Polymer Memory
Polymer Memory
POLYMER MEMORY
GUIDED BY: PRESENTED BY:
Mr.Vikram
(Asst. Prof., Department of ECE)
ADBHUT PARIHAR
EC-III
Roll no-07
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I express my sincere gratitude to Dr. T.N. Sharma (Head of Department), Electronics and communication Engineering, GLAITM, Mathura, for his cooperation and encouragement. I would also like to thank my seminar guide Mr. Vikram (Asst. Prof., Department of ECE), for their invaluable advice and wholehearted cooperation without which this seminar would not have seen the light of day. Gracious gratitude to all the faculty of the department of ECE & friends for their valuable advice and encouragement.
ABSTRACT
Digital Memory is and has been a close comrade of each and every technical advancement in Information Technology. The current memory technologies have a lot of limitations. These memory technologies when needed to expand will allow expansion only two dimensional space. Hence area required will be increased. Next Generation Memories satisfy all of the good attributes of memory. The most important one among them is their ability to support expansion in three dimensional spaces. They include MRAM, FeRAM, Polymer Memory and Ovonics Unified Memory. Polymer memory is the leading technology among them. It is mainly because of their expansion capability in three dimensional spaces. A polymer retains space charges near a metal interface when there is a bias, or electrical current, running across the surface. We can store space charges in a polymer layer, and conveniently check the presence of the space charges to know the state of the polymer layer. Space charges are essentially differences in electrical charge in a given region. They can be read using an electrical pulse because they change the way the devices conduct electricity.
CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION 2. PRESENT DAY MEMORY TECHNOLOGY 3. NEXT GENERATION MEMORIES 4. POLYMERS AS ELECTRONIC MATERIALS 5. FEATURES OF POLYMER MEMORY 6. HOW DOES POLYMER MEMORY WORK? 7. POLYMER MEMORY ARCHITECTURE 8. EXPANDING MEMORY CAPABILITY-STACKED MEMORY 14 9. NUMBER OF TRANSISTORS, SPEED, COST ETC 10. ADVANTAGES OF POLYMER MEMORY 11. LIMITATIONS OF POLYMER MEMORY 12. CONCLUSION
13.
REFERENCES
1. INTRODUCTION
Imagine a time when your mobile will be your virtual assistant and will need far more than the 8k and 16k memory that it has today, or a world where laptops require gigabytes of memory because of the impact of convergence on the very nature of computing. How much space would your laptop need to carry all that memory capacity? Not much, if Intel's project with Thin Film Electronics ASA (TFE) of Sweden works according to plan. TFE's idea is to use polymer memory modules rather than silicon-based memory modules, and what's more it's going to use architecture that is quite different from silicon-based modules. While microchip makers continue to wring more and more from silicon, the most dramatic improvements in the electronics industry could come from an entirely different material plastic. Labs around the world are working on integrated circuits, displays for handheld devices and even solar cells that rely on electrically conducting polymersnot siliconfor cheap and flexible electronic components. Now two of the worlds leading chip makers are racing to develop new stock for this plastic microelectronic arsenal: polymer memory. Advanced Micro Devices of Sunnyvale, CA, is working with Coatue, a startup in Woburn, MA, to develop chips that store data in polymers rather than silicon. The technology, according to Coatue CEO Andrew Perlman, could lead to a cheaper and denser alternative to flash memory chipsthe type of memory used in digital cameras and MP3 players. Meanwhile, Intel is collaborating with Thin Film Technologies in Linkping, Sweden, on a similar high capacity polymer memory.
technologies when needed to expand will allow expansion only two dimensional space. Hence area required will be increased. They will not allow stacking of one memory chip over the other. Also the storage capacities are not enough to fulfill the exponentially increasing need. Hence industry is searching for Holy Grail future memory technologies for portable devices such as cell phones, mobile PCs etc. Next generation memories are trying a tradeoffs between size and cost .This make them good possibilities for development.
The graph shows a comparison between cost and speed i.e., the Read/Write time. Disk drives are faster but expensive where as semiconductor memory is slower in read/write. Polymer memory lies in an optimum position. Polymer-based memory modules, as against silicon-based ones, promise to revolutionize the storage space and memory capabilities of chips. Coatues polymer memory cells are about one-quarter the size of conventional silicon cells. And unlike silicon devices, the polymer cells can be stacked that architecture could translate into memory chips with several times the storage capacity of flash memory. By 2004, Coatue hopes to have memory chips on the market that can store 32 gigabits, outperforming flash memory, which should hold about two gigabits by then, to produce a three-dimensional structure.
