Patent application number | Description | Published |
20080201672 | CASCADED PASS-GATE TEST CIRCUIT WITH INTERPOSED SPLIT-OUTPUT DRIVE DEVICES - A cascaded pass-gate test circuit including interposed split-output drive devices provides accurate measurement of critical timing parameters of pass gates. The rise time and fall time of signals passed through the pass gate can be separately measured in a ring oscillator or one-shot delay line configuration. Inverters or other buffer circuits are provided as drive devices to couple the pass gates in cascade. The final complementary tree in each drive device is split so that the only one of the output pull-down transistor or pull-up transistor is connected to the next pass gate input, while the other transistor is connected to the output of the pass gate. The result is that the state transition associated with the device connected to the pass gate input is dominant in the delay, while the other state transition is propagated directly to the output of the pass gate, bypassing the pass gate. | 08-21-2008 |
20080225615 | PULSED RING OSCILLATOR CIRCUIT FOR STORAGE CELL READ TIMING EVALUATION - A pulsed ring oscillator circuit for storage cell read timing evaluation provides read strength information. A pulse generator is coupled to a bitline to which the storage cell to be measured is connected. The storage cell thereby forms part of the ring oscillator and the read strength of the storage cell is reflected in the frequency of oscillation. A pulse regeneration circuit is included in the ring so that the storage cell read loading does not cause the oscillation to decay. Alternatively, a counter may be used to count the number of oscillations until the oscillations decay, which also yields a measure of the read strength of the storage cell. The pulse generator may have variable output current, and the current varied to determine a change in current with the storage cell enabled and disabled that produces the same oscillation frequency. The read current is the difference between currents. | 09-18-2008 |
20080273403 | STORAGE CELL DESIGN EVALUATION CIRCUIT INCLUDING A WORDLINE TIMING AND CELL ACCESS DETECTION CIRCUIT - A storage cell design evaluation circuit including a wordline timing and cell access detection circuit provides accurate information about state changes in static storage cells. A storage cell test row includes the access detection circuit, which provides the same loading during an access operation as the other cells in the array. The access detection circuit provides an output that may be probed without affecting the timing, read stability or writeability of the cell. The test row can test the clock and/or address timing of the row and may include a separate power supply rail for the row wordline driver, so that variation of access timing, read stability and writeability with wordline strength/access voltage can be determined. Multiple test rows may be cascaded among columns to provide a long delay line or ring oscillator for improved measurement resolution. | 11-06-2008 |
20090016141 | Methods and Arrangements for Enhancing Power Management Systems in Integrated Circuits - Methods and arrangements to configure power management systems for integrated circuits are provided herein. A group of IC components that are functionally distinct or have mutually exclusive and/or quasi-mutually exclusive, (ME/QME) operating patterns (i.e. alternate or partially overlapping duty cycles) can be powered with a single power cell. An integrated circuit design tool can identified components in an integrated circuit design that have the ME/QME operating patterns. These cells can be collocated in close proximity to each other and power management system components can be placed in this area such that a multiple signal processing cells can share a single power line and a single power cell. Such a configuration can greatly reduce the size of a power management system for an integrated circuit. | 01-15-2009 |
20090027065 | Wordline-To-Bitline Output Timing Ring Oscillator Circuit for Evaluating Storage Array Performance - A wordline-to-bitline timing ring oscillator circuit for evaluating storage cell access time provides data on internal bitline access timing, and in particular the total wordline select-to-bitline read output timing. Columns of a storage array are connected in a ring, forming a ring oscillator. The bitline read circuit output of each column is connected to a wordline select input of a next column, with a net inversion around the ring, so that a ring oscillator is formed. The period of oscillation of the ring oscillator is determined by the total wordline select-to-bitline read circuit output timing for a first phase and the pre-charge interval time for the other phase, with the bitline read timing dominating. The circuit may be applied both to small-signal storage arrays, with the sense amplifier timing included within the ring oscillator period, or to large-signal storage arrays, with the read evaluate circuit timing included. | 01-29-2009 |
