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Author

Jason Allen Janesky

Other affiliations: Motorola
Bio: Jason Allen Janesky is an academic researcher from Freescale Semiconductor. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetoresistive random-access memory & Layer (electronics). The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 51 publications receiving 1509 citations. Previous affiliations of Jason Allen Janesky include Motorola.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a 4Mb magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM) with a novel magnetic bit cell and toggle switching mode is presented, which greatly improves the operational performance of the MRAM as compared to conventional MRAM.
Abstract: A 4-Mb magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM) with a novel magnetic bit cell and toggle switching mode is presented. The circuit was designed in a five level metal, 0.18-mum complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor process with a bit cell size of 1.55 mum2. The new bit cell uses a balanced synthetic antiferromagnetic free layer and a phased write pulse sequence to provide robust switching performance with immunity from half-select disturbs. This switching mode greatly improves the operational performance of the MRAM as compared to conventional MRAM. A detailed description of this 4-Mb toggle MRAM is presented

514 citations

Patent
16 Oct 2001
TL;DR: In this article, a scalable magnetoresistive memory cell including the steps of providing a magnetoregressive memory device sandwiched between a word line and a digit line so that current waveforms can be applied to the word and digit lines at various times to cause a magnetic field flux to rotate the effective magnetic moment vector of the device by approximately 180°.
Abstract: A method to switch a scalable magnetoresistive memory cell including the steps of providing a magnetoresistive memory device sandwiched between a word line and a digit line so that current waveforms can be applied to the word and digit lines at various times to cause a magnetic field flux to rotate the effective magnetic moment vector of the device by approximately 180°. The magnetoresistive memory device includes N ferromagnetic layers that are anti-ferromagnetically coupled. N can be adjusted to change the magnetic switching volume of the device.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The technology that enabled present toggle and STT-MRAM products, future STT, and new MRAM technologies beyond STT are reviewed.
Abstract: Magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM) is regarded as a reliable persistent memory technology because of its long data retention and robust endurance. Initial MRAM products utilized toggle mode writing of a balanced synthetic antiferromagnet (SAF) free layer to overcome problems with half-selected bits that challenged traditional Stoner–Wohlfarth switching. With the development of spin transfer torque (STT) switching in perpendicular magnetic tunnel junctions, the capability for scaling MRAM products increased markedly, enabling a 1-Gb device in 2019. Ongoing research will allow scaling to even higher capacities. Compared to traditional memories, STT-MRAM can save power, improve performance, and enhance system data integrity, which supports the growing computing demands for everything from data centers to Internet of Things (IoT) devices. This article provides a review of the technology that enabled present toggle and STT-MRAM products, future STT-MRAM products, and new MRAM technologies beyond STT.

92 citations

Patent
04 Jun 2003
TL;DR: In this article, a magnetoresistive tunneling junction memory cell (MNTJ) consisting of a pinned ferromagnetic region (17) having a magnetic moment vector (47) fixed in a preferred direction in the absence of an applied magnetic field was proposed.
Abstract: A magnetoresistive tunneling junction memory cell (10) comprising a pinned ferromagnetic region (17) having a magnetic moment vector (47) fixed in a preferred direction in the absence of an applied magnetic field wherein the pinned ferromagnetic region has a magnetic fringing field (96), an electrically insulating material positioned on the pinned ferromagnetic region to form a magnetoresistive tunneling junction (16), and a free ferromagnetic region (15) having a magnetic moment vector (53) oriented in a position parallel or anti-parallel to that of the pinned ferromagnetic region wherein the magnetic fringing field is chosen to obtain a desired switching field.

83 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the intrinsic reliability of magnetoresistive tunnel junction (MTJ) memory bits and the metal interconnect system of MRAM are two areas of great interest due to the new materials involved in this emerging technology.
Abstract: The successful commercialization of MRAM will rely on providing customers with a robust and reliable memory product. The intrinsic reliability of magnetoresistive tunnel junction (MTJ) memory bits and the metal interconnect system of MRAM are two areas of great interest due to the new materials involved in this emerging technology. Time dependent dielectric breakdown (TDDB) and resistance drift were the two main failure mechanisms identified for intrinsic memory bit reliability. Results indicated that a lifetime over 10 years is achievable under the operating condition. For metal interconnect system, the initial results of Cu with magnetic cladding have met the reliability performance of typical nonclad Cu backend process in electromigration (EM) and iso-thermal annealing (ITA). Finally data retention is demonstrated over times orders of magnitude longer than 10 years.

61 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors are starting to see a new paradigm where magnetization dynamics and charge currents act on each other in nanostructured artificial materials, allowing faster, low-energy operations: spin electronics is on its way.
Abstract: Electrons have a charge and a spin, but until recently these were considered separately. In classical electronics, charges are moved by electric fields to transmit information and are stored in a capacitor to save it. In magnetic recording, magnetic fields have been used to read or write the information stored on the magnetization, which 'measures' the local orientation of spins in ferromagnets. The picture started to change in 1988, when the discovery of giant magnetoresistance opened the way to efficient control of charge transport through magnetization. The recent expansion of hard-disk recording owes much to this development. We are starting to see a new paradigm where magnetization dynamics and charge currents act on each other in nanostructured artificial materials. Ultimately, 'spin currents' could even replace charge currents for the transfer and treatment of information, allowing faster, low-energy operations: spin electronics is on its way.

2,191 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Sep 2005-Science
TL;DR: “Spintronics,” in which both the spin and charge of electrons are used for logic and memory operations, promises an alternate route to traditional semiconductor electronics.
Abstract: “Spintronics,” in which both the spin and charge of electrons are used for logic and memory operations, promises an alternate route to traditional semiconductor electronics. A complete logic architecture can be constructed, which uses planar magnetic wires that are less than a micrometer in width. Logical NOT, logical AND, signal fan-out, and signal cross-over elements each have a simple geometric design, and they can be integrated together into one circuit. An additional element for data input allows information to be written to domain-wall logic circuits.

1,955 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review focuses on recent works that have addressed how to manipulate and detect the magnetic state of an antiferromagnet efficiently and briefly mentions the broader context of spin transport, magnetic textures and dynamics, and materials research.
Abstract: Antiferromagnetic materials are magnetic inside, however, the direction of their ordered microscopic moments alternates between individual atomic sites. The resulting zero net magnetic moment makes magnetism in antiferromagnets invisible on the outside. It also implies that if information was stored in antiferromagnetic moments it would be insensitive to disturbing external magnetic fields, and the antiferromagnetic element would not affect magnetically its neighbors no matter how densely the elements were arranged in a device. The intrinsic high frequencies of antiferromagnetic dynamics represent another property that makes antiferromagnets distinct from ferromagnets. The outstanding question is how to efficiently manipulate and detect the magnetic state of an antiferromagnet. In this article we give an overview of recent works addressing this question. We also review studies looking at merits of antiferromagnetic spintronics from a more general perspective of spin-ransport, magnetization dynamics, and materials research, and give a brief outlook of future research and applications of antiferromagnetic spintronics.

1,737 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The phenomenology of exchange bias and related effects in nanostructures is reviewed in this paper, where the main applications of exchange biased nanostructure are summarized and the implications of the nanometer dimensions on some of the existing exchange bias theories are briefly discussed.

1,721 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reviews spintronics based memories, in particular, magnetic random access memory (MRAM) in a systematic manner and discusses some of the future technologies that might help the industry to move beyond the conventional MRAM technology.

726 citations