Figure2- Central atom responsible for bistable nature. The fundamental idea of all these technologies is the bistable nature possible for of the selected material which is due to their difference in behavior of internal dipoles when electric field is applied. And they retain those states until an electric field of opposite nature is applied. FeRAM works on the basis of the bistable nature of the centre atom of selected crystalline material. A voltage is applied upon the crystal which in turn polarizes the internal dipoles up or down. I.e. actually the difference between these states is the difference in conductivity. Non
Linear FeRAM read capacitor, i.e., the crystal unit placed in between two electrodes will remain in the direction polarized(state) by the applied electric field until another field capable of polarizing the crystals central atom to another state is applied.
The FeRAM memory is non volatile: - The state of the central atom or the direction of polarization remains even if power is made off. Fast Random Read Access. Fast write speed. Destructive read, limited read and write cycles. Very low power consumption.
electrical field is turned off. This polymer is "smart", to the extent that functionality is built into the material itself, like switchability, addressability and charge store. This is different from silicon and other electronic materials, where such functions typically are only achieved by complex circuitry. "Smart" materials can be produced from scratch, molecule by molecule, allowing them to be built according to design. This opens up tremendous opportunities in the electronics world, where tailor-made memory materials represent unknown territory Polymers are essentially electronic materials that can be processed as liquids. With Thin Films memory technology, polymer solutions can be deposited on flexible substrates with industry standard processes like spin coating in ultra thin layers.
state, or charge, replacing it with the default low state. The space charges remain stable for about an hour and also can be refreshed by another 3-volt positive pulse. The researchers intend to increase the memory retention ability of their device beyond an hour. Researchers are looking forward to increasing it into days or more. Once this is achieved, polymer devices can be used in data storage devices [and] also as a switch whose state can be changed externally by a voltage pulse.
Application of an electric field to a cell lowers the polymers resistance, thus increasing its ability to conduct current; the polymer maintains its state until a field of opposite polarity is applied to raise its resistance back to its original level. The different conductivity States represent bits of information. A polymer retains space charges near a metal interface when there is a bias, or electrical current, running across the surface. These charges come either from electrons, which are negatively charged, or the positively-charged holes vacated by electrons. We can store space charges in a polymer layer, and conveniently check the presence of the space charges to know the state of the polymer layer. Space charges are essentially differences in electrical charge in a given region. They can be read using an electrical pulse because they change the way the device conducts electricity. The basic principle of Polymer based memory is the dipole moment possessed by polymer chains. It is the reason by which polymers show difference in electrical conductivity. As explained earlier implementing a digital memory means setting up away to represent logic one and logic zero. Here polarizations of polymers are changed up or down to represent logic one and zero. Now lets see what are a dipole and a dipole moment.
Figure 4- The alignment of local dipoles within a polymer chain Coatue fabricates each memory cell as a polymer sandwiched between two electrodes. When electric field is applied polymers local dipoles will set up. The alignment of local dipoles within a polymer chain is shown in the diagram.
polymer is sandwiched between two sets of electrodes. A typical array may consist of several thousand such electrically conducting lines and hence millions of electrode crossings. Memory cells are defined by the physical overlap of the electrode crossings and selected by applying voltage. Each electrode crossing represents one bit of information in a true 4f (4-Lampda square) cell structure, the smallest possible physical memory cell. The effective cell footprint is further reduced if additional memory layers are applied. In the latter case, each new layer adds the same capacity as the first one. This stacking is a fundamental strength of the Thin Film technology. The polymer memory layers are just 1/10,000 of a millimeter or less in thickness, autonomous and easy to deposit. Layer upon layer may be coated on a substrate. A layer may include a self-contained active memory structure with on-layer TFT circuitry, or share circuitry with all other layers. Both approaches offer true 3D memory architecture. The stacking option will enable manufacturers to give gain previously unattainable storage capacity within a given footprint.
7.1 Circuits
Polymer microelectronics is potentially far less expensive to make than silicon devices. Instead of multibillion-dollar fabrication equipment that etches circuitry onto a silicon wafer, manufacturers could eventually use ink-jet printers to spray liquid-polymer circuits onto a surface. Polymer memory comes with an added bonus: unlike the memory in your PC, it retains information even after the power is shut off. Such nonvolatile memory offers potential advantagesnot the least of which is the prospect of never having to wait around for a PC to boot upand a number of researchers are working on various approaches. But polymer memory could potentially store far more data than other nonvolatile alternatives. In the Thin Film system there is no need for transistors in the memory cells, a substantial simplification compared to state of the art memory designs. The driver circuitry, comprising column and row decoders, sense amplifiers, charge pumps and control logic, is located entirely outside the memory matrix, leaving this area completely clear of circuitry, or be 100% built underneath the memory array. Both of these approaches have certain advantages. With no circuitry in the memory plane, it is possible to build the polymer memory on top of other chip structures, e.g. processors or memory, while the other option, all circuitry
located underneath the memory, offers the most area efficient memory design that can be envisaged, with a 100% fill factor. This enables optimal use of the memory cells and marks a radical directional change from state of the art technologies. Translated into hard facts, the Thin Film system requires about 0.5 million transistors per gigabit of memory. A traditional silicon-based system would require between 1.5 to 6.5 billion transistors for that same gigabit.
