Millipede memory

Millipede memory is a non-volatile computer memory stored on nanoscopic pits burned into the surface of a thin polymer layer, read and written by a MEMS-based probe.[1][2] It promised a data density of more than 1 terabit per square inch (1 gigabit per square millimeter), which is about the limit of the perpendicular recording hard drives. Millipede storage technology was pursued as a potential replacement for magnetic recording in hard drives, at the same time reducing the form-factor to that of flash media. IBM demonstrated a prototype millipede storage device at CeBIT 2005, and was trying to make the technology commercially available by the end of 2007. However, because of concurrent advances in competing storage technologies, no commercial product has been made available since then.

Technology

Basic concept

The main memory of modern computers is constructed from one of a number of DRAM-related devices. DRAM basically consists of a series of capacitors, which store data as the presence or absence of electrical charge. Each capacitor and its associated control circuitry, referred to as a cell, holds one bit, and bits can be read or written in large blocks at the same time. In contrast, hard drives store data on a disk that is covered with a magnetic material; data is represented as local magnetisation of this material. Reading and writing are accomplished by a single head, which waits for the requested memory location to pass under the head while the disk spins. As a result, the drive's performance is limited by the mechanical speed of the motor, and is generally hundreds of thousands of times slower than DRAM. However, since the "cells" in a hard drive are much smaller, the storage density is much higher than DRAM.

Millipede storage attempts to combine features of both. Like a hard drive, millipede stores data in a substrate or medium and accesses the data by moving the medium under the head as well. However, millipede uses many nanoscopic heads that can read and write in parallel, thereby increasing the throughput. Additionally, millipede's physical medium stores a bit in a small area, leading to high storage densities. Mechanically, millipede uses numerous atomic force probes each of which is responsible for reading and writing a large number of bits associated with it. Bits are stored as a pit, or the absence of one, in the surface of a thermo-active polymer deposited as a thin film on a carrier known as the sled. Any one probe can only read or write a fairly small area of the sled available to it, a storage field. Normally the sled is moved to position the selected bits under the probe using electromechanical actuators similar to those that position the read/write head in a typical hard drive, although the actual distance moved is tiny. The sled is moved in a scanning pattern to bring the requested bits under the probe, a process known as x/y scan.

The amount of memory serviced by any one field/probe pair is fairly small, but so is its physical size. Many such field/probe pairs are used to make up a memory device. Data reads and writes can be spread across many fields in parallel, increasing the throughput and improving the access times. For instance, a single 32-bit value would normally be written as a set of single bits sent to 32 different fields. In the initial experimental devices, the probes were mounted in a 32x32 grid for a total of 1,024 probes. As the layout looked like the legs on a millipede (animal), the name stuck. The design of the cantilever array involves making numerous mechanical cantilevers, on which a probe has to be mounted. All the cantilevers are made entirely out of silicon, using surface micromachining at the wafer surface.

Non-crosslinked polymers retain a low glass temperature, around 120 °C for PMMA[3] and if the tip is heated to above the glass temperature, it leaves a small indentation. Indentations have been made at 3 nm lateral resolution.[4] By heating the probe immediately next to an indentation, the polymer will re-melt and fill in the indentation, erasing it (see also: thermo-mechanical Scanning Probe Lithography). After writing, the probe tip can be used to read the indentations. If each indentation is treated as one bit then a storage density of 0.9 Tb/in2 could theoretically be achieved.[4]