20090108888 | Switched-Capacitor Charge Pumps - A switched-capacitor charge pump comprises a two-phase charging circuit, cross-coupled transistors connected to output nodes of the switched capacitors, and a pump output connected to source terminals of the cross-coupled transistors. The charge pump has side transistors for boosting charge transfer, and gating logic of the side transistors includes level shifters which control connections to the pump output or a reference voltage. Negative and positive charge pump embodiments are provided. The charging circuit advantageously utilizes non-overlapping wide and narrow clock signals to generate multiple gating signals. The pump clock circuit preferably provides independent, programmable adjustment of the widths of the wide and narrow clock signals. An override mode can be provided using clamping circuits which shunt the pump output to the second nodes of the switched capacitors. | 04-30-2009 |
20090116312 | Storage Array Including a Local Clock Buffer with Programmable Timing - A storage array including a local clock buffer with programmable timing provides a mechanism for evaluating circuit timing internal to the storage array. The local clock buffer can independently adjust the pulse width of a local clock that controls the wordline and local bitline precharge pulses and the pulse width of a delayed clock that controls the global bitline precharge, evaulate and read data latching. The delay between the local clock and the delayed clock can also be adjusted. By varying the pulse widths of the local and delayed clock signal, along with the inter-clock delay, the timing margins of each cell in the array can be evaluated by reading and writing the cell with varying pulse width and clock delay. The resulting evaluation can be used to evaluate timing margin variation within a die, as well variation from die-to-die and under varying environments, e.g., voltage and temperature variation. | 05-07-2009 |
20090129193 | ENERGY EFFICIENT STORAGE DEVICE USING PER-ELEMENT SELECTABLE POWER SUPPLY VOLTAGES - An energy efficient storage device using per-element selectable power supply voltages provides energy conservation in storage devices while maintaining a particular performance level. The storage device is partitioned into multiple elements, which may be sub-arrays, rows, columns or individual storage cells. Each element has a corresponding virtual power supply rail that is provided with a selectable power supply voltage. The power supply voltage provided to the virtual power supply rail for an element is set to the minimum power supply voltage unless a higher power supply voltage is required for the element to meet performance requirements. A control cell may be provided within each element that provides a control signal that selects the power supply voltage supplied to the corresponding virtual power supply rail. The state of the cell may be set via a fuse or mask, or values may be loaded into the control cells at initialization of the storage device. | 05-21-2009 |
20090132873 | Method and System for Determining Element Voltage Selection Control Values for a Storage Device - A method and system for determining element voltage selection control values for a storage device provides energy conservation in storage arrays while maintaining a particular performance level. The storage device is partitioned into multiple elements, which may be sub-arrays, rows, columns or individual storage cells. Each element has a corresponding virtual power supply rail that is provided with a selectable power supply voltage. At test time, digital control values are determined for selection circuits for each element that set the virtual power supply rail to the minimum power supply voltage, unless a higher power supply voltage is required for the element to meet performance requirements. The set of digital control values can then be programmed into a fuse or used to adjust a mask at manufacture, or supplied on media along with the storage device and loaded into the device at system initialization. | 05-21-2009 |
20090172451 | METHOD AND COMPUTER PROGRAM FOR CONTROLLING A STORAGE DEVICE HAVING PER-ELEMENT SELECTABLE POWER SUPPLY VOLTAGES - A method and computer program product for controlling a storage device using per-element selectable power supply voltages provides energy conservation in storage devices while maintaining a particular performance level. The storage device is partitioned into multiple elements, which may be sub-arrays, rows, columns or individual storage cells. Each element has a corresponding virtual power supply rail that is provided with a selectable power supply voltage. The power supply voltage provided to the virtual power supply rail for an element is set to the minimum power supply voltage unless a higher power supply voltage is required for the element to meet performance requirements. A control cell may be provided within each element that provides a control signal that selects the power supply voltage supplied to the corresponding virtual power supply rail. The state of the cell may be set via a fuse or mask, or values may be loaded into the control cells at initialization of the storage device. | 07-02-2009 |
