Abstract
The In-Memory Computing (IMC) architecture based on Conventional 6T, 8T, and 10T SRAM suffers from compute disturbance, compute-failure, and half-select issues, which affect the reliability of In-Memory Boolean Computation (IMBC) operations. To overcome these problems, local bit-line Shared pass-gate Dual-Port 8T (SDP8T) SRAM-based IMC architecture is proposed to perform energy-efficient IMBC operations. The local bit-line shared pass-gate structure addresses the half select issues with a small area overhead and achieves higher array efficiency by incorporating the bit-interleave architecture. The virtual-VSS write-assist is used in SDP8T SRAM to improve the write-margin yield (μ−3σ) by 48.99%, and multi-VTH technique improves Decoupled Read-Margin (DRM) yield by 5.26% when compared to DP8T SRAM. The Dynamical Reset Word Line (DRWL) scheme is proposed to resolve the sneak current problem and make the proposed IMC architecture more resilient to compute disturbance at non-read decouple paths during IMBC operations. Further, the Reference-based Reconfigurable Sense Amplifier (RRCSA) scheme is proposed to achieve reliable (compute-failure free) sensing for IMBC on four operands simultaneously in a single cycle, normal read, and Binary Content Addressable Memory (BCAM) operations. The 4 Kb SRAM array is implemented in 65-nm CMOS technology to analyze the SDP8T-IMC architecture. The operating frequency of 1190 MHz and average-energy consumption of 18.56 fJ/bit are achieved during IMBC operation at 1V. For BCAM operations, it achieves 0.60 fJ/search/bit energy consumption in the worst case (i.e., all data mismatch) at 1V. Cumulatively, the proposed SDP8T-IMC architecture has the highest figure of merits than the recently reported IMC architecture.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.