Thermal writing and erasing of a bit

Reading and writing data

Each probe in the cantilever array stores and reads data thermo-mechanically, handling one bit at a time.To accomplish a read, the probe tip is heated to around 300 °C and moved in proximity to the data sled. If the probe is located over a pit the cantilever will push it into the hole, increasing the surface area in contact with the sled, and in turn increasing the cooling as heat leaks into the sled from the probe. In the case where there is no pit at that location, only the very tip of the probe remains in contact with the sled, and the heat leaks away more slowly. The electrical resistance of the probe is a function of its temperature, rising with increasing temperature. Thus when the probe drops into a pit and cools, this registers as a drop in resistance. A low resistance will be translated to a "1" bit, or a "0" bit otherwise. While reading an entire storage field, the tip is dragged over the entire surface and the resistance changes are constantly monitored. To write a bit, the tip of the probe is heated to a temperature above the glass transition temperature of the polymer used to manufacture the data sled, which is generally acrylic glass. In this case the transition temperature is around 400 °C. To write a "1", the polymer in proximity to the tip is softened, and then the tip is gently touched to it, causing a dent. To erase the bit and return it to the zero state, the tip is instead pulled up from the surface, allowing surface tension to pull the surface flat again. Older experimental systems used a variety of erasure techniques that were generally more time consuming and less successful. These older systems offered around 100,000 erases, but the available references do not contain enough information to say if this has been improved with the newer techniques. As one might expect, the need to heat the probes requires a fairly large amount of power for general operation. However, the exact amount is dependent on the speed that data is being accessed; at slower rates the cooling during read is smaller, as is the number of times the probe has to be heated to a higher temperature to write. When operated at data rates of a few megabits per second, Millipede is expected to consume about 100 milliwatts, which is in the range of flash memory technology and considerably below hard drives. However, one of the main advantages of the Millipede design is that it is highly parallel, allowing it to run at much higher speeds into the GB/s. At these sorts of speeds one might expect power requirements more closely matching current hard drives. Data transfer speed is limited to the kilobits-per-second range for an individual probe, which amounts to a few megabits for an entire array. Experiments done at IBM's Almaden Research Center showed that individual tips could support data rates as high as 1 - 2 megabits per second, potentially offering aggregate speeds in the GB/s range.

First devices

The earliest generation millipede devices used probes 10 nanometers in diameter and 70 nanometers in length, producing pits about 40 nm in diameter on fields 92 µm x 92 µm. Arranged in a 32 x 32 grid, the resulting 3 mm x 3 mm chip stores 500 megabits of data or 62.5 MB, resulting in an areal density, the number of bits per square inch, on the order of 200 Gbit/in². IBM initially demonstrated this device in 2003, planning to introduce it commercially in 2005. By that point hard drives were approaching 150 Gbit/in², and have since surpassed it.

Devices demonstrated at CeBIT in 2005 have improved on the basic design, using a 64 x 64 cantilever chips with a 7 mm x 7 mm data sled, boosting the data storage capacity to 800 Gbit/in² using smaller pits. It appears the pit size can scale to about 10 nm, resulting in a theoretical areal density just over 1Tbit/in². IBM planned to introduce devices based on this sort of density in 2007. For comparison, as of late 2011, laptop hard drives are shipping with a density of 636 Gbit/in²,[5] and it is expected that heat-assisted magnetic recording and patterned media together could support densities of 10 Tbit/in².[6] Flash reached almost 250 Gbit/in² in early 2010.[7] As of 2015, because of concurrent advances in competing storage technologies, no commercial product has been made available so far.

See also

References

  1. Vettiger, Peter; et al. (2002). "The" millipede"-nanotechnology entering data storage.". Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on 1.1 (2002): 39-55. doi:10.1109/TNANO.2002.1005425.
  2. Giovanni Campardo; Federico Tiziani; Massimo Iaculo (4 February 2011). Memory Mass Storage. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 95–. ISBN 978-3-642-14752-4.
  3. Mamin & Rugar "Thermomechanical writing with an atomic force microscope tip" Applied Physics Letters (1992)
  4. 1 2 King, William P.; Goodson, Kenneth E. (2002). "Thermal Writing and Nanoimaging With a Heated Atomic Force Microscope Cantilever". Journal of Heat Transfer. 124 (4): 597. doi:10.1115/1.1502634.
  5. Hartin, Erin (2011-08-03). "Hitachi GST Ships One Terabyte Per Platter Hard Drives". Hitachi Global Storage Technologies. Retrieved 2011-12-17.
  6. Johnston, Casey (2011-05-07). "New hard drive write method packs in one terabit per inch". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2011-12-17.
  7. Mearian, Lucas (January 31, 2010). "Intel Micron to announce world's densest flash memory". computerworld.com.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.