59 research outputs found

    NEW MATERIAL FOR ELIMINATING LINEAR ENERGY TRANSFER SENSITIVITIES IN DEEPLY SCALED CMOS TECHNOLOGIES SRAM CELLS

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    As technology scales deep in submicron regime, CMOS SRAM memories have become increasingly sensitive to Single-Event Upset sensitivity. Key technological factors that impact Single-Event Upset sensitivity are gate length, gate and drain areas and the power supply voltage all of which impact transistor's nodal capacitance. In this work, I present engineering requirement studies, which show for the first time, the tread of Single-Event Upset sensitivity in deeply scaled SRAM cells. To mitigate the Single-Event Upset sensitivity, a novel approach is presented, illustrating exactly how material defects can be managed in a way that sets electrical resistance of the material as desired. A thin-film high-resistance value ranging from 2kΩ/-3.6MΩ/, and TCR of negative 0.0016%/˚C is presented. A defect model is presented that agrees well with the experimental results. These resistors are used in the cross-coupled latches; to decouple the latch nodes and delay the regenerative action of the cell, thus hardening against single even upset (SEU)

    SRAM stability metric under transient noise

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    ventional way to analyze the robustness of an SRAM bit cell is to quantify its immunity to static noise. The static immunity to disturbances like process and mi smatch variations, bulk noises, supply rings variations, temperature changes is well characterized by means of the Static Noise Margin (SNM) defined as the maximum applicable series voltage at the inputs which causes no change in the data retention nodes. However, a significant number of disturbance sources present a transient behavior which is ignored by the static analysis but has to be taken in consideration for a complete characterization of the cell’s behavior. In this paper, a metric to evaluate the cell robustness in the presence of transient voltage noise is proposed based on determining the energy of the noise signal which is able to flip the cell’s state. The Dynamic Noise Margin(DNM) metric is defined as the minimum energy of the voltage noise signal able to flip the cell.Postprint (published version

    Design, implementation and testing of SRAM based neutron detectors

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    Neutrons of thermal and high energies can change the value of a bit stored in a Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) memory chip. The effect is non destructive and linearly dependent on the amount of incoming particles, which makes it exploitable for use as a neutron detector. Detection is done by writing a known pattern to the memory and continuously reading it back checking for wrong values. As the SRAM memory is immune to gamma radiation it is ideal for use in for instance medical linear accelerators for detection of neutron dose to a patient. The intention of this work has been twofold: (1) Testing of different SRAM devices of different bit-sizes, manufacturers, feature sizes and voltages for their sensitivity to neutrons of different energies from thermal to high energies. (2) Design and implement detector hardware, firmware and its accompanying readout system for successful use in irradiation testing. The work has been done in close collaboration with Eivind Larsen, whose main contributions has been related to the nuclear physics aspect of the work in addition to arrangements in regard to beam setup and experimentation. Testing have been done at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) facility in Braunschweig Germany in a quasi-monochromatic neutron beam of 5:8MeV, 8:5MeV and 14:8MeV, finding a dependence of the sensitivity on the energy. In addition there have been testing conducted in the high energy hadron field at CERF at CERN, finding that by using the results from the other experiments an estimated range of the saturation cross section could be determined. Testing was also conducted at two occasions in the 29MeV proton beam at Oslo Cyclotron Laboratory (OCL) in Oslo Norway, where it was found that the detector could be used as a reference detector for beam monitoring and for beam profile characterization. The cross sections of the detectors were found to be comparable to the 14:8MeV cross section found at PTB. Thermal neutron testing of the devices was done in the thermal neutron field of the nuclear reactor at Institute for Energy Technology (IFE) at Kjeller Norway. All the devices were found to be sensitive to the field. Detector electronics, adapted to the different devices, has been built which can withstand the same radiation as the memory device without malfunctioning. There has been a focus on using Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) components for reducing the total cost of the detector to about 100-200$US. The use of COTS SRAM memory devices also simplifies the reproducibility and availability of spares. The detector currently uses a two way communication between the detector and iv Abstract the readout computer over two pair of cables reducing the amount of cabling needed for experiments. The detectors can be connected to the communication link in a bus fashion, currently enabling a total of 14 detectors to be tested simultaneously from 100m away, over the same cable. Single Event Latch-up (SEL) and problems with irregular count rate of SRAMs created in the 90nm fabrication node has created problems during testing. Some solutions and techniques to mitigate these in hardware and firmware are presented in this work.Master i FysikkMAMN-PHYSPHYS39

