Experimental demonstration of combination-encoding content-addressable memory of 0.75 bits per switch utilizing Hf–Zr–O ferroelectric tunnel junctions
Abstract
We experimentally demonstrate the concept of combination-encoding content-addressable memory (CECAM) that offers much higher content density than any other content-addressable memory devices proposed to date. In this work, CECAM was fabricated and validated with a hafnium-zirconium oxide (HZO) ferroelectric tunnel junction (FTJ) crossbar array. The new CAM structure, which utilizes nonvolatile memory devices, offers numerous advantages including low-current operation (FTJ), standby power reduction (ferroelectric HZO), and increased content density. Multibit data are encoded and stored in multi-switch CECAM. Perfect-match searching in CECAM with a reasonable match current (lower than nA) for different sizes of CECAM has been validated from a novel CAM device. We demonstrate N-CECAM (with keys encoded into 2N-long binary arrays) for N = 3 (using 6 FTJs) and 4 (using 8 FTJs), leading to content densities of 0.667 and 0.75 bits per switch, which highlight 33% and 50% increase in content density compared to that of the conventional TCAM (0.5 bits per switch)
- This article is part of the themed collection: Memristors and Neuromorphic Systems