Methodology for Application-Dependent Degradation Analysis of Memory Timing

Conference Paper (2019)
Author(s)

D. Kraak (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

I.O. Agbo (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

Mottagiallah Taouil (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

S Hamdioui (TU Delft - Quantum & Computer Engineering)

P. Weckx (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, IMEC)

Stefan Cosemans (IMEC)

F Catthoor (IMEC, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)

Research Group
Computer Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.23919/DATE.2019.8715143
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Research Group
Computer Engineering
Pages (from-to)
162-167
ISBN (print)
978-1-7281-0331-0
ISBN (electronic)
978-3-9819263-2-3

Abstract

Memory designs typically contain design margins to compensate for aging. As aging impact becomes more severe with technology scaling, it is crucial to accurately predict such impact to prevent overestimation or underestimation of the margins. This paper proposes a methodology to accurately and efficiently analyze the impact of aging on the memory's digital logic (e.g., timing circuit and address decoder) while considering realistic workloads extracted from applications. To demonstrate the superiority of the methodology, we analyzed the degradation of the L1 data and instruction caches for an ARM v8-a processor using both our methodology as well as the state-of-the-art methods. The results show that the existing methods may significantly over-or underestimate the impact (e.g., the decoder margin up to 221% and the access time up to 20%) as compared with the proposed scheme. In addition, the results show that in general the instruction cache has the highest degradation. For example, its access time degrades up to 9% and its decoder margin up to 44%.

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