Davide Lombardo, Saketh Ram Mamidala, et al.
DRC 2024
Electronic tunneling is a fundamentally quantum mechanical phenomenon. In a magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ), the tunnel conductance is further dependent on the electron’s spin-state, adding another degree of freedom, and leading to spin-orientation dependent tunnel resistance – known as tunnel magnetoresistance, and a spin-polarized tunnel current carrying angular momentum flow in addition to charge current. These two uniquely quantum mechanical attributes, a spin-dependent magnetoresistance, and a spin-current flow, brought a nanomagnetic tunnel junction capable of performing both read- and write-operation in a charge-current controlled environment such as in an integrated CMOS technology for computing. In this article, I review some of the basic concepts involved in an MTJ, for its tunnel magnetoresistance, and for its spin-current related spin-transfer-torque switching, and some of the lessons learnt over the course of developing the STT-switched MTJ for CMOS-integrated memory as a commercial technology.
Davide Lombardo, Saketh Ram Mamidala, et al.
DRC 2024
Gianmarco Gabrieli, Irina Espejo Morales, et al.
Digital Discovery
Giulia Prone, Dominik Scherrer, et al.
Swiss Phot. Ind. Symp. on Phot. Sens. 2024
Shrivani Pandiya, Serge Ecoffey, et al.
ECTC 2023