    INVESTIGATING THE EFFECTS OF SINGLE-EVENT UPSETS IN STATIC AND DYNAMIC REGISTERS

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    Radiation-induced single-event upsets (SEUs) pose a serious threat to the reliability of registers. The existing SEU analyses for static CMOS registers focus on the circuit-level impact and may underestimate the pertinent SEU information provided through node analysis. This thesis proposes SEU node analysis to evaluate the sensitivity of static registers and apply the obtained node information to improve the robustness of the register through selective node hardening (SNH) technique. Unlike previous hardening techniques such as the Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) and the Dual Interlocked Cell (DICE) latch, the SNH method does not introduce larger area overhead. Moreover, this thesis also explores the impact of SEUs in dynamic flip-flops, which are appealing for the design of high-performance microprocessors. Previous work either uses the approaches for static flip-flops to evaluate SEU effects in dynamic flip-flops or overlook the SEU injected during the precharge phase. In this thesis, possible SEU sensitive nodes in dynamic flip-flops are re-examined and their window of vulnerability (WOV) is extended. Simulation results for SEU analysis in non-hardened dynamic flip-flops reveal that the last 55.3 % of the precharge time and a 100% evaluation time are affected by SEUs

    A Fast Modular Method for True Variation-Aware Separatrix Tracing in Nanoscaled SRAMs

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    As memory density continues to grow in modern systems, accurate analysis of SRAM stability is increasingly important to ensure high yields. Traditional static noise margin metrics fail to capture the dynamic characteristics of SRAM behavior, leading to expensive over-design and disastrous under-design. One of the central components of more accurate dynamic stability analysis is the separatrix; however, its straightforward extraction is extremely time-consuming, and efficient methods are either non-accurate or extremely difficult to implement. In this paper, we propose a novel algorithm for fast separatrix tracing of any given SRAM topology, designed with industry standard transistor models in nano-scaled technologies. The proposed algorithm is applied to both standard 6T SRAM bitcells, as well as previously proposed alternative sub-threshold bitcells, providing up to three orders-of-magnitude speedup, as compared to brute force methods. In addition, for the first time, statistical Monte Carlo separatrix distributions are plotted

