SOLID MEMORY
In one embodiment of the present invention, recording and erasing of data in PRAM have hitherto been performed based on a change in physical characteristics caused by primary phase-transformation of a crystalline state and an amorphous state of a chalcogen compound including Te which serves as a recording material. Since, however, a recording thin film is formed of a polycrystal but not a single crystal, a variation in resistance values occurs and a change in volume caused upon phase-transition has placed a limit on the number of times of readout of the record. The above problem is solved by preparing a solid memory having a superlattice structure with a thin film containing Sb and a thin film containing Te. The solid memory can realize the number of times of repeated recording and erasing of 1015.
The present invention relates to a phase-separation solid memory for recording and erasing, as data, a difference in electric resistance or optical characteristics which is caused by phase-separation (spindle separation) of a chalcogen compound which is a form of phase-change. Because phase-separation is a form of phase-change, the phase-separation solid memory also can be described as a phase-change solid memory (phase-separation RAM, PRAM).
BACKGROUND ARTRecording and erasing of data in phase-change RAM have hitherto been performed based on a change in physical characteristics caused by primary phase-transformation between a crystalline state and an amorphous state of a chalcogen compound including Te which serves as a recording material, and phase-change RAM has been designed based on this basic principle (for example, see Patent Literature 1 below).
A Recording material used for recording and erasing data in a phase-change RAM is generally formed between electrodes by using a vacuum film formation method such as sputtering. Usually, a single-layered alloy thin film made by using a target made of a compound is used as such recording material.
Therefore, a recording thin film of 20-50 nm in thickness consists of a polycrystal but not a single crystal.
A difference in interfacial electric resistance between individual microcrystals influences uniformity in electric resistance values throughout a phase-change RAM as a whole, and causes variations in resistance values in a crystalline state (see Non Patent Literature 1 below).
Furthermore, it is considered that about 10% change in volume generated in phase-transition between a crystalline state and an amorphous state causes individual microcrystals to have different stresses, and flow of material and deformation of an entire film restrict the number of times of readout of record (see Non Patent Literature 2 below).
Patent Literature 1: Japanese Patent Application Publication, Tokukai, No. 2002-203392 ANon Patent Literature 1: supervisor: Masahiro Okuda, Zisedai Hikari Kiroku Gizyutsu to Zairyo (Technology and Materials for Future Optical Memories), CMC Publishing Company, issued on Jan. 31, 2004, p 114
Non Patent Literature 2: supervisor: Yoshito Kadota, Hikari Disc Storage no Kiso to Oyo, edited by The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineer (IEICE), third impression of the first edition issued on Jun. 1, 2001, p 209
Non Patent Literature 4: A. Kolobov et al. Nature Materials 3 (2004) p 703
SUMMARY OF INVENTION Technical ProblemRegarding a crystalline structure and an amorphous structure of a chalcogen compound including Te, the structural analysis has been made by X-ray and so on since the latter 1980s. However, since the atomic number of Te is next to that of Sb atoms which form the compound with Te and the number of electrons of Te is different from that of Sb atoms only by one, X-ray diffraction and electron ray diffraction have hardly succeeded in discriminating Te from Sb. Consequently, detail of the crystalline structure of the chalcogen compound had been unclear until 2004.
Particularly, experiments have demonstrated that characteristics of a compound called GeSbTe (225 composition) and compositions prepared based on a pseudobinary compound (a compound prepared based on GeTe—Sb2Te3, i.e. 225, 147 and 125 compositions), which have been already commercialized in the field of rewritable optical discs, are very excellent. However, it has been considered that crystalline structures of the compound and the compositions are sodium chloride structures with Te occupying a site (site (a)) which Na occupies and with Ge or Sb occupying a site (site (b)) which Cl occupies, and the way of occupying is random (see Non Patent Literature 3 above).
Solution to ProblemWhen structural analysis of a GeSbTe compound was made minutely by a synchrotron radiation orbit unit and so on, it was found that a chalcogen compound including Te took on a different aspect from a conventional structure in the following points (see Non Patent Literature 4 above).
1. In a crystalline phase, orderings of Ge atoms and Sb atoms which occupy positions of Cl (site (b)) within NaCl—simple cubic lattices are not in a “random” state as having been considered so far, but positions of orderings of atoms are properly “determined”. Furthermore, lattices are twisted (see
2. In an amorphous state, orderings of atoms are not entirely random, but Ge atoms within crystalline lattices are positioned closer to Te atoms by 2 A from the center (though a bit misaligned and ferroelectric), and the amorphous state has a twisted structure while maintaining its atom unit (see
3. Restoration of the twisted unit enables high-speed switching to be repeated stably (see
However, rewritable optical discs without Ge are also commercialized. In DVD-RW and DVD+RW, materials consisting mainly of Sb and additionally containing Te are used, and particularly, composition including Sb2Te is mainly used.
A model of the GeSbTe alloy including Ge was applied to an alloy including Sb and Te, and the result of the application was minutely analyzed by experiments and computer simulation. As a result, it was found that in a chalcogen compound including Ge, a recording or erasing state is formed by changing positions of Ge atoms as shown in
From a principle of the interlaminar separation switching which was newly found, it was found that formation of a chalcogen compound without Ge by the following method allows providing a new phase-separation RAM capable of reducing interfacial electric resistance between individual microcrystals as much as possible, and of drastically increasing the number of times of repeated rewriting.
