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Ovonic memory a reality at last?

Michael Kanellos CNET News.com

Published: 17 Mar 2005 10:05 GMT

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Researchers at Royal Philips Electronics say they have devised a material that could replace existing types of computer memory through a technique that has been studied for years.

The material, a thin layer of antimony and tellurium, could be used to create phase change memory, which largely works the same way CDs and DVDs do. A laser is directed to a microscopic point on a layer of the material to obtain a reflection. The reflection will differ, depending on whether the molecules at that particular point are amorphous or arranged in a crystal. The two types of reflections then become the ones and zeroes of data.

If the material can be used commercially, chips made of it could potentially replace DRAM, flash memory (employed in mobile phones for temporary and permanent storage) or hard drives, depending on how the final device works and gets incorporated into computers.

The challenge, however, has been in changing an amorphous bit to a crystalline one. Typically, phase change materials need to be heated to several hundred degrees Celsius in a few nanoseconds — an operation that requires a lot of electrical energy — while preventing any excess energy from changing an adjacent memory cell. IBM's Millipede, for example, writes data by heating thousands of microscopic spikes to 300°C.

Elpida Memory and Intel, among others, have been experimenting with Ovonic Unified Memory, another type of phase change memory, for years.

Back in 1970, Gordon Moore predicted a strong future for the technology, but no one has commercially mass-produced Ovonic memory yet.

Philips says its doped antimony-tellurium material can switch phases with 0.7V and these phase changes occur extremely quickly, typically within 30ns on the prototype.

Researchers around the globe are searching for materials and structures that will enable their companies to get off the hamster wheel of Moore's Law. By switching from making chips out of silicon, companies hope to reduce their manufacturing costs while devising chips that will be faster, consume less energy and fit into smaller spaces.

Chips made of these new types of materials are expected to come out over the next two decades; still, there is no guarantee that any of them will work in mass production.

Further details will be published in the April issue of Nature Materials.

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