Impact and mitigation of SRAM read path aging

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

Innocent Agbo (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

Mottaqiallah Taouil (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

Daniël Kraak (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

Said Hamdioui (TU Delft - Computer Engineering)

Pieter Weckx (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, IMEC)

Stefan Cosemans (IMEC)

Francky Catthoor (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, IMEC)

Wim Dehaene (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microrel.2018.05.011 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Volume number
87
Pages (from-to)
158-167
Downloads counter
221

Abstract

This paper proposes an appropriate method to estimate and mitigate the impact of aging on the read path of a high performance SRAM design; it analyzes the impact of the memory cell, and sense amplifier (SA), and their interaction. The method considers different workloads, technology nodes, and inspects both the bit-line swing (BLS) (which reflect the degradation of the cell) and the sensing delay (SD) (which reflects the degradation of the sense amplifier); the voltage swing on the bit lines has a direct impact on the proper functionality of the sense amplifier. The results with respect to the quantification of the aging, show for the considered SRAM read-path design that the cell degradation is marginal as compared to the sense amplifier, while the SD degradation strongly depends on the workload, supply voltage, temperature, and technology nodes (up to 41% degradation). The mitigation schemes, one targeting the cell and one the sense amplifier, confirm the same and show that sense amplifier mitigation (up to 15.2% improvement) is more effective for the SRAM read path than cell mitigation (up to 11.4% improvement).