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Filamentary Transport and Thermoelectric Effects in Mushroom Phase Change Memory Cells
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arXiv:2606.10262v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: We performed a 2D finite-element electrothermal computational study of thermoelectric effects and filamentary electronic transport in Ge$_2$Sb$_2$Te$_5$ mushroom phase change memory cells during Reset and Set operations, accounting for spatial activation energy variations in amorphous Ge$_2$Sb$_2$Te$_5$ and phase-change dynamics. Reset operations with current going from the top electrode to the narrow 4 nm bottom electrode require $\sim$3x less...
arXiv:2606.10262v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: We performed a 2D finite-element electrothermal computational study of thermoelectric effects and filamentary electronic transport in Ge$_2$Sb$_2$Te$_5$ mushroom phase change memory cells during Reset and Set operations, accounting for spatial activation energy variations in amorphous Ge$_2$Sb$_2$Te$_5$ and phase-change dynamics. Reset operations with current going from the top electrode to the narrow 4 nm bottom electrode require $\sim$3x less energy and power, and $\sim$2x lower current to achieve the same Reset resistance, compared to the opposite polarity, due to thermoelectric effects. Filamentary conduction, electrical breakdown, thermal runaway, and local crystallization of amorphous Ge$_2$Sb$_2$Te$_5$ depend on current polarity and thermal boundary conditions, and determine the location, shape, and volume of the programming region, which may be significantly smaller than the semi-cylindrical mushroom region. The programming volume does not scale with contact dimensions larger than 10 nm. Larger contact areas introduce increased device-to-device and cycle-to-cycle variability due to filamentary conduction but are expected to lead to higher reliability and endurance.