silver atoms in GeSe under a thermoelectric effect can be evaluated.
First, the number of n-loaded atoms may be evaluated.
In atomic volume (cm3/mol):
the molar volume of chalcogenide Ag33Ge17Se50 may be obtained: ˜1396 cm3/mol (that is 7.16×10−4 mol/cm3).
In a saturated state, the chalcogenide material accepts up to 33% of Ag atoms, among which 20% are mobile. There are 4.7×10−3 mol of mobile Ag atoms per cm3, that is about n=2.85×1021 at/cm3 of mobile Ag atoms. The mobility of these atoms may be evaluated as follows:
Let σ be the electric conductivity (about 3×10−4 Ω−1·cm−1), q the elementary load of loaded atoms (=1.6×10−19 C), n the density of loaded atoms (2.85×1021 cm−3), m the mobility (in m2V−1·s−1) then:
σ=q n μ
μ=σ/q n=3×10−2/(1.6×10−19·4×1027)=6.6×10−11 m2·V−1·s−1
Δ1 (travelled distance) and t (travelling time) can also be evaluated. Let v be the travelling velocity of ions, μ their mobility, ΔV the electric potential gradient and E the electric field then:
v=Δl/t=μ·E, and E=ΔV/Δl
leads to:
Δl=sqrt(μ·ΔV·t)
t=Δl2/μ/ΔV
For Se-based components, the thermal electric effect may then be calculated, with a gradient on 1 μm. Let S be the thermal electric coefficient (in mV/K, S=+1 mV/K for Se) then:
ΔT=1K ΔV=1 mV and t=15 s.
This calculation shows that if a temperature deviation of 1K appears on a 1 μm distance, about 20 s will be necessary for the silver to reach that distance. The deposition time is of about one minute, which explains Ag depleted areas appearing on an extension of at least one micrometer around the tungsten plugs 6 (see
The thickness and material of the layer 30 may also be optimized by electrothermal stimulation, which may be implemented, for example, with a commercial multi physical modelling software, such as, for example FEMLAB software.
Modelling results, which allow the influence of the sublayer 30 to be illustrated, are given in
In these figures, a (tungsten) stud 6 may be seen, whereas reference 40 corresponds to the surrounding (SiO2) insulating material. The layer 32 is of chalcogenide. Two points A and B are identified in these figures: point B is located at the boundary between the conductive stud, the insulating area and the chalcogenide layer 32, whereas point A is situated at the boundary of the insulator and the chalcogenide.
Profile I corresponds to the case of
CBRAM devices have been manufactured with a barrier 30 having a lower carbon content. Different barrier thicknesses have been tested, from 0.7 to 7 nm. The active stacking is as follows:
Devices with a known structure, without a carbon layer 30, have further been manufactured.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
07 58363 | Oct 2007 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
933365 | Cory et al. | Sep 1909 | A |
4115872 | Bluhm | Sep 1978 | A |
4177475 | Holmberg | Dec 1979 | A |
5363329 | Troyan | Nov 1994 | A |
5761115 | Kozicki et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5933365 | Klersy et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6348365 | Moore et al. | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6737312 | Moore | May 2004 | B2 |
6855975 | Gilton | Feb 2005 | B2 |
6864521 | Moore et al. | Mar 2005 | B2 |
6864522 | Krieger et al. | Mar 2005 | B2 |
6878569 | Li | Apr 2005 | B2 |
6953720 | Moore et al. | Oct 2005 | B2 |
6985378 | Kozicki | Jan 2006 | B2 |
7050327 | Campbell | May 2006 | B2 |
7071021 | Harshfield et al. | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7279418 | Bechevet et al. | Oct 2007 | B2 |
7332401 | Moore et al. | Feb 2008 | B2 |
20020127886 | Moore et al. | Sep 2002 | A1 |
20030027398 | Maimon et al. | Feb 2003 | A1 |
20030043631 | Gilton et al. | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20030045049 | Campbell et al. | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20030052330 | Klein | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20030123282 | Nickel et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20030209728 | Kozicki et al. | Nov 2003 | A1 |
20030209971 | Kozicky | Nov 2003 | A1 |
20040157417 | Moore et al. | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20040192006 | Campbell et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20040228164 | Gilton | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20050104105 | Campbell | May 2005 | A1 |
20050127524 | Sakamoto et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050128794 | Sussner | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050148150 | Moore et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20050162907 | Campbell et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20060046444 | Campbell et al. | Mar 2006 | A1 |
20060099822 | Harshfield et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
20070072125 | Sousa et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20070148882 | Dressler et al. | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20080007997 | Sousa | Jan 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
62-205598 | Sep 1987 | JP |
03019691 | Mar 2003 | WO |
03020998 | Mar 2003 | WO |
2006034946 | Apr 2006 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090098681 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |