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Journal ArticleDOI

Ultra-low-leakage, Robust FinFET SRAM Design Using Multiparameter Asymmetric FinFETs

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TLDR
This article shows how Multiparameter Asymmetric (MPA) FinFETs can be used to design ultra-low-leakage and robust 6T SRAM cells and combines multiple asymmetries, namely, asymmetry in gate work function, source/drain doping concentration, and gate underlap, to address various SRAM design issues all at once.
Abstract
Memory arrays consisting of Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) cells occupy the largest area on chip and are responsible for significant leakage power consumption in modern microprocessors. With the transition from planar Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) technology to FinFETs, FinFET SRAM design has become important. However, increasing leakage power consumption of FinFETs due to aggressive scaling, width quantization, read-write conflict, and process variations make FinFET SRAM design challenging. In this article, we show how Multiparameter Asymmetric (MPA) FinFETs can be used to design ultra-low-leakage and robust 6T SRAM cells. We combine multiple asymmetries, namely, asymmetry in gate work function, source/drain doping concentration, and gate underlap, to address various SRAM design issues all at once. We propose five novel MPA FinFET SRAM cell designs and compare them with symmetric and Single-Parameter Asymmetric (SPA) FinFET SRAM cells using dc and transient metrics. We show that the leakage current of MPA FinFET SRAM cells can be reduced by up to 58 × while ensuring reasonable read/write stability metric values. In addition, high stability metric values can be achieved with 22 × leakage current reduction compared to the traditional symmetric FinFET SRAM cell. There is no area overhead associated with MPA FinFET SRAM cells.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Ultra-compact sub-10nm logic circuits based on ambipolar SB-FinFETs

TL;DR: Functionality of the proposed minimalist logic circuits are verified with Synopsys TCAD simulations, which indicate that optimized gate work-functions lead to CMOS logic circuits as small as 5nm and supply voltage of 0.6V, with a power-delay product at 5 χ 10−18 J level.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

10T and 8T Full Adders Based on Ambipolar XOR Gates with SB-FinFETs

TL;DR: Novel ten (10T) and eight (8T) transistor full-adder logic gates based on recently proposed gate workfunction engineering (WFE) approach are introduced and area and performance gains are provided also for other logic building blocks that can be redesigned using SB-FinFETs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

FinFET-a self-aligned double-gate MOSFET scalable to 20 nm

TL;DR: In this paper, a self-aligned double-gate MOSFET, FinFET was proposed by using boron-doped Si/sub 04/Ge/sub 06/ as a gate material.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Die Stacking (3D) Microarchitecture

TL;DR: This research study the performance advantages and thermal challenges of two forms of die stacking: Stacking a large DRAM or SRAM cache on a microprocessor and dividing a traditional micro architecture between two die in a stack.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Pipeline gating: speculation control for energy reduction

TL;DR: This paper introduces a hardware mechanism called pipeline gating to control rampant speculation in the pipeline, and presents inexpensive mechanisms for determining when a branch is likely to mispredict, and for stopping wrong-path instructions from entering the pipeline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Read Stability and Write-Ability Analysis of SRAM Cells for Nanometer Technologies

TL;DR: This paper analyzes the read stability N-curve metrics and compares them with the commonly used static noise margin (SNM) metric defined by Seevinck, and demonstrates that the new metrics provide additional information in terms of current, which allows designing a more robust and stable cell.
Journal ArticleDOI

Turning silicon on its edge [double gate CMOS/FinFET technology]

TL;DR: For both low-power and high-performance applications, DGCMOS-FinFET offers a most promising direction for continued progress in VLSI.
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