Title :
A 283.2μW 800Mb/s/pin DLL-based data self-aligner for Through-Silicon Via (TSV) interface
Author :
Lee, Hyun-Woo ; Lim, Soo-Bin ; Song, Junyoung ; Koo, Ja-Beom ; Kwon, Dae-Han ; Kang, Jong-Ho ; Kim, Yunsaing ; Choi, Young-Jung ; Park, Kunwoo ; Chung, Byong-Tae ; Kim, Chulwoo
Author_Institution :
Korea Univ., Seoul, South Korea
Abstract :
The process variation among 512 DRAM samples is more than 30%. The performance variation of general circuits is predicted to be over 60% in 2012. In general, a single-die-based DRAM has a large process variation from chip to chip, which among other parameters, causes tAC (address access time) variation in the application system. In order to reduce the tAC variation, most highspeed SDRAMs adopt a delay-locked loop (DLL) at the cost of additional area and power consumption. For TSV-based stacked dies, large tAC variantion results in higher power consumption due to short circuit current from data conflicts among shared I/Os. Since the number of I/Os for TSV-based stacked DRAM (TSV DRAM) might be 512 or more, the additional power consumption can be very high. Even though it is desirable in mobile DRAM to exclude the DLL because of the power cost, TSV DRAM for high-speed operation partially adopts a DLL in the master die. Our DLL-based data self-aligner (DBDA) reduces the data conflict time among stacked dies, consuming 283.2μW during read operation at 800Mb/s/pin. It dissipates 4.98μW in self-refresh mode with the help of leakage-current-reduction controller.
Keywords :
DRAM chips; delay lock loops; leakage currents; power consumption; short-circuit currents; three-dimensional integrated circuits; DBDA; DLL-based data self-aligner; SDRAM; TSV interface; TSV-based stacked DRAM; TSV-based stacked dies; address access time variation; data conflict time; delay-locked loop; general circuit; high-speed operation; leakage-current-reduction controller; master die; mobile DRAM; power 283.2 muW; power 4.98 muW; power consumption; power cost; process variation; read operation; self-refresh mode; shared I/O; short circuit current; single-die-based DRAM; tAC variation; through-silicon via; Clocks; Delay; Detectors; Power demand; Random access memory; Through-silicon vias;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers (ISSCC), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0376-7
DOI :
10.1109/ISSCC.2012.6176873