Title :
A High-Density 45 nm SRAM Using Small-Signal Non-Strobed Regenerative Sensing
Author :
Verma, Naveen ; Chandrakasan, Anantha P.
Author_Institution :
Microsyst. Technol. Labs., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA
Abstract :
High-density SRAMs utilize aggressively small bit-cells, which are subject to extreme variability, degrading their read SNM and read-current. Additionally, array performance is also limited by sense-amplifier offset and strobe-timing uncertainty. This paper, presents a sense-amplifier that targets all of these performance degradations: specifically, simple offset compensation reduces sensitivity to variation while imposing minimal loading on high-speed nodes; stable internal voltage references serve as an internal means to self-trigger regeneration to avoid tracking mismatch in an external strobe-path; precise small-signal detection withstands small read-currents so that other bit-cell parameters can be optimized; and single-ended sensing provides compatibility to asymmetric bit-cells, which can have improved operating margins. The design is integrated with a 64-kb high-density array composed of 0.25 mum2 6T bit-cells. A prototype, in low-power 45 nm CMOS, compares its performance with a conventional sense-amplifier, demonstrating an improvement of 4X in access-time sigma and 34% in overall worst case access time.
Keywords :
CMOS memory circuits; SRAM chips; amplifiers; CMOS; SRAM; bit-cell parameters; high-density array; self-trigger regeneration; sense-amplifier offset; single-ended sensing; size 45 nm; small-signal nonstrobed regenerative sensing; strobe-timing uncertainty; tracking mismatch; CMOS technology; Degradation; Energy consumption; Manufacturing; Prototypes; Random access memory; Target tracking; Topology; Uncertainty; Voltage; Auto-zeroing; SRAM; device variation; offset compensation; sense-amplifier;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2008.2006428