20090174441 | Peak Power Reduction Methods in Distributed Charge Pump Systems - A distributed charge pump system uses a delay element and frequency dividers to generate out of phase pump clock signals that drive different charge pumps, to offset peak current clock edges for each charge pump and thereby reduce overall peak power. Clock signal division and phase offset may be extended to multiple levels for further smoothing of the pump clock signal transitions. A dual frequency divider may be used which receives the clock signal and its complement, and generates two divided signals that are 90° out of phase. In an illustrative embodiment the clock generator comprises a variable-frequency clock source, and a voltage regulator senses an output voltage of the charge pumps, generates a reference voltage based on a currently selected frequency of the variable-frequency clock source, and temporarily disables the charge pumps (by turning off local pump clocks) when the output voltage is greater than the reference voltage. | 07-09-2009 |
20100001788 | SYSTEM TO EVALUATE CHARGE PUMP OUTPUTS AND ASSOCIATED METHODS - A system to evaluate charge pump output may include a comparator to compare a charge pump output voltage to a reference voltage to generate a comparison result. The system may also include a divider to divide down a clock signal. The system may further include a logical conjunction unit to operate on the comparison result and the divided down clock signal. | 01-07-2010 |
20100085823 | Optimizing Sram Performance over Extended Voltage or Process Range Using Self-Timed Calibration of Local Clock Generator - A delay circuit has a fixed delay path at a lower voltage level, a level converter, and an adjustable delay path at a higher voltage level. The fixed delay path includes an inverter chain, and the adjustable delay path includes serially-connected delay elements selectively connected to the circuit output. In an application for a local clock buffer of a static, random-access memory (SRAM), the lower voltage level is that of the local clock buffer, and the higher voltage level is that of the SRAM. These voltages may vary in response to dynamic voltage scaling, requiring re-calibration of the adjustable delay path. The adjustable delay path may be calibrated by progressively increasing the read access time of the SRAM array until a contemporaneous read operation returns the correct output, or by using a replica SRAM path to simulate variations in delay with changes in voltage supply. | 04-08-2010 |
20100102854 | CIRCULAR EDGE DETECTOR - A circular edge detector on an integrated circuit including a plurality of edge detector cells, each of the plurality of edge detector cells having an input select block operable to receive a data signal and a previous cell signal and to generate a present cell signal, and a state capture block operably connected to receive the present cell signal. The present cell signal of each of the plurality of edge detector cells is provided to a next of the plurality of edge detector cells as the previous cell signal for the next of the plurality of edge detector cells, and the present cell signal from a last edge detector cell is provided to a first edge detector cell as the previous cell signal for the first edge detector cell. | 04-29-2010 |
20100220541 | SWITCHED-CAPACITOR CHARGE PUMPS - A switched-capacitor charge pump comprises a two-phase charging circuit, cross-coupled transistors connected to output nodes of the switched capacitors, and a pump output connected to source terminals of the cross-coupled transistors. The charge pump has side transistors for boosting charge transfer, and gating logic of the side transistors includes level shifters which control connections to the pump output or a reference voltage. Negative and positive charge pump embodiments are provided. The charging circuit advantageously utilizes non-overlapping wide and narrow clock signals to generate multiple gating signals. The pump clock circuit preferably provides independent, programmable adjustment of the widths of the wide and narrow clock signals. An override mode can be provided using clamping circuits which shunt the pump output to the second nodes of the switched capacitors. | 09-02-2010 |
