This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2008-2548, filed on Jan. 9, 2008, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a resistance change memory device and more particularly, to a resistance change memory formed in three-dimensional cell array.
2. Description of the Related Art
Recently, a resistance change memory gains the spotlight as a succeeding memory of a flash memory. Here, the resistance change memory device includes a resistance change memory (ReRAM: Resistance RAM), in a narrow sense, which stores the state of resistance in a recording layer formed of transition metal oxide in a non-volatile manner and a phase change memory (PCRAM: Phase Change RAM) which uses chalcogenide or the like as a recording layer and uses the information of resistance in a crystalline state (conductor) and an amorphous state (insulator).
It is known that a variable resistance element of the ReRAM has two kinds of operation modes. One is to set a high resistance state and a low resistance state by switching polarity of applied voltage, which is called bipolar type. The other is to set a high resistance state and a low resistance state by controlling a voltage value and voltage application time without switching the polarity of the applied voltage, which is called unipolar type (for example, refer to “High Speed Unipolar Switching Resistance RAM (RRAM) Technology” written by Y. Hosoi et al, IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting 2006 Technical Digest p. 793-796).
In order to realize a high-density memory cell array, the unipolar type is preferable. In the case of the unipolar type, a cell array can be formed by stacking the variable resistance element and a rectifier element such as a diode at a cross point of a bit line and a word line without using a transistor. Further, by stacking these cell arrays three-dimensionally, high-capacity can be realized without enlarging the size of the cell array (for example, refer to Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2006-514392).
In the ReRAM of a three dimensional cell array structure, the word line and the bit line are connected to a reading/writing circuit formed on a cell array foundation substrate through a via wiring. In order to restrain the CR delay of the bit line and the word line within a certain range, it is necessary to divide the memory cell array into a plurality of memory mats on a flat plane. In this case, it becomes an issue of how to restrain an area penalty of the via wiring in order to reduce the size of cell array and chip.
A resistance change memory device according to one aspect of the present invention includes: a semiconductor substrate; a three dimensional cell array formed by a plurality of unit cell array blocks of two dimensional arrangement on the semiconductor substrate, the unit cell array block being formed by stacking a plurality of unit cell arrays including a first wiring, a second wiring crossing with the first wiring, and a variable resistance element connected at an intersection of the both wirings; a reading/writing/driving circuit formed on the semiconductor substrate under the three dimensional cell array; a first via region which is arranged in an end portion of the unit cell array block, and in which a via wiring for connecting the first wiring in each layer to the reading/writing/driving circuit is formed; and a second via region which is arranged in an end portion of the unit cell array block, and in which a via wiring for connecting the second wiring in each layer to the reading/writing/driving circuit is formed, wherein when the first wiring is longer than the second wiring, the number of via arrangements in the first via region is set larger than that in the second via region.
A resistance change memory device according to another aspect of the present invention includes: a semiconductor substrate; a three dimensional cell array formed by a plurality of unit cell array blocks of two dimensional arrangement on the semiconductor substrate, the unit cell array block being formed by stacking a plurality of unit cell arrays including a first wiring, a second wiring crossing with the first wiring, and a variable resistance element connected at an intersection of the both wirings; a reading/writing/driving circuit formed on the semiconductor substrate under the three dimensional cell array; a first via region which is arranged in an end portion of the unit cell array block, and in which a via wiring for connecting the first wiring in each layer to the reading/writing/driving circuit is formed; and a second via region which is arranged in an end portion of the unit cell array block, and in which a via wiring for connecting the second wiring in each layer to the reading/writing/driving circuit is formed, wherein when the number of via arrangements in the first via region is smaller than that in the second via region, the first wiring is set shorter than the second wiring.
A resistance change memory device according to still another aspect of the present invention includes: a semiconductor substrate; a three dimensional cell array formed by a plurality of unit cell array blocks of two dimensional arrangement on the semiconductor substrate, the unit cell array block being formed by stacking a plurality of unit cell arrays including a first wiring, a second wiring crossing with the first wiring, and a variable resistance element connected at an intersection of the both wirings; a first via region which is arranged in an end portion of the unit cell array block, and in which a via wiring connected to the first wiring in each layer and extending in a vertical direction is formed; and a second via region which is arranged in an end portion of the unit cell array block, and in which a via wiring connected to the second wiring in each layer and extending in a vertical direction is formed, wherein when the first wiring is longer than the second wiring, the number of via arrangements in the first via region is set larger than that in the second via region.
Hereinafter, referring to the drawings, an embodiment according to the invention will be described.
The 3D cell array 3 is formed by four layers of cell arrays MA0 to MA3 in this example.
The memory cell is preferably set in a stable state (reset state) with a high resistance state; for example, storing binary data makes use of a high resistance state and a low resistance state (set state). The specific example will be described later.
The stack structure of the unit memory cell MC is, for example, as shown in
The reading/writing circuit 2 on the substrate 1 has, for example, a global bus 21 for exchanging sense data with outside which is arranged in parallel with the word line in the midst of projection of the 3D cell array, sense amplifier arrays 22 which are arranged at the both sides of the global bus 21, and further multiplexers 23 for selecting a sense amplifier which are arranged at the outside of the sense amplifier arrays 22. One end of the global bus 21 is a decode circuit (low decoder) 24 which selects a word line of the cross point cell.
In order to connect the word line WL and the bit line BL of each cell array to the reading/writing circuit 2, wirings (via contacts) extending in a vertical direction are necessary at least at three sides of the 3D cell array. For example, a via contact is arranged along the side of one end of the word line WL and via contacts are arranged along the two sides of the both ends of the bit line BL.