That is, it was found that a new phase-separation RAM which drastically improves characteristics of a conventional phase-change RAM can be provided by artificially forming a chalcogen compound including Sb and Te as a superlattice including a Sb thin film and a Sb2Te3 thin film, combining a Sb layer with a Sb2Te3 layer via a weak atomic bond, cutting the combination only in an interlaminar direction by electric energy and forming and fixing a state with high electric resistance (a state of recording (erasing)), and recombining by electric energy and restoring a state with low electric resistance (a state of erasing (recording)).
In a case of forming such an artificial superlattice by sputtering, it is preferable that a speed of film formation per time with respect to an electric power required for sputtering be measured in advance by using a compound target including Sb or Sb2Te3 (or by using single target). By doing this, only controlling a time for the film formation allows easily forming such an artificial superlattice structure including these films.
In a case of forming a single-layered recording film with use of a compound target including composition of Sb and Te, a direction of interlaminar separation within a resulting microcrystal is random with respect to each microcrystal, and electric energy given in order to cut interlaminar combination does not have coherency, hence a lot of heat energy has to be wasted as entropy to a system thermodynamically, whereas in a superlattice structure of the present invention, switching motion by interlaminar combination is performed in a single direction (that is, having coherency) in a recording film as shown in
Therefore, energy efficiency for performing switching motion by interlaminar combination is improved. Furthermore, limiting a change in volume (change in volume between a crystalline state and an amorphous state) caused by rewriting only to a uniaxial direction (that is, a work) between layers allows operation of stably repeated rewriting without composition segregation.
ADVANTAGEOUS EFFECTS OF INVENTIONWith the present invention, formation of a superlattice structure including made of a chalcogen compound with different compositions without Ge enables characteristics of a phase-change RAM having a chalcogen compound including Ge to be improved drastically.
Best mode for carrying out the present invention is described below.
Example 1A phase-separation RAM was formed using a basic technique of general self-resistance heating. That is, TiN was used for an electrode. 20 layers of superlattices of Sb and Sb2Te3 were laminated and the laminate was used as a recording film. The size of a cell is 100×100 nm2 square.
Comparison between
A voltage was applied on this device programmatically and current values in recording and erasing were measured. The results of the measurements show that in recording, the current value was 0.35 mA and the time of pulse was 5 ns, and in erasing, the current value was 0.08 mA and the time of pulse was 60 ns. The number of times of repeated recording and erasing at these current values was measured to be 1014.
Reference ExampleA phase-change RAM was formed using a technique of general self-resistance heating as in Example 1. A 20 nm single-layered film of Sb2Te was formed for a recording film. The size of a cell was 100×100 nm2 square. A voltage was applied on this device programmatically and current values in recording and erasing were measured.
As a result, the current value in recording was 1.3 mA and the current value in erasing was 0.65 mA. Note that irradiation time of pulse was the same as in Example 1. The number of times of repeated recording and erasing at these current values was measured to be 1011.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITYIn the present invention, the current value in recording data in a phase-change RAM can be decreased to be one-tenth or less, and the number of times of repeated rewriting of data can be increased by 2-3 digits or more, compared with a conventional phase-change RAM. Therefore, the present invention can make meaningful contribution to the industry.
Claims
1. A Solid Memory,
- electric characteristics thereof changing due to phase-separation of a substance constituting the solid memory,
- the substance serving as a material for recording and reproducing data, the material including a laminated structure of artificial superlattices whose electric characteristics change due to the phase-separation.
2. The solid memory as set forth in claim 1, wherein:
- the laminated structure is made of alloy thin films including stibium (Sb) atoms and alloy thin films including tellurium (Te) atoms.
3. The solid memory as set forth in claim 1, wherein:
- a thickness of each of the alloy thin films including stibium (Sb) atoms and the alloy thin films including tellurium (Te) atoms ranges from 0.3 to 2 nm.
4. The solid memory as set forth in claim 2, wherein:
- data is recorded by causing interfaces between the alloy thin films including stibium (Sb) atoms and the alloy thin films including tellurium (Te) atoms to be in a one-dimensionally anisotropically separated state.
5. The solid memory as set forth in claim 2, wherein:
- data is erased by causing interfaces between the alloy thin films including stibium (Sb) atoms and the alloy thin films including tellurium (Te) atoms, having been in a one-dimensionally anisotropically separated state, to be in a recombined state.
6. The solid memory as set forth in claim 2, wherein:
- a thickness of each of the alloy thin films including stibium (Sb) atoms and the alloy thin films including tellurium (Te) atoms ranges from 0.3 to 2 nm.
Type: Application
Filed: Jun 13, 2008
Publication Date: Aug 19, 2010
Inventors: Junji Tominaga (Ibaraki), James Paul Fons (Ibaraki), Alexander Kolobov (Ibaraki)
Application Number: 12/733,295
International Classification: H01L 45/00 (20060101);