1. Ultrathin perpendicular free layers for lowering the switching current in STT-MRAM
- Author
-
Santos, Tiffany S., Mihajlovic, Goran, Smith, Neil, Li, J. -L., Carey, Matthew, Katine, Jordan A., and Terris, Bruce D.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
The critical current density $J_{c0}$ required for switching the magnetization of the free layer (FL) in a spin-transfer torque magnetic random access memory (STT-MRAM) cell is proportional to the product of the damping parameter, saturation magnetization and thickness of the free layer, $\alpha M_S t_F$. Conventional FLs have the structure CoFeB/nonmagnetic spacer/CoFeB. By reducing the spacer thickness, W in our case, and also splitting the single W layer into two layers of sub-monolayer thickness, we have reduced $t_F$ while minimizing $\alpha$ and maximizing $M_S$, ultimately leading to lower $J_{c0}$ while maintaining high thermal stability. Bottom-pinned MRAM cells with device diameter in the range of 55-130 nm were fabricated, and $J_{c0}$ is lowest for the thinnest (1.2 nm) FLs, down to 4 MA/cm$^2$ for 65 nm devices, $\sim$30% lower than 1.7 nm FLs. The thermal stability factor $\Delta_{\mathrm{dw}}$, as high as 150 for the smallest device size, was determined using a domain wall reversal model from field switching probability measurements. With high $\Delta_{\mathrm{dw}}$ and lowest $J_{c0}$, the thinnest FLs have the highest spin-transfer torque efficiency., Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF