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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Digital Timing Control in SRAMs for Yield Enhancement and Graceful Aging Degradation

Neale, Adam January 2010 (has links)
Embedded SRAMs can occupy the majority of the chip area in SOCs. The increase in process variation and aging degradation due to technology scaling can severely compromise the integrity of SRAM memory cells, hence resulting in cell failures. Enough cell failures in a memory can lead to it being rejected during initial testing, and hence decrease the manufacturing yield. Or, as a result of long-term applied stress, lead to in-field system failures. Certain types of cell failures can be mitigated through improved timing control. Post-fabrication programmable timing can allow for after-the-fact calibration of timing signals on a per die basis. This allows for a SRAM's timing signals to be generated based on the characteristics specific to the individual chip, thus allowing for an increase in yield and reduction in in-field system failures. In this thesis, a delay line based SRAM timing block with digitally programmable timing signals has been implemented in a 180 nm CMOS technology. Various timing-related cell failure mechanisms including: 1). Operational Read Failures, 2). Cell Stability Failures, and 3). Power Envelope Failures are investigated. Additionally, the major contributing factors for process variation and device aging degradation are discussed in the context of SRAMs. Simulations show that programmable timing can be used to reduce cell failure rates by over 50%.
12

Statistical Characterization and Decomposition of SRAM cell Variability and Aging

January 2013 (has links)
abstract: Memories play an integral role in today's advanced ICs. Technology scaling has enabled high density designs at the price paid for impact due to variability and reliability. It is imperative to have accurate methods to measure and extract the variability in the SRAM cell to produce accurate reliability projections for future technologies. This work presents a novel test measurement and extraction technique which is non-invasive to the actual operation of the SRAM memory array. The salient features of this work include i) A single ended SRAM test structure with no disturbance to SRAM operations ii) a convenient test procedure that only requires quasi-static control of external voltages iii) non-iterative method that extracts the VTH variation of each transistor from eight independent switch point measurements. With the present day technology scaling, in addition to the variability with the process, there is also the impact of other aging mechanisms which become dominant. The various aging mechanisms like Negative Bias Temperature Instability (NBTI), Channel Hot Carrier (CHC) and Time Dependent Dielectric Breakdown (TDDB) are critical in the present day nano-scale technology nodes. In this work, we focus on the impact of NBTI due to aging in the SRAM cell and have used Trapping/De-Trapping theory based log(t) model to explain the shift in threshold voltage VTH. The aging section focuses on the following i) Impact of Statistical aging in PMOS device due to NBTI dominates the temporal shift of SRAM cell ii) Besides static variations , shifting in VTH demands increased guard-banding margins in design stage iii) Aging statistics remain constant during the shift, presenting a secondary effect in aging prediction. iv) We have investigated to see if the aging mechanism can be used as a compensation technique to reduce mismatch due to process variations. Finally, the entire test setup has been tested in SPICE and also validated with silicon and the results are presented. The method also facilitates the study of design metrics such as static, read and write noise margins and also the data retention voltage and thus help designers to improve the cell stability of SRAM. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Electrical Engineering 2013
13

Process-Voltage-Temperature Aware Nanoscale Circuit Optimization

Thakral, Garima 12 1900 (has links)
Embedded systems which are targeted towards portable applications are required to have low power consumption because such portable devices are typically powered by batteries. During the memory accesses of such battery operated portable systems, including laptops, cell phones and other devices, a significant amount of power or energy is consumed which significantly affects the battery life. Therefore, efficient and leakage power saving cache designs are needed for longer operation of battery powered applications. Design engineers have limited control over many design parameters of the circuit and hence face many chal-lenges due to inherent process technology variations, particularly on static random access memory (SRAM) circuit design. As CMOS process technologies scale down deeper into the nanometer regime, the push for high performance and reliable systems becomes even more challenging. As a result, developing low-power designs while maintaining better performance of the circuit becomes a very difficult task. Furthermore, a major need for accurate analysis and optimization of various forms of total power dissipation and performance in nanoscale CMOS technologies, particularly in SRAMs, is another critical issue to be considered. This dissertation proposes power-leakage and static noise margin (SNM) analysis and methodologies to achieve optimized static random access memories (SRAMs). Alternate topologies of SRAMs, mainly a 7-transistor SRAM, are taken as a case study throughout this dissertation. The optimized cache designs are process-voltage-temperature (PVT) tolerant and consider individual cells as well as memory arrays.
14

Design and Stability Analysis of a High-Temperature SRAM

Tanvir, Tanvir 20 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
15

Mätutrustning för kosmisk strålning / Measureeqipment for cosmic radiation

Melin, Stefan January 2005 (has links)
<p>The purpose with this examination is to build a measureequipment to AerotechTelub AB (AT), who will registrate fault in SRAM-memory in contact with cosmic radiation. The equipment will be created around developcard from Memec Design with FPGA from Xilinx. The logic in the FPGA will be implemented with the hardwaredescribed language VHDL. The SRAM-memory that will be tested is build in CMOS-teknologi. The memorycells will be loaded with a predecided bitpattern. Changes in the memorycells will be registrated together with the adress where the fault came up. </p><p>The equipment will be used of AT at the measuring they use to do in special laboratories that can give cosmic radiation.</p>
16

