Abstract

We have presented an analysis of the gate leakage current of the IP3 static random access memory (SRAM) cell structure when the cell is in idle mode (performs no data read/write operations) and active mode (performs data read/write operations), along with the requirements for the overall standby leakage power, active write and read powers. A comparison has been drawn with existing SRAM cell structures, the conventional 6T, PP, P4 and P3 cells. At the supply voltage, VDD = 0.8 V, a reduction of 98%, 99%, 92% and 94% is observed in the gate leakage current in comparison with the 6T, PP, P4 and P3 SRAM cells, respectively, while at VDD = 0.7 V, it is 97%, 98%, 87% and 84%. A significant reduction is also observed in the overall standby leakage power by 56%, the active write power by 44% and the active read power by 99%, compared with the conventional 6T SRAM cell at VDD = 0.8 V, with no loss in cell stability and performance with a small area penalty. The simulation environment used for this work is 45 nm deep sub-micron complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology, tox = 2.4 nm, Vthn = 0.22 V, Vthp = 0.224 V, VDD = 0.7 V and 0.8 V, at T = 300 K.

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