SUMMARY
UCLA researchers in the Department of Electrical Engineering have developed a new design of read and write circuitry using negative differential resistance devices to improve the performance of resistive memories.
BACKGROUND
Emerging non-volatile resistive memories including phase-change memory (PCM), spin-transfer torque magnetic random access memory (STT-MRAM), resistive switching RAM (RRAM), etc. are promising for storage, cache, and computing in future. Among these, STT-MRAM is especially promising due to its high endurance, and relative fast access time. However, STT-MRAMs suffer from three main challenges: 1) high write energy, 2) low sensing margin (read difficulty), and 3) susceptibility to read disturbance.
INNOVATION
UCLA researchers proposed a new memory read and write circuitry that can solve all the three problems above. This new design uses negative differential resistance (NDR) devices in series with the memory cell write or read current path. The use of pre-charge transistor and pre-charge pulse sequence is employed to maximize the usefulness of the NDR device. A NDR can also be shared and connected to the several bit-lines that share a sense amplifier.
APPLICATIONS
Improve the performance of resistive memories:
ADVANTAGES
STATE OF DEVELOPMENT
The UCLA researchers have proposed and simulated a new memory write and read circuitry using negative differential resistance (NDR) devices. Circuit simulations on STT-MRAM have shown write energy reduction of 2x, read margin improvements of over 3x, and read disturbance reduction over 100,000x. Also, the device specification for NDR devices is also low (peak-to-valley ratio > 3) for significant improvement in write energy efficiency (> about 1.8×) and read margin (> about 2×).
PATENT STATUS
United States Of America Issued Patent 10,832,752 11/10/2020