Conference paper

Towards Scalable 3D Integration of 2T-nC FeRAM with Hundreds of Layer Stacking

Abstract

We study the limits of the number of capacitors and read history dependence in a 2T-nC FeRAM cell, paving the way for its high-density integration toward hundreds of stacked layers. Through a comprehensive experimental and simulation study on the scaling behavior of the 2T-nC FeRAM architecture, we demonstrate: (i) successful fabrication of 2T-64C cells with robust memory operation and clearly distinguishable ‘0’ and ‘1’ states, even in 64-capacitor configurations; (ii) that the parasitic capacitance of the floating node originates predominantly from the linear component of the ferroelectric capacitor, and its impact on n-scaling—due to degraded sense margin—can be mitigated by floating unselected capacitors with enough TΩ isolation; (iii) that sharing write and read transistors among n capacitors introduces a read history dependence issue due to fluctuating floating node voltage; and (iv) that a proposed FN discharge scheme can effectively eliminate read-sequence dependence, at the cost of reduced read endurance.