Before thinking about a two dimensional arrangement of a memory mat, a relation between a sharing state of the bit line BL and the word line WL between the cell arrays in the 3D cell array and the number of the bit line vias and the word line vias will be described, which has not been described in
At first, a mode of sharing a bit line and a word line includes the following three types: (1) the case of “simple stack structure” in which neither bit line nor word line is shared among the cell arrays, (2) the case of “fully shared stack structure” in which the bit lines and the word lines are fully shared among the cell arrays, and (3) the case of “partially shared stack structure” in which either the bit lines or the word lines are shared among the cell arrays.
Then, the structure of sharing a via is determined according to the relation of the above structure of sharing the bit lines and the word lines. Hereinafter, the arrangement structure of the bit line vias and the word line vias will be described specifically. In the following description, the number of word line vias arranged in a direction of word line and the number of bit line vias arranged in a direction of bit line are called the number of via arrangements (or simply called the number of vias).
In the following description, the number of cell array layers is defined as 2N, the number of cell arrays which share one word line via is defined as m, and the number of cell arrays which share one bit line via is defined as n. Each maximum value of n and m is N and magnitude relation thereof is determined depending on the structure of sharing the word lines and the bit lines.
[Simple Stack Structure]
When one of the word line and the bit line is shared among the adjacent cell arrays, basically, the other must be independent in each of the adjacent cell arrays. For example, when the word lines in respective layers are connected in common through one via, it is necessary to prepare each independent via for the bit line in each layer.
In the case of the simple stack structure, generally, the word line via region 51 has 2N/m of via arrangements, the bit line via region 52 has 2N/n of via arrangements, and mn=2N. The example of
In the case of the simple stack structure of 2N=4, the following via arrangement structures of the word line and the bit line are possible: (1) m=1 and n=4, (2) m=2 and n=2, and (3) m=4 and n=1.
[Fully Shared Stack Structure]
In the example of
[Partially Shared Stack Structure]
Generally, when the word line via is shared in m-layer and the bit line via is shared in n-layer, the number of the via arrangements of the word line is 2N/m (or N/m), and the number of the via arrangements of the bit line is 2N/n (or N/n).
[Memory Mat Size and Via Arrangement Method]
Next, a via arrangement method for reducing the memory mat size will be described.
Based on the layout of the memory mat MAT in
In this case, when the widths DX and □Y of the via region have the equal via arrangement pitch “a”, in the MAT 1, DX=a and DY=4a and in the MAT 2, DX=4a and DY=a.
When the memory mat size defined by the outer frame of the bit line and word line via regions is required, in the MAT 1, S1=(X+2DX) (Y+2DY)=(X+2a) (Y+8a) and in the MAT 2, S2=(X+2DX) (Y+2DY)=(X+8a) (Y+2a). A difference in the size becomes S1-S2=6a (X−Y). Therefore, when the size of the memory cell unit 50 is X>Y, the memory mat size becomes S1>S2 and the MAT 2 is smaller than the MAT 1 in size.
The above is generalized as follows. The word line and the bit line are defined as the first wiring and the second wiring generally and the via regions corresponding to these are defined as the first via region and the second via region respectively. When the via arrangement pitch is equal in the via regions and the first wiring is longer than the second wiring, the number of the via arrangements of the first via region is increased more than that of the second via region. Therefore, it is possible to make the memory mat size including the via region smaller than in the contrary case.
A preferred condition to reduce the memory mat size will be described as follows, with respect to the sharing structure of the word line and the bit line in the respective layers described in
In the example of the simple stack structure in
In the example of the fully shared stack structure in
In the example of the partially stack structure in
[Size of Memory Mat Arrangement and Via Arrangement Method]
Next, a preferred condition to reduce the size when a plurality of memory mats are arranged will be described referring to
In the memory cell unit 50 of each memory mat, the word line length is X=A and the bit line length is Y=B in the MAT-ARRAY 1, the word line length is X=B and the bit line length is Y=A in the MAT-ARRAY 2, and the size is the same A□B in the both. On the other hand, the width DX of the word line via region 51 and the width DY of the bit line via region 52 satisfy the relation DX<DY in the both.
For example, A is about twice as long as B, and two memory mats are arranged in the x direction and four mats are arranged in the y direction in the MAT-ARRAY 1; while four mats are arranged in the x direction and two mats are arranged in the y direction in the MAT-ARRAY 2, so that eight memory mats M0 to M7 may be as square as possible.
The magnitude relation between the two memory mat arrangements MAT-ARRAY 1 and MAT-ARRAY 2 is determined depending on the magnitude relation of the size between the word line via region 51 and the bit line via region 52 since the memory cell unit 50 has the same size. In this example in which the width DY of the word line via region 51 (namely, the number of via arrangements) is larger than the width DX of the bit line via region 52 (namely, the number of via arrangements), the size of the mat arrangement MAT-ARRAY 1 which has the larger bit line via region 52 X□DY is larger than that of the MAT-ARRAY 2 apparently. From the viewpoint of size reduction, the arrangement method of the MAT-ARRAY 2 is preferable to that of the MAT-ARRAY 1.
When it has the same word line length X and the same bit line length Y as the memory mat MAT-ARRAY 1, it is preferable that the number of via arrangements in the bit line via region 52 be smaller than that in the word line via region 51, in order to realize a smaller size than in the memory mat MAT-ARRAY 1, as shown in
About the above-mentioned memory mat arrangement, the word line and the bit line are generally defined as the first and second wirings respectively and the word line via region and the bit line via region are defined as the first via region and the second via region respectively. In order to reduce the mat arrangement on the whole, it is preferable that, when the number of the via arrangements of the first via region is smaller than that of the second via region, the first wiring be set shorter than the second wiring (the MAT-ARRAY 2 of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-2548 | Jan 2008 | JP | national |