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A Discharge-Path-Based Sensing Circuit With OTS Snapback Current Protection for Phase Change Memoriesopen access

Authors
No, TaeungChoi, SeongjunSung, GaeryunKim, Seong-BeomHan, JaedukSong, Yun-Heub
Issue Date
May-2022
Publisher
IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
Keywords
Phase change materials; Computer architecture; Microprocessors; Discharges (electric); Resistance; Sensors; Current mirrors; Discharge; phase-change memories; sensors; snapback currents
Citation
IEEE ACCESS, v.10, pp.53513 - 53521
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
IEEE ACCESS
Volume
10
Start Page
53513
End Page
53521
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/170206
DOI
10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3175857
ISSN
2169-3536
Abstract
A discharge-path-based sensing circuit is proposed to reduce the damage caused by an ovonic threshold switch (OTS) snapback current to a phase-change memory (PCM). OTS devices are used as access devices (selectors) in most PCM systems to increase the sensitivity and resolve the leakage current problem that occurs during sensing of the PCM cell. Snapback current, which occurs during an OTS phase change by using the OTS device, causes damage to the PCM device and deteriorates the read performance; thus, this study proposes a discharge path circuit as a new sensing method to reduce the damage inflicted on the PCM. In addition, a gate-coupled PMOS (GCPMOS) and a current mirror using a feed-forward technique are designed to reduce the peak value of the energy applied to the PCM. The discharge path circuit, GCPMOS, and the current mirror are designed in a 180-nm CMOS process and occupy an area of 0.19-mm(2). The measurement results after fabrication show that, compared to the conventional sense amplifier based scheme, the discharge path circuit reduces the amount of energy applied to the PCM by 21.8%, and the discharge path circuit with the GCPMOS reduces the total energy consumption by 27.7%. Furthermore, the discharge path circuit with a feed-forward current mirror reduces the initial peak level of the PCM current by 10.1% and the total energy consumption by 34.6%. The proposed sensing circuit is the first snapback protection circuit reported to the public domain.
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