9 research outputs found

    Characterization of the doped silicon dioxide and its implications on the resistive switching phenomena in the electrochemical metallization cells

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    In this Master's thesis, the switching behavior of the doped and undoped SiO2-based memory cells was compared. The aim of doping was to enhance the switching behavior of the ECM memory cells. About 270 samples were sputtered using the CT1000 cluster deposition tool in the IWE2 of RWTH Aachen University. For the deposition of the thin films, the platinum, titanium nitride and Al2O3 substrates were used. The deposition was performed by using three differently doped targets. The physical characterization of the thin films was done using SEM, XRR, XRD, and EDX. Electroforming and electric characterization of the fabricated memory cells were made in the probe station with the light microscope and the Keithley electrometer. The results of the physical and electrical characterization were analyzed using the principle of Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA). The analysis of the result shows that two undoped samples on the platinum substrate and some doped samples exhibit the unexpected volatile threshold switching of metallic and semiconductive origin, respectively. Linear fitting of the measurement data in a logarithmic scale suggests that Schottky- and Frenkel- Poole conduction mechanisms are not dominant

    OXIDE-BASED MEMRISTIVE DEVICES BY BLOCK COPOLYMER SELF-ASSEMBLY

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    Oxide-based memristive systems represent today an emerging class of devices with a significant potential in memory, logic, and neuromorphic circuit applications. These devices have a simple capacitor structure and promise superior scalability together with favorable memory performances. This thesis presents a study of resistive switching phenomena in HfOx-based nanoscale memristive devices, with focus on material properties and development of bottom-up approaches for the fabrication of structures with dimension down to the nanoscale. One of the main issues for practical applications regarding device variability is first assessed by doping hafnium oxide films with different concentrations of aluminum atoms. Testing devices are analyzed by physico-chemical and electrical techniques in order to define the effect of oxide doping on the device properties. In the following part of the thesis, the scalability limit is explored in very high density arrays of nanodevices produced exploiting a lithographic approach based on the bottom-up self-assembly of block copolymer templates. This technique allows a tight control over the size and density of the defined features, and the possibilities offered by block copolymer patterning are here discussed. Electrical measurements of the nanodevices are performed through conductive atomic force microscopy. The device variability is examined and related to the inherent oxide non-homogeneity at the nanoscale, while a non-volatile switching of the resistance of the nanodevices is demonstrated. Further, this analysis draws the attention to a crosstalk phenomenon occurring at the nanoscale in a continuous thin film geometry. This result suggests to select different system configurations. A promising technique based on selective reactions with one copolymer block is finally discussed which allows the direct production of oxide patterns from block copolymer templates avoiding a pattern transfer process. In conclusion, the results reported in this thesis highlight the high scalability potential of oxide-based memristive devices, providing a missing piece of information for the understanding and practical development of very high density arrays

    Application Centric Networks-On-Chip Design Solutions for Future Multicore Systems

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    With advances in technology, future multicore systems scaled to 100s and 1000s of cores/accelerators are being touted as an effective solution for extracting huge performance gains using parallel programming paradigms. However with the failure of Dennard Scaling all the components on the chip cannot be run simultaneously without breaking the power and thermal constraints leading to strict chip power envelops. The scaling up of the number of on chip components has also brought upon Networks-On-Chip (NoC) based interconnect designs like 2D mesh. The contribution of NoC to the total on chip power and overall performance has been increasing steadily and hence high performance power-efficient NoC designs are becoming crucial. Future multicore paradigms can be broadly classified, based on the applications they are tailored to, into traditional Chip Multi processor(CMP) based application based systems, characterized by low core and NoC utilization, and emerging big data application based systems, characterized by large amounts of data movement necessitating high throughput requirements. To this order, we propose NoC design solutions for power-savings in future CMPs tailored to traditional applications and higher effective throughput gains in multicore systems tailored to bandwidth intensive applications. First, we propose Fly-over, a light-weight distributed mechanism for power-gating routers attached to switched off cores to reduce NoC power consumption in low load CMP environment. Secondly, we plan on utilizing a promising next generation memory technology, Spin-Transfer Torque Magnetic RAM(STT-MRAM), to achieve enhanced NoC performance to satisfy the high throughput demands in emerging bandwidth intensive applications, while reducing the power consumption simultaneously. Thirdly, we present a hardware data approximation framework for NoCs, APPROX-NoC, with an online data error control mechanism, which can leverage the approximate computing paradigm in the emerging data intensive big data applications to attain higher performance per watt

    Complexity, Emergent Systems and Complex Biological Systems:\ud Complex Systems Theory and Biodynamics. [Edited book by I.C. Baianu, with listed contributors (2011)]

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    An overview is presented of System dynamics, the study of the behaviour of complex systems, Dynamical system in mathematics Dynamic programming in computer science and control theory, Complex systems biology, Neurodynamics and Psychodynamics.\u

    Design Space Exploration and Resource Management of Multi/Many-Core Systems

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    The increasing demand of processing a higher number of applications and related data on computing platforms has resulted in reliance on multi-/many-core chips as they facilitate parallel processing. However, there is a desire for these platforms to be energy-efficient and reliable, and they need to perform secure computations for the interest of the whole community. This book provides perspectives on the aforementioned aspects from leading researchers in terms of state-of-the-art contributions and upcoming trends

    A History of Materials and Technologies Development

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    The purpose of the book is to provide the students with the text that presents an introductory knowledge about the development of materials and technologies and includes the most commonly available information on human development. The idea of the publication has been generated referring to the materials taken from the organic and non-organic evolution of nature. The suggested texts might be found a purposeful tool for the University students proceeding with studying engineering due to the fact that all subjects in this particular field more or less have to cover the history and development of the studied object. It is expected that studying different materials and technologies will help the students with a better understanding of driving forces, positive and negative consequences of technological development, etc

    Torus Breakdown in a Uni Junction Memristor

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    International audienceExperimental study of a uni junction transistor (UJT) has enabled to show that this electronic component has the same features as the so-called “memristor”. So, we have used the memristor’s direct current (DC) vM–iM characteristic for modeling the UJT’s DC current–voltage characteristic. This has led us to confirm on the one hand, that the UJT is a memristor and, on the other hand, to propose a new four-dimensional autonomous dynamical system allowing to describe experimentally observed phenomena such as the transition from a limit cycle to torus breakdown
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