학술논문

Ultra-Low-Voltage UTBB-SOI-Based, Pseudo-Static Storage Circuits for Cryogenic CMOS Applications
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Journal on Exploratory Solid-State Computational Devices and Circuits IEEE J. Explor. Solid-State Comput. Devices Circuits Exploratory Solid-State Computational Devices and Circuits, IEEE Journal on. 7(2):201-208 Dec, 2021
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Cryogenic electronics
Silicon-on-insulator
Threshold voltage
Flip-flops
Cryogenics
Leakage currents
FinFETs
Cryo-CMOS
embedded dynamic random access memory (eDRAM)
flip-flop
pseudo-static
retention time
ultra-thin body and buried oxide silicon-on-insulator (UTBB-SOI)
Language
ISSN
2329-9231
Abstract
Operating CMOS circuits at cryogenic temperatures offers advantages of higher mobility, higher ON-current, and better subthreshold characteristics, which can be leveraged to realize high-performance CMOS circuits. However, an ultra-low-voltage operation is necessary to minimize the power consumption and to offset the cooling cost overheads. The MOSFET threshold voltages (Vt) increase at cryogenic temperatures making it challenging to achieve high performance while operating at very low voltage. Ultra-thin body and buried oxide silicon-on-insulator (UTBB-SOI)-based MOSFETs can modulate the transistor threshold voltage using the back-gate bias, unlike conventional FinFETs. This unique UTBB-SOI technology attribute has been leveraged to realize compact pseudo-static storage circuits, namely, embedded dynamic random access memory (DRAM) bitcell and a flip-flop operating at 0.2 V and 77 K. This article presents UTBB-SOI device fabrication details and calibrate experimental device characteristics with BSIM compact models. SPICE simulations suggest the feasibility of three-transistor gain-cell embedded DRAM (eDRAM) capable of reliably storing three distinct voltage levels (1.5 bits/cell) and exhibiting retention time of the order of 10 4 s. Furthermore, a unique pseudo-static flip-flop design is presented, which can lower the clock power by 50%, transistor count by 20%, and static power consumption by 20%.