Variability-Aware Design of Static Random Access Memory Bit-Cell

Gupta, Vasudha January 2008 (has links)
The increasing integration of functional blocks in today's integrated circuit designs necessitates a large embedded memory for data manipulation and storage. The most often used embedded memory is the Static Random Access Memory (SRAM), with a six transistor memory bit-cell. Currently, memories occupy more than 50% of the chip area and this percentage is only expected to increase in future. Therefore, for the silicon vendors, it is critical that the memory units yield well, to enable an overall high yield of the chip. The increasing memory density is accompanied by aggressive scaling of the transistor dimensions in the SRAM. Together, these two developments make SRAMs increasingly susceptible to process-parameter variations. As a result, in the current nanometer regime, statistical methods for the design of the SRAM array are pivotal to achieve satisfactory levels of silicon predictability. In this work, a method for the statistical design of the SRAM bit-cell is proposed. Not only does it provide a high yield, but also meets the specifications for the design constraints of stability, successful write, performance, leakage and area. The method consists of an optimization framework, which derives the optimal design parameters; i.e., the widths and lengths of the bit-cell transistors, which provide maximum immunity to the variations in the transistor's geometry and intrinsic threshold voltage fluctuations. The method is employed to obtain optimal designs in the 65nm, 45nm and 32nm technologies for different set of specifications. The optimality of the resultant designs is verified. The resultant optimal bit-cell designs in the 65nm, 45nm and 32nm technologies are analyzed to study the SRAM area and yield trade-offs associated with technology scaling. In order to achieve 50% scaling of the bit-cell area, at every technology node, two ways are proposed. The resultant designs are further investigated to understand, which mode of failure in the bit-cell becomes more dominant with technology scaling. In addition, the impact of voltage scaling on the bit-cell designs is also studied.
17

Mätutrustning för kosmisk strålning / Measureeqipment for cosmic radiation

Melin, Stefan January 2005 (has links)
The purpose with this examination is to build a measureequipment to AerotechTelub AB (AT), who will registrate fault in SRAM-memory in contact with cosmic radiation. The equipment will be created around developcard from Memec Design with FPGA from Xilinx. The logic in the FPGA will be implemented with the hardwaredescribed language VHDL. The SRAM-memory that will be tested is build in CMOS-teknologi. The memorycells will be loaded with a predecided bitpattern. Changes in the memorycells will be registrated together with the adress where the fault came up. The equipment will be used of AT at the measuring they use to do in special laboratories that can give cosmic radiation.
18

Variability-Aware Design of Static Random Access Memory Bit-Cell

Gupta, Vasudha January 2008 (has links)
The increasing integration of functional blocks in today's integrated circuit designs necessitates a large embedded memory for data manipulation and storage. The most often used embedded memory is the Static Random Access Memory (SRAM), with a six transistor memory bit-cell. Currently, memories occupy more than 50% of the chip area and this percentage is only expected to increase in future. Therefore, for the silicon vendors, it is critical that the memory units yield well, to enable an overall high yield of the chip. The increasing memory density is accompanied by aggressive scaling of the transistor dimensions in the SRAM. Together, these two developments make SRAMs increasingly susceptible to process-parameter variations. As a result, in the current nanometer regime, statistical methods for the design of the SRAM array are pivotal to achieve satisfactory levels of silicon predictability. In this work, a method for the statistical design of the SRAM bit-cell is proposed. Not only does it provide a high yield, but also meets the specifications for the design constraints of stability, successful write, performance, leakage and area. The method consists of an optimization framework, which derives the optimal design parameters; i.e., the widths and lengths of the bit-cell transistors, which provide maximum immunity to the variations in the transistor's geometry and intrinsic threshold voltage fluctuations. The method is employed to obtain optimal designs in the 65nm, 45nm and 32nm technologies for different set of specifications. The optimality of the resultant designs is verified. The resultant optimal bit-cell designs in the 65nm, 45nm and 32nm technologies are analyzed to study the SRAM area and yield trade-offs associated with technology scaling. In order to achieve 50% scaling of the bit-cell area, at every technology node, two ways are proposed. The resultant designs are further investigated to understand, which mode of failure in the bit-cell becomes more dominant with technology scaling. In addition, the impact of voltage scaling on the bit-cell designs is also studied.
19

Dynamic stability margin analysis on SRAM

Ho, Yenpo 15 May 2009 (has links)
In the past decade, aggressive scaling of transistor feature size has been a primary force driving higher Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) integration density. Due to the scaling, nanometer SRAM designs are getting more and more stability issues. The traditional way of analyzing stability is the Static Noise Margins (SNM). However, SNM has limited capability to capture critical nonlinearity, so it becomes incapable of characterizing the key dynamics of SRAM operations with induced soft-error. This thesis defines new stability margin metrics using a system-theoretic approach. Nonlinear system theories will be applied rigorously in this work to construct new stability concepts. Based on the phase portrait analysis, soft-error can be explained using bifurcation theory. The state flipping requires a minimum noise current (Icritical) and time (Tcritical). This work derives Icritical analytically for simple L1 model and provides design insight using a level one circuit model, and also provides numerical algorithms on both Icritical and Tcritial for higher a level device model. This stability analysis provides more physical characterization of SRAM noise tolerance property; thus has potential to provide needed yield estimation.
20

Dual Threshold Voltage SRAM & BIST Comparators

Lee, Po-Ming 24 September 2003 (has links)
Since the invention of SRAM (Static Random Access Memory), many improvements have been proposed. The major targets are speed, area, and power consumption. The evolution of the CMOS process technology makes it possible to implement SRAM by using dual threshold voltage transistors. Hence, we will use TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) 0.25 $mu$m 1P5M CMOS process to realize the dual threshold voltage SRAM in this thesis. In order to reduce SRAM internal power consumption, we also propose quenchers to suppress unwanted oscillation between bit lines. In addition, several types of BIST (Build In Self Test) comparators are also proposed to test the mentioned SRAM. After detailed simulations, the proposed comparators possess impressive results in high fan-in, low transistor count, and high speed. The proposed SRAM and BIST comparators are fabricated by the CMOS process provided by National Science Council Chip Implementation Center (CIC). The measurements of the chips are fully corrected to meet the design goals.

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