Figure 5- Polymer memory architecture. In the Thin Film system, a substrate is coated with extremely thin layers of polymer. The layers in the stack are sandwiched between two sets of crossed electrodes. Each point of intersection represents a memory cell containing one bit of information.
7.2 Manufacture
With Thin Films memory technology, polymer solutions can be deposited on flexible substrates with industry standard processes like spin coating in ultra thin layers. Using an allorganic architecture, the Thin Film memory system is suitable for roll-to-roll manufacture. This is a continuous production method where a substrate is wound from one reel to another while being processed. The basic premise is to exploit the fact that polymers can be handled as
liquids and, at a later stage, printed directly with the cross matrices of electrodes, thus allowing square meters of memory and processing devices to be produced by the second. This can be taken even further by the use of simple ink-jet printers. Such printers, with modified printer heads, will have the capability to print complete memory chips at the desktop in the future. With the Thin Film technology, there are no individual components that must be assembled in a purpose-built factory, nor is the technology limited to a particular substrate.
That is, you move from talking about area to talking about volume. Put simply, a 128 MB RAM module will have the same footprint as a 64 MB module, but slightly thicker (or higher). This difference in thickness or height will be so small, that we may not even be able to tell the difference by just looking at it. If a 64 MB silicon-based module takes up 20mmx10mmx6mm (1200 cubic mm of space), then 124 MB occupies approximately double that volume. However, with polymer-based memory, the footprint (length x breadth) will remain the same (200 sq mm) but the height would increase only by about 1/10000th of a millimeter, which adds practically nothing to the volume. Polymer memory layers are just 1/10,000 of a millimeter or less in thickness, autonomous and easy to deposit. Layer upon layer may be coated on a substrate. A layer may include a self-contained active memory structure with on-layer circuitry and TFT, or share circuitry (as in hybrid polymer-over-silicon chips). In the latter case, stacked layers may be individually addressed from the bottom circuitry, giving three dimensional storage capacities. The Thin Film memory system is expandable by the addition of new layers manufacturers will be able to gain previously unattainable storage capacity within a given footprint. Examples: The equivalent of 400,000 CDs, or 60,000 DVDs, or 126 years of MPG music may be stored on a polymer memory chip the size of a credit card.
holographic storage opens the possibility of reading and writing data a million bits at a time, instead of one by one as with magnetic storage. That means you could duplicate an entire DVD movie in mere seconds. The idea of storing tons of data three-dimensionally was first proposed by Polaroid scientist Pieter J. van Heerden in the 1960s. But developing the technology was difficult, because the required optical equipment was large and expensive. A typical laser back then, for example, was two meters long. Today, lasers are measured in mere centimeters and are much cheaper.
9.2 Speed
The absence of moving parts offers a substantial speed advantage compared to mechanical storage systems such as magnetic hard disks and optical storage. Thin Film memory technology is all solid state based. The absence of moving parts in itself offers a substantial speed advantage compared to all mechanical systems, like magnetic hard disks and optical systems. The polymer film can be read in two modes either destructive or non-destructive. In the first case, reading speed is symmetric with write. Depending on how the polymer is processed and initialized this speed can range from nanoseconds to microseconds. This speed symmetry puts the Thin Film memory in a favorable position versus e.g. another non-volatile memory, NAND flash, where the erase before write may be orders of magnitude slower than
the read. In the non-destructive read mode the Thin Film memory speed will be comparable to or better than DRAM read speeds. More important than single bit speed capacity is the potentials embedded in the 3D architecture per sec, allowing massive parallelism in multiple dimensions and the use of mega words rather than the prevailing 64 and 128 bit words.
