Crossbar ReRAM chases terabyte non-volatile memory

Article By : Peter Clarke

The ReRAM is showing advantages over flash memory, including read latencies of 20 nanoseconds and write latencies of 12 nanoseconds.

California-based start-up Crossbar, a developer of non-volatile resistive RAM (ReRAM) based on silver-over-amorphous-silicon technology, has kept its promise to be in production in 2016.

The Crossbar ReRAM for embedded non-volatile memory applications is in production at partner foundry Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) using a 40nm CMOS process and is sampling to SMIC customers, according to Sylvain Dubois, Crossbar’s vice president of strategic marketing and business development.

Dubois told EE Times Europe that not only is 40nm ReRAM in production but that production on 28nm CMOS would follow soon. Dubois defined that to mean the first half of 2017, but he declined to say whether that would be with SMIC or another foundry.

Founded in 2010, Crossbar is well-backed with more than $80 million raised to date, including support from the China-based venture capital firm Northern Light Venture Capital. It is pursuing an IP licensing business model.

Crossbar is one of many companies racing to develop a non-volatile memory technology that could replace flash memory and scale to 28nm and beyond. ReRAM has looked a likely candidate after the failure of phase change memory to succeed in the market place. But there are numerous versions of ReRAM technology and in many cases a deep understanding of the physics behind switching and failure modes has been missing. Some have even indicated that Magnetic RAM could be the non-volatile memory to win out at the 28nm node.

Another rival is non-volatile memory based on a layer of carbon nanotubes in a matrix as offered by Nantero (Woburn, Mass.) which has licensed its technology to fabless chip company Fujitsu Semiconductor and to foundry Mie Fujitsu Semiconductor for use at 55nm and with 40nm to follow.

"Some applications need 16Mbit and more and some don't need that. We are working on larger macros but we also let customers develop ReRAM macros," said Dubois.

The ReRAM is already showing considerable advantages over flash memory, including read latencies of 20 nanoseconds and write latencies of 12 nanoseconds, which compare with millisecond latencies for flash memory, Dubois said. "We don't have block erase so a single byte can be rewritten," he added. As to endurance Dubois said Crossbar guarantees 100k read-write cycles. "For these applications 100k is the target although we are pushing for higher endurance," said Dubois.

Crossbar is pursuing a twin-track business strategy working on both ReRAM for embedded non-volatile and also as a technology developer of high capacity stand-alone memories. The embedded NVM is about a year ahead in terms of maturity although at the 2016 Flash Memory Summit and at 2017's Consumer Electronics Show Crossbar has been demonstrating its ability to do cross-point arrays with a select element.

Crossbar also claims the ability to do 3D stacking of its dense cross-point memory arrays, which together the ability to scale below 10nm and to store multiple bits per cell, would allow high capacity non-volatile terabyte memories on a single die.

Dubois said Crossbar was working with a company or companies to create high-capacity discrete ReRAM and that it would use a licensing business model there too. He declined to name any partners or licensees.

Previously Crossbar had stated that it would develop stand-alone memories under its own brand to replace NOR flash in code storage and NAND flash in data storage. "To enter the market has to be through strong strategic alliances," said Dubois. "We want to be the ARM of memory."

Dubois said that none of Crossbar's customers is in commercial production themselves with ICs with embedded ReRAM but now that they have samples from SMIC that point was approaching quickly. "This is a critical phase for the company and the market. We have to prove reliability."

This article first appeared on EE Times Europe

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