20100315132 | PEAK POWER REDUCTION METHODS IN DISTRIBUTED CHARGE PUMP SYSTEMS - A distributed charge pump system uses a delay element and frequency dividers to generate out of phase pump clock signals that drive different charge pumps, to offset peak current clock edges for each charge pump and thereby reduce overall peak power. Clock signal division and phase offset may be extended to multiple levels for further smoothing of the pump clock signal transitions. A dual frequency divider may be used which receives the clock signal and its complement, and generates two divided signals that are 90° out of phase. In an illustrative embodiment the clock generator comprises a variable-frequency clock source, and a voltage regulator senses an output voltage of the charge pumps, generates a reference voltage based on a currently selected frequency of the variable-frequency clock source, and temporarily disables the charge pumps (by turning off local pump clocks) when the output voltage is greater than the reference voltage. | 12-16-2010 |
20110188295 | High Performance eDRAM Sense Amplifier - Embedded dynamic random access memory (eDRAM) sense amplifier circuitry in which a bit line connected to each of a first plurality of eDRAM cells is controlled by cell control lines tied to each of the cells. During a READ operation the eDRAM cell releases its charge indicating its digital state. The digital charge propagates through the eDRAM sense amplifier circuitry to a mid-rail amplifier inverter circuit which amplifies the charge and provides it to a latch circuit. The latch circuit, in turn, inverts the charge to correctly represent at its output the logical value stored in the eDRAM cell being read, and returns the charge through the eDRAM sense amplifier circuitry to replenish the eDRAM cell. | 08-04-2011 |
20110204931 | PEAK POWER REDUCTION METHODS IN DISTRIBUTED CHARGE PUMP SYSTEMS - A distributed charge pump system uses a delay element and frequency dividers to generate out of phase pump clock signals that drive different charge pumps, to offset peak current clock edges for each charge pump and thereby reduce overall peak power. Clock signal division and phase offset may be extended to multiple levels for further smoothing of the pump clock signal transitions. A dual frequency divider may be used which receives the clock signal and its complement, and generates two divided signals that are 90° out of phase. In an illustrative embodiment the clock generator comprises a variable-frequency clock source, and a voltage regulator senses an output voltage of the charge pumps, generates a reference voltage based on a currently selected frequency of the variable-frequency clock source, and temporarily disables the charge pumps (by turning off local pump clocks) when the output voltage is greater than the reference voltage. | 08-25-2011 |
20110225438 | COMPUTER PROGRAM PRODUCT FOR CONTROLLING A STORAGE DEVICE HAVING PER-ELEMENT SELECTABLE POWER SUPPLY VOLTAGES - A computer program product for controlling a storage device using per-element selectable power supply voltages provides energy conservation in storage devices while maintaining a particular performance level. The storage device is partitioned into multiple elements, which may be sub-arrays, rows, columns or individual storage cells. Each element has a corresponding virtual power supply rail that is provided with a selectable power supply voltage. The power supply voltage provided to the virtual power supply rail for an element is set to the minimum power supply voltage unless a higher power supply voltage is required for the element to meet performance requirements. A control cell may be provided within each element that provides a control signal that selects the power supply voltage supplied to the corresponding virtual power supply rail. The state of the cell may be set via a fuse or mask, or values may be loaded into the control cells at initialization of the storage device. | 09-15-2011 |
20120212997 | TEST STRUCTURE FOR CHARACTERIZING MULTI-PORT STATIC RANDOM ACCESS MEMORY AND REGISTER FILE ARRAYS - A test structure for characterizing a production static random access memory (SRAM) array. The test structure includes a characterization circuit having multiple memory cell columns connected in series to form a ring configuration. The characterization circuit is fabricated on a wafer substrate in common with and proximate to a production SRAM array. The characterization circuit preferably includes SRAM cells having a circuit topology substantially identical to the circuit topology of memory cells within the production SRAM array. In one embodiment, the test structure is utilized for characterizing a multi-port memory array and includes multiple memory cell columns connected in series to form a ring oscillator characterization circuit. Each cell column in the characterization circuit includes multiple SRAM cells each having a latching node and multiple data path access nodes. Selection control circuitry selectively enables the multiple data path access nodes for the SRAM cells within the characterization circuit. | 08-23-2012 |
