posted on 2018-02-01, 00:00authored byFederico Raffone, Giancarlo Cicero
Even though resistance
switching memories (RRAMs) can be potentially employed in a broad
variety of fields, such as electronics and brain science, they are
still affected by issues that prevent their application in circuitry.
These problems are a consequence of the lack of detailed knowledge
about the physical processes occurring in the device. In this work,
we propose multiscale simulations, combining kinetic Monte Carlo and
finite difference methods, to shed light on the yet-unclear switching
process occurring in the valence change RRAMs, which are believed
to work as a consequence of the drift and diffusion of crystalline
defects that act as dopants. Results show that the height of the defect
diffusion barrier influences the switching process, the retention,
and the switching time. In particular, nonvolatile switching can be
achieved only by means of the fundamental role of temperature variations
induced by Joule heating if the diffusion barriers of the defects
are larger than ∼1 eV. High barriers prevent defects from hopping
when no voltage is applied. During the transition from the high-resistance
to the low-resistance state of the device, a heating stage of the
material precedes the defect drift because the applied electric field
by itself is not enough to lead to a drift velocity such that switching
is achieved within microseconds. The temperature increase has, therefore,
the double effect of activating the motion of the defects and enhancing
their drift velocity. The switching process can occur only if a sufficiently
high temperature is reached thanks to the Joule effect. On the basis
of these findings, the RRAM design could aim at a better temperature
management to achieve at the same time reproducibility and reliability.