Memristor Memory Readied for Production
HP plans new nonvolatile memory for 2013.
HP has begun testing samples of a new kind of nonvolatile memory based on memristors–circuit elements that are much smaller than the transistors used in flash memory. The company plans to introduce the first commercial memristor memory product in three years’ time.
HP expects its memristor memory technology to scale better than flash and hopes to offer a product with a storage density of about 20 gigabytes per square centimeter in 2013–double the storage that flash is expected to offer at that time. The move will be an important testing ground for memristors; the reliability and performance of these components, first made at HP Labs in 2008, remain largely unproven.
R. Stan Williams, a senior fellow at HP and director of the company’s information and quantum systems lab, says his group is testing the first batch of sample memristor memory devices made at an undisclosed semiconductor fab. The sample memristor arrays are being built on standard 300-millimeter silicon wafers.
Memristors are nanoscale devices with a variable resistance and the ability to remember their resistance when power is off. HP fabricates them using conventional lithography techniques: laying down a series of parallel metal nanowires, coating the wires with a layer of titanium dioxide a few nanometers thick, and then laying down a second array of wires perpendicular to the first. The points where the wires cross are the memristors, and each can be as small as about three nanometers. This cross-bar structure also makes it possible to pack memristors in very dense arrays.
Both flash and memristor memory are nonvolatile, meaning they hold on to data even when power is cut off. Flash has some limitations, though. It can only withstand about 100,000 data-writing cycles, and, like all devices based on silicon transistors, it will come up against physical limits as it’s scaled to make more storage-dense memory devices. Williams says that memristor memory can withstand up to about a million read-write cycles in lab tests. “We will be able to scale faster and farther than flash because the memristor is a very simple structure, and it can be stacked,” Williams says.
Other researchers are cautiously optimistic about memristors’ promise. While silicon’s material properties are well known, those of the materials used to make Williams’s memristors are not–at least so far.
“The fundamentals of why these metal oxides switch the way they do are not well understood,” says Curt Richter, leader of the NanoElectronic Device Metrology project at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Gaithersburg, MD. A better understanding of the fundamental material properties of the metal oxides used to make the memristors will be critical to ensuring that chips with billions of the devices operate reliably over as long as 10 years.

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