Title :
256-Mb DRAM circuit technologies for file applications
Author :
Kitsukawa, Goro ; Horiguchi, Masashi ; Kawajiri, Yoshiki ; Kawahara, Takayuki ; Akiba, Takesada ; Kawase, Yasushi ; Tachibana, Toshikazu ; Sakai, Takeshi ; Aoki, Masakazu ; Shukuri, Syoji ; Sagara, Kazuhiko ; Nagai, Ryo ; Ohji, Yuzuru ; Hasegawa, Nono ; Y
Author_Institution :
Central Res. Lab., Hitachi Ltd., Kokubunji, Japan
fDate :
11/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
256-Mb DRAM circuit technologies characterized by low power and high fabrication yield for file applications are described. The newly proposed and developed circuits are a self-reverse-biasing circuit for word drivers and decoders to suppress the subthreshold current to 3% of the conventional scheme, and a subarray-replacement redundancy technique that doubles chip yield and consequently reduces manufacturing costs. An experimental 256-Mb DRAM has been designed and fabricated by combining the proposed circuit techniques and a 0.25-μm phase-shift optical lithography, and its basic operations are verified. A 0.72-μm2 double-cylindrical recessed stacked-capacitor (RSTC) cell is used to ensure a storage capacitance of 25 fF/cell. A typical access time under a 2-V power supply voltage was 70 ns. With the proper device characteristics, the simulated performances of the 256-Mb DRAM operating with a 1.5-V power supply voltage are a data-retention current of 53 μA and an access time of 48 ns
Keywords :
DRAM chips; cellular arrays; integrated circuit technology; photolithography; redundancy; 0.25 micron; 1.5 V; 2 V; 256 Mbit; 48 ns; 53 muA; 70 ns; DRAM circuit technologies; access time; chip yield; data-retention current; decoders; double-cylindrical recessed stacked-capacitor cell; fabrication yield; file applications; manufacturing costs; phase-shift optical lithography; self-reverse-biasing circuit; storage capacitance; subarray-replacement redundancy technique; subthreshold current; word drivers; Costs; Decoding; Driver circuits; Fabrication; Manufacturing; Optical design; Power supplies; Random access memory; Subthreshold current; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of