1,727 research outputs found

    Memristor MOS Content Addressable Memory (MCAM): Hybrid Architecture for Future High Performance Search Engines

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    Large-capacity Content Addressable Memory (CAM) is a key element in a wide variety of applications. The inevitable complexities of scaling MOS transistors introduce a major challenge in the realization of such systems. Convergence of disparate technologies, which are compatible with CMOS processing, may allow extension of Moore's Law for a few more years. This paper provides a new approach towards the design and modeling of Memristor (Memory resistor) based Content Addressable Memory (MCAM) using a combination of memristor MOS devices to form the core of a memory/compare logic cell that forms the building block of the CAM architecture. The non-volatile characteristic and the nanoscale geometry together with compatibility of the memristor with CMOS processing technology increases the packing density, provides for new approaches towards power management through disabling CAM blocks without loss of stored data, reduces power dissipation, and has scope for speed improvement as the technology matures.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure

    High-Density Solid-State Memory Devices and Technologies

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    This Special Issue aims to examine high-density solid-state memory devices and technologies from various standpoints in an attempt to foster their continuous success in the future. Considering that broadening of the range of applications will likely offer different types of solid-state memories their chance in the spotlight, the Special Issue is not focused on a specific storage solution but rather embraces all the most relevant solid-state memory devices and technologies currently on stage. Even the subjects dealt with in this Special Issue are widespread, ranging from process and design issues/innovations to the experimental and theoretical analysis of the operation and from the performance and reliability of memory devices and arrays to the exploitation of solid-state memories to pursue new computing paradigms

    Intrinsic variability of nanoscale CMOS technology for logic and memory.

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    The continuous downscaling of CMOS technology, the main engine of development of the semiconductor Industry, is limited by factors that become important for nanoscale device size, which undermine proper device operation completely offset gains from scaling. One of the main problems is device variability: nominally identical devices are different at the microscopic level due to fabrication tolerance and the intrinsic granularity of matter. For this reason, structures, devices and materials for the next technology nodes will be chosen for their robustness to process variability, in agreement with the ITRS (International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors). Examining the dispersion of various physical and geometrical parameters and the effect these have on device performance becomes necessary. In this thesis, I focus on the study of the dispersion of the threshold voltage due to intrinsic variability in nanoscale CMOS technology for logic and for memory. In order to describe this, it is convenient to have an analytical model that allows, with the assistance of a small number of simulations, to calculate the standard deviation of the threshold voltage due to the various contributions

    Optimization and evaluation of variability in the programming window of a flash cell with molecular metal-oxide storage

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    We report a modeling study of a conceptual nonvolatile memory cell based on inorganic molecular metal-oxide clusters as a storage media embedded in the gate dielectric of a MOSFET. For the purpose of this paper, we developed a multiscale simulation framework that enables the evaluation of variability in the programming window of a flash cell with sub-20-nm gate length. Furthermore, we studied the threshold voltage variability due to random dopant fluctuations and fluctuations in the distribution of the molecular clusters in the cell. The simulation framework and the general conclusions of our work are transferrable to flash cells based on alternative molecules used for a storage media

    A Modern Primer on Processing in Memory

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    Modern computing systems are overwhelmingly designed to move data to computation. This design choice goes directly against at least three key trends in computing that cause performance, scalability and energy bottlenecks: (1) data access is a key bottleneck as many important applications are increasingly data-intensive, and memory bandwidth and energy do not scale well, (2) energy consumption is a key limiter in almost all computing platforms, especially server and mobile systems, (3) data movement, especially off-chip to on-chip, is very expensive in terms of bandwidth, energy and latency, much more so than computation. These trends are especially severely-felt in the data-intensive server and energy-constrained mobile systems of today. At the same time, conventional memory technology is facing many technology scaling challenges in terms of reliability, energy, and performance. As a result, memory system architects are open to organizing memory in different ways and making it more intelligent, at the expense of higher cost. The emergence of 3D-stacked memory plus logic, the adoption of error correcting codes inside the latest DRAM chips, proliferation of different main memory standards and chips, specialized for different purposes (e.g., graphics, low-power, high bandwidth, low latency), and the necessity of designing new solutions to serious reliability and security issues, such as the RowHammer phenomenon, are an evidence of this trend. This chapter discusses recent research that aims to practically enable computation close to data, an approach we call processing-in-memory (PIM). PIM places computation mechanisms in or near where the data is stored (i.e., inside the memory chips, in the logic layer of 3D-stacked memory, or in the memory controllers), so that data movement between the computation units and memory is reduced or eliminated.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1903.0398

    Doctor of Philosophy

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    dissertationThis dissertation describes the design, fabrication, testing, reliability, and harsh environment performance of single-device Micro-electro-mechanical-system (MEMS)- based digital logic gates, such as XOR and AND, for applications in ultra-low-power computation in unforgiving settings such as high ionizing radiation and high temperatures. Within the scope of this dissertation are several significant contributions. First, this work was the first ever to report the evolution in logic design architecture from a CMOS-paradigm to a MEMS architecture utilizing a single functional device per logic, as opposed to multiple relays per logic. This novel approach reduces the number of devices needed to implement a logic function by approximately 10X, leading to better reliability, yield, speed, and overall better characteristics (subthreshold characteristics, smaller turn-on/off voltage variations, etc.) and it simplifies implementation of MEMSbased circuits. The logic gates illustrate ~1.5V turn-on voltage at 5MHz with >109 cycles of reliable operations and low operational power consumption (leakage current and power <10-9A, <1^W). Second, this work is the first ever to report an intensive study on the cycle-bycycle evolution of contact resistance (Rc) up to 100,000 cycles, on materials such as, Ir, Pt, W, Ni, Cr, Ti, Cu, Al, and graphite, which are materials commonly used in MEMS switches. Adhesion forces between contacts were also studied using a contact-modeAFM, force vs. displacement, experiment. Results show that materials with high Young's modulus, high melting temperatures, and high density show low initial contact resistances and low adhesion forces (such as Ir, Pt, and W). Third, the devices were interrogated separately in harsh environments where they were exposed to high doses of ionizing radiation (90kW) in a nuclear reactor for a prolonged time (120 min) and, separately, at high temperatures (409K). Here, results show that solid-state devices begin to deteriorate almost immediately to a point where their gate can no longer control the drain-to-source current, whereas MEMS switches survive such ionizing radiation and temperatures portraying clear ON and OFF states for far longer. In terms of the applications empowered and the breadth of topics covered to accomplish these results, the work presented here demonstrates significant contributions to an important and developing branch of engineering
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