ARM Support Claimed for Non-Filamentary ReRAM
Peter Clarke, Electronics360
31 January 2014
An innovative non-volatile memory technology that could scale further and perform better than flash memory and resistive RAM (ReRAM) technologies has attracted the interest of processor licensor ARM Holdings plc (Cambridge, England), according to Carlos Paz de Araujo, a professor at the University of Colorado who is the leading advocate for development of the memory.
Professor Araujo told Electronics 360 that his company Symetrix Corp. (Colorado Springs, Colo.) has secured ARM's support for research into a non-filamentary, non-volatile memory technology based on the metal-insulator Mott transition in nickel oxide and other transition metal oxides (TMOs). In email correspondence he said that Symetrix, ARM, the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs and the University of Texas at Dallas, are engaged in research on what he has dubbed Correlated-Electron RAM (CeRAM).
|
|
E-mail This Article |
|
Printer-Friendly Page |
Related News
- MachineWare announces new ARM processor simulation and SystemC profiling products, adds Windows support
- SEGGER Embedded Studio for Arm now with hard real-time C++ support
- NVIDIA Aerial 5G Platform Extends Support for Arm
- IAR Systems introduces 64-bit Arm core support in leading embedded development tools
- Nimbix Announces First Multi-cloud HPC Platform With Support For Arm
Breaking News
- RISC-V International Promotes Andrea Gallo to CEO
- See the 2025 Best Edge AI Processor IP at the Embedded Vision Summit
- Andes Technology Showcases RISC-V AI Leadership at RISC-V Summit Europe 2025
- RISC-V Royalty-Driven Revenue to Exceed License Revenue by 2027
- Keysom Unveils Keysom Core Explorer V1.0
Most Popular
- RISC-V International Promotes Andrea Gallo to CEO
- See the 2025 Best Edge AI Processor IP at the Embedded Vision Summit
- Andes Technology Showcases RISC-V AI Leadership at RISC-V Summit Europe 2025
- Ceva, Inc. Announces First Quarter 2025 Financial Results
- Cadence Unveils Millennium M2000 Supercomputer with NVIDIA Blackwell Systems to Transform AI-Driven Silicon, Systems and Drug Design






