1 research outputs found
Valley-Spin Hall Effect-based Nonvolatile Memory with Exchange-Coupling-Enabled Electrical Isolation of Read and Write Paths
Valley-spin hall (VSH) effect in monolayer WSe2 has been shown to exhibit
highly beneficial features for nonvolatile memory (NVM) design. Key advantages
of VSH-based magnetic random-access memory (VSH-MRAM) over spin orbit torque
(SOT)-MRAM include access transistor-less compact bit-cell and low power
switching of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) magnets. Nevertheless,
large device resistance in the read path (RS) due to low mobility of WSe2 and
Schottky contacts deteriorates sense margin, offsetting the benefits of
VSH-MRAM. To address this limitation, we propose another flavor of VSH-based
MRAM that (while inheriting most of the benefits of VSH-MRAM) achieves lower RS
in the read path by electrically isolating the read and write terminals. This
is enabled by coupling VSH with electrically-isolated but magnetically-coupled
PMA magnets via interlayer exchange-coupling. Designing the proposed devices
using object oriented micro magnetic framework (OOMMF) simulation, we ensure
the robustness of the exchange-coupled PMA system under process variations. To
maintain a compact memory footprint, we share the read access transistor across
multiple bit-cells. Compared to the existing VSH-MRAMs, our design achieves
39%-42% and 36%-46% reduction in read time and energy, respectively, along with
1.1X-1.3X larger sense margin at a comparable area. This comes at the cost of
1.7X and 2.0X increase in write time and energy, respectively. Thus, the
proposed design is suitable for applications in which reads are more dominant
than writes