1992
DOI: 10.1109/20.179491
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High speed (10-20 ns) non-volatile MRAM with folded storage elements

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Cited by 12 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Anisotropic MRAM was investigated in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Honeywell Inc., NonVolatile Electronics Inc. (NVE, a company based in Eden Prairie, Minnesota that was spun off from Honeywell in 1989 to pursue MRAM technology), and by researchers at Iowa State University [32,33,9,7]. The cell name comes from the fact that the programmable permalloy thin film is shaped to permit only two magnetic polarizations.…”
Section: Anisotropic Mrammentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Anisotropic MRAM was investigated in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Honeywell Inc., NonVolatile Electronics Inc. (NVE, a company based in Eden Prairie, Minnesota that was spun off from Honeywell in 1989 to pursue MRAM technology), and by researchers at Iowa State University [32,33,9,7]. The cell name comes from the fact that the programmable permalloy thin film is shaped to permit only two magnetic polarizations.…”
Section: Anisotropic Mrammentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The cell name comes from the fact that the programmable permalloy thin film is shaped to permit only two magnetic polarizations. For example, the cell described in [33] has an oblong (18 µm × 1.8 µm) ferromagnetic layer that is a sandwich comprising two 1.5 µm thick layers of permalloy (65% Ni, 15% Fe, 20% Co) separated by a 0.5-µm layer of reacted Ta. The sense line through a column of cells is connected in series, in the long direction, to the ferromagnetic cell regions.…”
Section: Anisotropic Mrammentioning
confidence: 99%