76 research outputs found

    Doctor of Philosophy in Computing

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    dissertationThe demand for main memory capacity has been increasing for many years and will continue to do so. In the past, Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) process scaling has enabled this increase in memory capacity. Along with continued DRAM scaling, the emergence of new technologies like 3D-stacking, buffered Dual Inline Memory Modules (DIMMs), and crosspoint nonvolatile memory promise to continue this trend in the years ahead. However, these technologies will bring with them their own gamut of problems. In this dissertation, I look at the problems facing these technologies from a current delivery perspective. 3D-stacking increases memory capacity available per package, but the increased current requirement means that more pins on the package have to be now dedicated to provide Vdd/Vss, hence increasing cost. At the system level, using buffered DIMMs to increase the number of DRAM ranks increases the peak current requirements of the system if all the DRAM chips in the system are Refreshed simultaneously. Crosspoint memories promise to greatly increase bit densities but have long read latencies because of sneak currents in the cross-bar. In this dissertation, I provide architectural solutions to each of these problems. We observe that smart data placement by the architecture and the Operating System (OS) is a vital ingredient in all of these solutions. We thereby mitigate major bottlenecks in these technologies, hence enabling higher memory densities

    Design and analysis of memristor-based reliable crossbar architectures

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    The conventional transistor-based computing landscape is already undergoing dramatic changes. While transistor-based devices’ scaling is approaching its physical limits in nanometer technologies, memristive technologies hold the potential to scale to much smaller geometries. Memristive devices are used majorly in memory design but they also have unignorable applications in logic design, neuromorphic computing, sensors among many others. The most critical research and development problems that must be resolved before memristive architectures become mainstream are related to their reliability. One of such reliability issue is the sneak-paths current which limits the maximum crossbar array size. This thesis presents various designs of the memristor based crossbar architecture and corresponding experimental analysis towards addressing its reliability issues. Novel contribution of this thesis starts with the formulation of robust analytic models for read and write schemes used in memristive crossbar arrays. These novel models are less restrictive and are suitable for accurate mathematical analysis of any mn crossbar array and the evaluation of their performance during these critical operations. In order to minimise the sneak-paths problem, we propose techniques and conditions for reliable read operations using simultaneous access of multiple bits in the crossbar array. Two new write techniques are also presented, one to minimise failure during single cell write and the other designed for multiple cells write operation. Experimental results prove that the single write technique minimises write voltage drop degradation compared to existing techniques. Test results from the multiple cells write technique show it consumes less power than other techniques depending on the chosen configuration. Lastly, a novel Verilog-A memristor model for simulation and analysis of memristor’s application in gas sensing is presented. This proposed model captures the gas sensing properties of titanium-dioxide using gas concentration to control the overall memristance of the device. This model is used to design and simulate a first-of-its-kind sneak-paths free memristor-based gas detection arrays. Experimental results from a 88 memristor sensor array show that there is a ten fold improvement in the accuracy of the sensor’s response when compared with a single memristor sensor

    Bio-inspired Neuromorphic Computing Using Memristor Crossbar Networks

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    Bio-inspired neuromorphic computing systems built with emerging devices such as memristors have become an active research field. Experimental demonstrations at the network-level have suggested memristor-based neuromorphic systems as a promising candidate to overcome the von-Neumann bottleneck in future computing applications. As a hardware system that offers co-location of memory and data processing, memristor-based networks represent an efficient computing platform with minimal data transfer and high parallelism. Furthermore, active utilization of the dynamic processes during resistive switching in memristors can help realize more faithful emulation of biological device and network behaviors, with the potential to process dynamic temporal inputs efficiently. In this thesis, I present experimental demonstrations of neuromorphic systems using fabricated memristor arrays as well as network-level simulation results. Models of resistive switching behavior in two types of memristor devices, conventional first-order and recently proposed second-order memristor devices, will be first introduced. Secondly, experimental demonstration of K-means clustering through unsupervised learning in a memristor network will be presented. The memristor based hardware systems achieved high classification accuracy (93.3%) on the standard IRIS data set, suggesting practical networks can be built with optimized memristor devices. Thirdly, implementation of a partial differential equation (PDE) solver in memristor arrays will be discussed. This work expands the capability of memristor-based computing hardware from ‘soft’ to ‘hard’ computing tasks, which require very high precision and accurate solutions. In general first-order memristors are suitable to perform tasks that are based on vector-matrix multiplications, ranging from K-means clustering to PDE solvers. On the other hand, utilizing internal device dynamics in second-order memristors can allow natural emulation of biological behaviors and enable network functions such as temporal data processing. An effort to explore second-order memristor devices and their network behaviors will be discussed. Finally, we propose ideas to build large-size passive memristor crossbar arrays, including fabrication approaches, guidelines of device structure, and analysis of the parasitic effects in larger arrays.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147610/1/yjjeong_1.pd

