1 research outputs found
Quantum-statistical transport phenomena in memristive computing architectures
The advent of reliable, nanoscale memristive components is promising for next
generation compute-in-memory paradigms, however, the intrinsic variability in
these devices has prevented widespread adoption. Here we show coherent electron
wave functions play a pivotal role in the nanoscale transport properties of
these emerging, non-volatile memories. By characterizing both filamentary and
non-filamentary memristive devices as disordered Anderson systems, the
switching characteristics and intrinsic variability arise directly from the
universality of electron transport in disordered media. Our framework suggests
localization phenomena in nanoscale, solid-state memristive systems are
directly linked to circuit level performance. We discuss how quantum
conductance fluctuations in the active layer set a lower bound on device
variability. This finding implies there is a fundamental quantum limit on the
reliability of memristive devices, and electron coherence will play a decisive
role in surpassing or maintaining Moore's Law with these systems.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure