%0 Thesis
%A Sharma, Abhishek
A.
%D 2015
%T S-type Negative Differential Resistance: Emerging Memory and Oscillators for Next-Generation Computation
%U https://kilthub.cmu.edu/articles/thesis/S-type_Negative_Differential_Resistance_Emerging_Memory_and_Oscillators_for_Next-Generation_Computation/7416239
%R 10.1184/R1/7416239.v1
%2 https://kilthub.cmu.edu/ndownloader/files/13726322
%K S-type Negative Differential Resistance
%X Increasing data-centric nature of compute has motivated the need for overcoming the von Neumann memory-access bottleneck. Multi-functional beyond-CMOS have shown a great potential in uniquely complementing and augmenting the compute capability by utilizing emerging paradigms like on-chip memory and brain-inspired computing. In this work, we focus on first understanding the physics of devices that show S-type negative differential resistance behavior (S-NDR) and then engineering them for use in emerging memory (RRAM, selectors) and compute (oscillators for simulated annealing, neural networks, physically obfuscated keys) architectures. To understand the electro-thermal dynamics of filament formation in metal semiconductor/oxide
-metal (MSM) stacks, we first develop a novel high-speed transient thermometry. This reveals a two-step current localization and nucleation process that is responsible for forming or threshold switching in these MSM stacks. This current localization event manifests as S-NDR in these
devices, which we explore to variously understand threshold switching and oscillatory behavior. We also apply the developed nano-scale thermometry to resistive switching memory devices to extract the role of temperature in the switching process. After establishing self-consistency with
microstructural changes under a TEM, we estimate the filament size and evolution with bias and current compliance.
%I Carnegie Mellon University