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RADAR: A Fast and Energy-Efficient Programming Technique for Multiple Bits-Per-Cell RRAM Arrays.

Authors :
Le, Binh Q.
Levy, Akash
Wu, Tony F.
Radway, Robert M.
Hsieh, E. Ray
Zheng, Xin
Nelson, Mark
Raina, Priyanka
Wong, H.-S. Philip
Wong, Simon
Mitra, Subhasish
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices. Sep2021, Vol. 68 Issue 9, p4397-4403. 7p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

HfO2-based resistive RAM (RRAM) is an emerging nonvolatile memory technology that has recently been shown capable of storing multiple bits-per-cell. The energy/delay costs of an RRAM write operation are dependent on the number of pulses required for RRAM programming. The pulse count is often large when existing programming approaches are used for multiple bits-per-cell RRAM, especially when resistance ranges are allocated to account for retention. We present a new technique, Range-Dependent Adaptive Resistance (RADAR) Tuning, for fast and energy-efficient programming of multiple bits-per-cell RRAM arrays, using a combination of coarse- and fine-grained RRAM resistance tuning. Experimental data are collected on 16k cells from two 1Megacell (1M physical cells) 1T1R HfO2-based RRAM arrays fabricated in a 130-nm CMOS process. RADAR reduces the programming pulse count by 2.4X (for both uncycled cells and cells that have undergone 8k cycles) on average over existing programming techniques tested on the same RRAM arrays, with the same bit error rate targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00189383
Volume :
68
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153763970
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/TED.2021.3097975