    A PUF based Lightweight Hardware Security Architecture for IoT

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    With an increasing number of hand-held electronics, gadgets, and other smart devices, data is present in a large number of platforms, thereby increasing the risk of security, privacy, and safety breach than ever before. Due to the extreme lightweight nature of these devices, commonly referred to as IoT or `Internet of Things\u27, providing any kind of security is prohibitive due to high overhead associated with any traditional and mathematically robust cryptographic techniques. Therefore, researchers have searched for alternative intuitive solutions for such devices. Hardware security, unlike traditional cryptography, can provide unique device-specific security solutions with little overhead, address vulnerability in hardware and, therefore, are attractive in this domain. As Moore\u27s law is almost at its end, different emerging devices are being explored more by researchers as they present opportunities to build better application-specific devices along with their challenges compared to CMOS technology. In this work, we have proposed emerging nanotechnology-based hardware security as a security solution for resource constrained IoT domain. Specifically, we have built two hardware security primitives i.e. physical unclonable function (PUF) and true random number generator (TRNG) and used these components as part of a security protocol proposed in this work as well. Both PUF and TRNG are built from metal-oxide memristors, an emerging nanoscale device and are generally lightweight compared to their CMOS counterparts in terms of area, power, and delay. Design challenges associated with designing these hardware security primitives and with memristive devices are properly addressed. Finally, a complete security protocol is proposed where all of these different pieces come together to provide a practical, robust, and device-specific security for resource-limited IoT systems

    Applications of memristors in conventional analogue electronics

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    This dissertation presents the steps employed to activate and utilise analogue memristive devices in conventional analogue circuits and beyond. TiO2 memristors are mainly utilised in this study, and their large variability in operation in between similar devices is identified. A specialised memristor characterisation instrument is designed and built to mitigate this issue and to allow access to large numbers of devices at a time. Its performance is quantified against linear resistors, crossbars of linear resistors, stand-alone memristive elements and crossbars of memristors. This platform allows for a wide range of different pulsing algorithms to be applied on individual devices, or on crossbars of memristive elements, and is used throughout this dissertation. Different ways of achieving analogue resistive switching from any device state are presented. Results of these are used to devise a state-of-art biasing parameter finder which automatically extracts pulsing parameters that induce repeatable analogue resistive switching. IV measurements taken during analogue resistive switching are then utilised to model the internal atomic structure of two devices, via fittings by the Simmons tunnelling barrier model. These reveal that voltage pulses modulate a nano-tunnelling gap along a conical shape. Further retention measurements are performed which reveal that under certain conditions, TiO2 memristors become volatile at short time scales. This volatile behaviour is then implemented into a novel SPICE volatile memristor model. These characterisation methods of solid-state devices allowed for inclusion of TiO2 memristors in practical electronic circuits. Firstly, in the context of large analogue resistive crossbars, a crosspoint reading method is analysed and improved via a 3-step technique. Its scaling performance is then quantified via SPICE simulations. Next, the observed volatile dynamics of memristors are exploited in two separate sequence detectors, with applications in neuromorphic engineering. Finally, the memristor as a programmable resistive weight is exploited to synthesise a memristive programmable gain amplifier and a practical memristive automatic gain control circuit.Open Acces

    Improving Performance and Endurance for Crossbar Resistive Memory

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    Resistive Memory (ReRAM) has emerged as a promising non-volatile memory technology that may replace a significant portion of DRAM in future computer systems. When adopting crossbar architecture, ReRAM cell can achieve the smallest theoretical size in fabrication, ideally for constructing dense memory with large capacity. However, crossbar cell structure suffers from severe performance and endurance degradations, which come from large voltage drops on long wires. In this dissertation, I first study the correlation between the ReRAM cell switching latency and the number of cells in low resistant state (LRS) along bitlines, and propose to dynamically speed up write operations based on bitline data patterns. By leveraging the intrinsic in-memory processing capability of ReRAM crossbars, a low overhead runtime profiler that effectively tracks the data patterns in different bitlines is proposed. To achieve further write latency reduction, data compression and row address dependent memory data layout are employed to reduce the numbers of LRS cells on bitlines. Moreover, two optimization techniques are presented to mitigate energy overhead brought by bitline data patterns tracking. Second, I propose XWL, a novel table-based wear leveling scheme for ReRAM crossbars and study the correlation between write endurance and voltage stress in ReRAM crossbars. By estimating and tracking the effective write stress to different rows at runtime, XWL chooses the ones that are stressed the most to mitigate. Additionally, two extended scenarios are further examined for the performance and endurance issues in neural network accelerators as well as 3D vertical ReRAM (3D-VRAM) arrays. For the ReRAM crossbar-based accelerators, by exploiting the wearing out mechanism of ReRAM cell, a novel comprehensive framework, ReNEW, is proposed to enhance the lifetime of the ReRAM crossbar-based accelerators, particularly for neural network training. To reduce the write latency in 3D-VRAM arrays, a collection of techniques, including an in-memory data encoding scheme, a data pattern estimator for assessing cell resistance distributions, and a write time reduction scheme that opportunistically reduces RESET latency with runtime data patterns, are devised
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