    Analysis and Design of Resilient VLSI Circuits

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    The reliable operation of Integrated Circuits (ICs) has become increasingly difficult to achieve in the deep sub-micron (DSM) era. With continuously decreasing device feature sizes, combined with lower supply voltages and higher operating frequencies, the noise immunity of VLSI circuits is decreasing alarmingly. Thus, VLSI circuits are becoming more vulnerable to noise effects such as crosstalk, power supply variations and radiation-induced soft errors. Among these noise sources, soft errors (or error caused by radiation particle strikes) have become an increasingly troublesome issue for memory arrays as well as combinational logic circuits. Also, in the DSM era, process variations are increasing at an alarming rate, making it more difficult to design reliable VLSI circuits. Hence, it is important to efficiently design robust VLSI circuits that are resilient to radiation particle strikes and process variations. The work presented in this dissertation presents several analysis and design techniques with the goal of realizing VLSI circuits which are tolerant to radiation particle strikes and process variations. This dissertation consists of two parts. The first part proposes four analysis and two design approaches to address radiation particle strikes. The analysis techniques for the radiation particle strikes include: an approach to analytically determine the pulse width and the pulse shape of a radiation induced voltage glitch in combinational circuits, a technique to model the dynamic stability of SRAMs, and a 3D device-level analysis of the radiation tolerance of voltage scaled circuits. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed techniques for analyzing radiation particle strikes in combinational circuits and SRAMs are fast and accurate compared to SPICE. Therefore, these analysis approaches can be easily integrated in a VLSI design flow to analyze the radiation tolerance of such circuits, and harden them early in the design flow. From 3D device-level analysis of the radiation tolerance of voltage scaled circuits, several non-intuitive observations are made and correspondingly, a set of guidelines are proposed, which are important to consider to realize radiation hardened circuits. Two circuit level hardening approaches are also presented to harden combinational circuits against a radiation particle strike. These hardening approaches significantly improve the tolerance of combinational circuits against low and very high energy radiation particle strikes respectively, with modest area and delay overheads. The second part of this dissertation addresses process variations. A technique is developed to perform sensitizable statistical timing analysis of a circuit, and thereby improve the accuracy of timing analysis under process variations. Experimental results demonstrate that this technique is able to significantly reduce the pessimism due to two sources of inaccuracy which plague current statistical static timing analysis (SSTA) tools. Two design approaches are also proposed to improve the process variation tolerance of combinational circuits and voltage level shifters (which are used in circuits with multiple interacting power supply domains), respectively. The variation tolerant design approach for combinational circuits significantly improves the resilience of these circuits to random process variations, with a reduction in the worst case delay and low area penalty. The proposed voltage level shifter is faster, requires lower dynamic power and area, has lower leakage currents, and is more tolerant to process variations, compared to the best known previous approach. In summary, this dissertation presents several analysis and design techniques which significantly augment the existing work in the area of resilient VLSI circuit design

    Radiation Hardened by Design Methodologies for Soft-Error Mitigated Digital Architectures

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    abstract: Digital architectures for data encryption, processing, clock synthesis, data transfer, etc. are susceptible to radiation induced soft errors due to charge collection in complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs). Radiation hardening by design (RHBD) techniques such as double modular redundancy (DMR) and triple modular redundancy (TMR) are used for error detection and correction respectively in such architectures. Multiple node charge collection (MNCC) causes domain crossing errors (DCE) which can render the redundancy ineffectual. This dissertation describes techniques to ensure DCE mitigation with statistical confidence for various designs. Both sequential and combinatorial logic are separated using these custom and computer aided design (CAD) methodologies. Radiation vulnerability and design overhead are studied on VLSI sub-systems including an advanced encryption standard (AES) which is DCE mitigated using module level coarse separation on a 90-nm process with 99.999% DCE mitigation. A radiation hardened microprocessor (HERMES2) is implemented in both 90-nm and 55-nm technologies with an interleaved separation methodology with 99.99% DCE mitigation while achieving 4.9% increased cell density, 28.5 % reduced routing and 5.6% reduced power dissipation over the module fences implementation. A DMR register-file (RF) is implemented in 55 nm process and used in the HERMES2 microprocessor. The RF array custom design and the decoders APR designed are explored with a focus on design cycle time. Quality of results (QOR) is studied from power, performance, area and reliability (PPAR) perspective to ascertain the improvement over other design techniques. A radiation hardened all-digital multiplying pulsed digital delay line (DDL) is designed for double data rate (DDR2/3) applications for data eye centering during high speed off-chip data transfer. The effect of noise, radiation particle strikes and statistical variation on the designed DDL are studied in detail. The design achieves the best in class 22.4 ps peak-to-peak jitter, 100-850 MHz range at 14 pJ/cycle energy consumption. Vulnerability of the non-hardened design is characterized and portions of the redundant DDL are separated in custom and auto-place and route (APR). Thus, a range of designs for mission critical applications are implemented using methodologies proposed in this work and their potential PPAR benefits explored in detail.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201
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