Irem Boybat, Manuel Le Gallo, et al.
Nature Communications
Chalcogenide phase change materials enable non-volatile, low-latency storage-class memory. They are also being explored for new forms of computing such as neuromorphic and in-memory computing. A key challenge, however, is the temporal drift in the electrical resistance of the amorphous states that encode data. Drift, caused by the spontaneous structural relaxation of the newly recreated melt-quenched amorphous phase, has consistently been observed to have a logarithmic dependence in time. Here, it is shown that this observation is valid only in a certain observable timescale. Using threshold-switching voltage as the measured variable, based on temperature-dependent and short timescale electrical characterization, the onset of drift is experimentally measured. This additional feature of the structural relaxation dynamics serves as a new benchmark to appraise the different classical models to explain drift.
Irem Boybat, Manuel Le Gallo, et al.
Nature Communications
Valeria Bragaglia, Benedikt Kersting, et al.
MRS Spring/Fall Meeting 2020
Evangelos Eleftheriou, Geethan Karunaratne, et al.
IBM J. Res. Dev
Francesco Marrone, Jacopo Secco, et al.
Scientific Reports