On the efficacy of write-assist techniques in low voltage nanoscale SRAMs

Vikas Chandra, Cezary Pietrzyk, Robert Aitken
2010 2010 Design, Automation & Test in Europe Conference & Exhibition (DATE 2010)  
Read and write assist techniques are now commonly used to lower the minimum operating voltage (Vmin) of an SRAM. In this paper, we review the efficacy of four leading write-assist (WA) techniques and their behavior at lower supply voltages in commercial SRAMs from 65nm, 45nm and 32nm low power technology nodes. In particular, the word-line boosting and negative bit-line WA techniques seem most promising at lower voltages. These two techniques help reduce the value of W Lcrit by a factor of
more » ... at 0.7V and also decrease the 3σ spread by ∼3.3X, thus significantly reducing the impact of process variations. These write-assist techniques also impact the dynamic read noise margin (DRNM) of half-selected cells during the write operation. The negative bit-line WA technique has virtually no impact on the DRNM but all other WA techniques degrade the DRNM by 10-15%. In conjunction with the benefit (decrease in W Lcrit) and the negative impact (decrease in DRNM), overhead of implementation in terms of area and performance must be analyzed to choose the best write-assist technique for lowering the SRAM Vmin.
doi:10.1109/date.2010.5457179 dblp:conf/date/ChandraPA10 fatcat:oc2i3etufnbzrhzvgsjlfdxk3i