20120293197 | On-Chip Leakage Current Modeling and Measurement Circuit - At least one N-type transistor and at least one P-type transistor separate from the digital circuit are sized to represent the total area of the corresponding type transistors in the digital circuit. The gates of the N-type transistor and P-type transistors are set to voltages according to the corresponding off-state logic levels of the digital circuit. The N-type and P-type transistors form a portion of corresponding current mirror circuits, which can provide outputs to a leakage current monitor and/or a control circuit such as a comparator that determines when leakage current for the N-type or P-type devices has exceeded a threshold. The output of the measurement/control circuit can be used to determine a temperature of and/or control operation of the digital circuit or the system environment of the integrated circuit. | 11-22-2012 |
20120320689 | Performing Logic Functions on More Than One Memory Cell Within an Array of Memory Cells - A circuit structure is provided for performing a logic function within a memory. A plurality of read word line transistors are provided that receive a read word line signal and, upon receiving the read word line signal, the plurality of read word line transistors provide a path from a plurality of bit-line transistors associated with a plurality of physically adjacent memory cells to a read bit-line. In response to an associated memory cell within the memory storing a first value, each of the plurality of read bit-line transistors turns on and provides a path to ground thereby causing a first output value to be output on the read bit-line. In response to all of the plurality of memory cells storing a second value, the plurality of read bit-line transistors turn off thereby preventing a path to ground and a second output value is output on the read bit-line. | 12-20-2012 |
20130070549 | Single-Ended Sense Amplifier with Read-Assist - A sense amplifier is provided that comprises, responsive to receiving a set signal to turn on a set device and a precharged voltage level read bit line signal, a keeper device that turns on responsive to receiving a LOW signal from an inverting amplifier and pulls up the voltage at a first node so that a HIGH signal is output onto a global bit line. Responsive to receiving the set signal to turn on the set device and a read bit line signal that is discharging through a read stack path to ground and responsive to the read bit line signal discharging below a first predesigned voltage level, a read assist device in the sense amplifier turns on responsive to receiving a HIGH signal from the inverting amplifier and pulls down the voltage at the first node so that a LOW state is output onto a global bit line. | 03-21-2013 |
20130077415 | CIRCUIT FOR MEMORY CELL RECOVERY - An apparatus and method for combating the effects of bias temperature instability (BTI) in a memory cell. Bit lines connecting to a memory cell contain two alternate paths criss-crossing to connect a lower portion of a first bit line to an upper portion of a second bit line, and to connect a lower portion of the second bit line to an upper portion of the first bit line. Alternative to activating transistors on the bit lines to read and write to the memory cell, transistors on the alternative paths may be activated to read and write to the memory cell from the opposite bit lines. The memory cell may be read through the bit lines to a sense amplifier, the transistors on the bit lines are subsequently deactivated and the transistors on the alternate paths are activated to write transposed bit values to the memory cell, thereby reversing the biases. | 03-28-2013 |
20130272077 | CIRCUIT FOR MEMORY CELL RECOVERY - An apparatus and method for combating the effects of bias temperature instability (BTI) and other variability in a memory cell. Bit lines connecting to a memory cell contain two alternate paths that criss-cross to connect a lower portion of a first bit line to an upper portion of a second bit line, and to connect a lower portion of the second bit line to an upper portion of the first bit line. Alternative to activating transistors on the bit lines to read and write to the memory cell, transistors on the alternative paths may be activated to read and write to the memory cell from the opposite bit line. In this fashion, the memory cell may be read through the bit lines to a sense amplifier where the bit values are latched. While the bit values remain latched in the sense amplifier, the transistors on the bit lines are deactivated and the transistors on the alternate paths are activated. When the word line is accessed, the bit values will be written into the opposite sides of the memory cell, reversing the biases. | 10-17-2013 |
20140136786 | ASYNCHRONOUS PERSISTENT STORES FOR TRANSACTIONS - A processor includes a processor core, a cache, and a tracker. The processor core is configured to execute persistent write instructions and receive notifications of completed persistent write instructions. The tracker is configured to track the completion state of a persistent write instruction. | 05-15-2014 |