Title :
A Stable 2-Port SRAM Cell Design Against Simultaneously Read/Write-Disturbed Accesses
Author :
Suzuki, Toshikazu ; Yamauchi, Hiroyuki ; Yamagami, Yoshinobu ; Satomi, Katsuji ; Akamatsu, Hironori
Author_Institution :
Syst. LSI Technol. Dev. Center, Matsushita Electr. Ind. Co., Ltd., Kyoto
Abstract :
A 2-port SRAM cell has to guarantee stability against simultaneously read and write (R/W)-disturbed accesses while keeping cell current (Icell). We verified that it was difficult to provide the stability without any decrease in Icell and any increase in the cell-area penalty only by using the previously proposed techniques for a 1-port cell, and have proposed a new cell biasing technique that controlled the level of the cell VSS (VSSM) with a dual-Vdd and a reduced write-bit-line (WBL) precharge scheme for an 8-transistor (8T) 2-port cell to address the above issue. In this paper, a further consideration was newly demonstrated about the stability for a 2-port SRAM under the random fluctuation of the threshold-voltage (Vth) in 65-nm CMOS technology. The stability with the proposed biasing was compared with that of the conventional cell-Vdd (VDDM) control for write assist. The results under 4-sigma random-Vth fluctuation verified that the minimum Icell at a simultaneously R/W-disturbed cell increased by 2.4 times at Vdd=0.9 V while improving the write margin (WRTM). The cell size based on the same Icell was reduced by 20%. The minimum static noise margin (SNM) was also improved by 44%. Each stability also had the tolerance against 6-sigma random-Vth fluctuation. Furthermore, we have challenged to apply the proposed cell biasing to a 7-transistor (7T) 2-port cell design for area saving with a unique write-assist scheme. The cell size was reduced by 26% with the 7T cell compared with that of the conventional 8T cell. This proposed cell biasing satisfied all the requirements of 2-port SRAM operation while improving stability and saving cell size.
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; SRAM chips; network synthesis; stability; 2-port SRAM cell design; CMOS technology; cell biasing technique; cell current; minimum static noise margin; random fluctuation; read and write disturbed accesses; read-write-disturbed access; size 65 nm; stability; threshold-voltage; voltage 0.9 V; write-bit-line precharge scheme; CMOS technology; Fluctuations; Information science; Laboratories; Large scale integration; Random access memory; Semiconductor device noise; Stability; Topology; Variable structure systems; 2-port; Cell-current; embedded SRAM; memory cell; stability;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2008.2001872