• DocumentCode
    35087
  • Title

    Near-Threshold CNTFET SRAM Cell Design With Word-Line Boosting and Removed Metallic CNT Tolerance

  • Author

    Zhe Zhang ; Delgado-Frias, Jose G.

  • Author_Institution
    Sch. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA, USA
  • Volume
    13
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Mar-14
  • Firstpage
    182
  • Lastpage
    191
  • Abstract
    In this study, we report an in-depth study of power supply reduction toward near threshold for an eight-transistor carbon nanotube (CNT) field-effect transistors SRAM cell. Near-threshold voltage has an impact on delays, energy, energy-delay product, leakage current, and static noise margin. In addition, we have incorporated a removed metallic CNT approach to deal with nonsemiconductor CNTs. Monte Carlo simulations at Vdd (power supply voltage) of 0.4 V have shown that 97.24% of the cells are functional after removing the metallic CNTs. The power saving is over 5× and the average delay is increased by 3.5× as compared to a typical Vdd of 0.9 V. To further improve yield and performance, a word-line boosting technique is explored. Read and write word lines are boosted with additional 100 mV; this in turn effectively eliminates all the write failures at the 0.4 V level and reduces read and write delays. Comparing boosted and nonboosted cells with Vdd = 0.4 V, the boosted cell has write and read delays that are faster by 3.8× and 1.7×, respectively. This cell´s energy increases by less than 4% per-access in the worst case. The cell with Vdd of 0.4 V with boosted word-lines achieves the lowest energy-delay product of all the cases considered in this study, which is 52.3% and 56.9% lower than that of a boosted and nonboosted cell with Vdd of 0.9 V, respectively.
  • Keywords
    Monte Carlo methods; SRAM chips; carbon nanotube field effect transistors; integrated circuit design; leakage currents; Monte Carlo simulations; eight-transistor carbon nanotube field-effect transistors; energy-delay product; leakage current; near-threshold CNTFET SRAM cell design; nonsemiconductor CNT; power supply reduction; read-write delay reduction; removed metallic CNT tolerance approach; static noise margin; voltage 0.4 V; voltage 0.9 V; word-line boosting technique; Boosting; CMOS integrated circuits; CNTFETs; Delays; SRAM cells; Carbon nanotube field-effect transistor (CNTFET); eight-transistor (8T) SRAM cell; metallic CNT (M-CNT) tolerance; near-threshold scaling; word-line boosting;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1536-125X
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNANO.2013.2295757
  • Filename
    6690174