DocumentCode
2379215
Title
Adaptive SRAM memory for low power and high yield
Author
Mohammad, Baker ; Bijansky, Stephen ; Aziz, Adnan ; Abraham, Jacob
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX
fYear
2008
fDate
12-15 Oct. 2008
Firstpage
176
Lastpage
181
Abstract
SRAMs typically represent half of the area and more than half of the transistors on a chip today. Variability increases as feature size decreases, and the impact of variability is especially pronounced on SRAMs since they make extensive use of minimum sized devices. Variability leads to a large amount of guard banding in the design phase in order to meet frequency and yield targets. We develop an SRAM architecture that eliminates guard banding. Specifically, our SRAM uses multiple supply voltages that are assigned post-manufacturing. We compensate for variation by powering up manufactured devices that are slower than designed. Specifically, we assign supply voltages to 6T cells on a per-column basis; this gives us sufficiently fine-grained control over devices without excessive area overhead. We show that post-manufacturing voltage assignment results in a 28% reduction in bitline energy compared to a fixed voltage design for the same yield using data from a real-world 45 nm process.
Keywords
SRAM chips; adaptive SRAM memory; fine-grained control; guard banding; minimum sized devices; multiple supply voltages; transistors; Frequency; Jacobian matrices; Job shop scheduling; Manufacturing; Random access memory; Registers; Stability; Threshold voltage; Timing; Voltage control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Design, 2008. ICCD 2008. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Lake Tahoe, CA
ISSN
1063-6404
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2657-7
Electronic_ISBN
1063-6404
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCD.2008.4751858
Filename
4751858
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