Electrical Switching Dynamics in Circular and Rectangular Ge2Sb2Te5 Nanopillar Phase Change Memory Devices
Ozhan Ozatay, Barry Stipe, Jordan Katine, Bruce Terris

TL;DR
This study investigates the electrical switching behavior of Ge2Sb2Te5 nanopillar phase change memory devices, highlighting how contact geometry and heating schemes influence phase states, reproducibility, and device performance.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive resistance map, analyzes the impact of contact geometry on switching dynamics, and introduces a finite element model to understand thermal and electrical effects in nanoscale PCM devices.
Findings
Non-uniform heating promotes partial amorphization/crystallization.
Circular contacts yield more reproducible switching.
Sharp corners in rectangular contacts cause localized hot spots.
Abstract
We have measured the critical phase change conditions induced by electrical pulses in Ge2Sb2Te5 nanopillar phase change memory devices by constructing a comprehensive resistance map as a function of pulse parameters (width, amplitude and trailing edge). Our measurements reveal that the heating scheme and the details of the contact geometry play the dominant role in determining the final phase composition of the device such that a non-uniform heating scheme promotes partial amorphization/crystallization for a wide range of pulse parameters enabling multiple resistance levels for data storage applications. Furthermore we find that fluctuations in the snap-back voltage and set/reset resistances in repeated switching experiments are related to the details of the current distribution such that a uniform current injection geometry (i.e. circular contact) favors more reproducible switching…
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