9.3 Cost
Cost-wise, because the polymer is solution-based and can easily be applied to large surfaces with regular coating processes (even something as simple as printing a photograph on an inkjet printer), there is a huge advantage in terms of price for capacity. The use of a solution based memory material opens up for better price/capacity performance than hitherto experienced by the electronic industry. For the hybrid silicon-polymer chips, the substrate circuitry with one memory layer will typically cost the same to process per area unit as competing silicon devices, however, since more bits can be packaged in that area, the cost per MB will be substantially lower. The ability to expand capacity by stacking also means that the cost per MB will reduce substantially. TFE believes that the cost per MB will become so low that truly disposable memory chips will become possible. One report says that this technology could take flash card prices to 10 per cent of what they are today. One can imagine what this would mean to laptops (same footprint, but gigabytes of space and RAM), mobile phones (more and more phone numbers and SMS messages), PDAs (more e-mail, more addresses, and more notes), digital cameras (more and better pictures per card, and the cards are cheap!). The news is explosive: Evidently, for the cost of a few cents, a Norwegian company can produce a memory module with a capacity of up to 170,000 gigabytes, which could fit on a bank card. This price advantage scales with the number of memory layers. Typically 8 layers involve about the same number of mask steps as making a conventional memory chip, or twice the cost of a single layer chip, while the storage capacity increases 8x. Even greater cost advantages will come with TFT based chips, using inkjet printers or roll-to-roll production. Cost per MB will here become so low that true disposable memory chips can be envisaged.
Polymers are robust by nature. The polymer memory developed by Thin Film has undergone stringent reliability tests at temperatures between -40 and 110C. The results underline the exceptional stability of the polymer memory and compliance with military and commercial standard tests.
In Coatues chip an electric field draws ions up through the polymer increasing the conductivity. Difference in conductivity represents bits of data. Coatue is a research and development company on the forefront of a new generation of memory chips based on
electronic polymers. This disruptive technology promises to deliver cheaper, higher performance, higher density memory for use in many products ranging from portable devices to desktop computers. Coatue's memories utilize molecular storage, eliminating the need for transistors to store information and drastically simplifying both the architecture and manufacturing process of today's chips. Coatue's multi-state polymer materials emulate the function of traditional memory cells by switching between on and off states, representing 1's and 0's. Polymer memory devices have significant advantages over existing memory storage techniques, however. Polymer memory does not require transistors which drastically reduces the cell footprint and simplifies the cell architecture. Large on/off ratios in Coatue's chips provide hundreds of distinct conductivity states which yield up to eight bits per memory cell (versus 2 in Flash and 1 in DRAM). In addition, polymers can be stacked vertically on a single piece of silicon paving the way for true three dimensional architectures, further enhancing the density. In terms of performance, polymer cells have fast switching speeds (ultimately in the terahertz domain) and can retain information for long periods of time. Because polymer memory utilizes a molecular switching mechanism, Coatue's chips can be scaled down to molecular dimensions (1-10 nm). Finally, polymer materials can be deposited on traditional silicon for near term commercialization and are solution soluble for extremely low cost reel-to-reel manufacture in the future.
Polymer memory layers can be stacked this enable to achieve very high storage capacity.
2. Memory is Nonvolatile 3. Fast read and write speeds 4. Very low cost/bit, high capacity per dollar 5. Low power consumption
6.
Easy manufacture use ink-jet printers to spray liquid-polymer circuits onto a surface
7. Thin Film system requires about 0.5 million transistors per gigabit of memory. Traditional silicon-based system would require between 1.5 to 6.5 billion transistors for that same gigabit.
11.1. Future
Cost per MB will here become so low that true disposable memory chips can be envisaged. One report says that this technology could take flash card prices to 10 per cent of what they are today. By 2004, Coatue hopes to have memory chips on the market that can store 32 gigabits, outperforming flash memory, which should hold about two gigabits by then, to produce a three-dimensional structure. One can imagine what this would mean to laptops (same footprint, but gigabytes of space and RAM), mobile phones (more and more phone numbers and SMS messages), PDAs (more e-mail, more addresses, and more notes), digital cameras (more and better pictures per
card, and the cards are cheap!). Evidently, for the cost of a few cents, a Norwegian company can produce a memory module with a capacity of up to 170,000 gigabytes, which could fit on a bank card. As polymer memory technology advances, it could pave the way to computers made entirely of plastic electronic components, from the display to the logic chip. That may be decades off, but as researchers push the bounds of polymers, the vision seems less far-fetched. And in the short term, Coatue says its polymer memory could be integrated into the existing silicon infrastructure. The revolution has already begun, says MIT chemist Tim Swagger, a scientific advisor to Coatue.
12. CONCLUSION
The fundamental strength, i.e. the stacking of memory layers which yields maximum storage capacity in a given footprint is the main reason why Polymer memory is highly preferred. The nonvolatileness and other features are in built in molecular level and offers very high advantages in terms of cost. Polymers ,which are once considered to be the main reason for pollution and referred to be removed from the earth, has found a new area of utilization.
13. REFERENCE
2.
3.
4. www.technologyreview.com 5. www.intel.com 6. Technical paper, "Memory Device Applications of a Conjugated Polymer: Role of Space Charges," Journal of Applied Physics, February 15, 2002.