A Low-Cost Reduced-Latency DRAM Architecture With Dynamic Reconfiguration of Row Decoder

  • Fujun Bai
  • , Song Wang
  • , Xuerong Jia
  • , Yixin Guo
  • , Bing Yu
  • , Hang Wang
  • , Cong Lai
  • , Qiwei Ren
  • , Hongbin Sun

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

DRAM latency has remained almost constant over decades and has become a performance bottleneck of computing systems. In this study, we propose a low-cost DRAM architecture enabling dynamic reconfiguring of row decoder to provide reduced latency with high flexibility and reliability. We apply minimum changes to row decoders and allow dynamic reconfiguration to switch array blocks between two modes: 1) normal mode, where the DRAM array behaves in the same manner as the conventional DRAM does and 2) low latency mode, where two DRAM cells in the neighbor array blocks are coupled to operate as a logical cell and reduce latency reliably according to the differential principle. On the basis of an industrial open bitline (BL) cell array, we only change the word-line decoding scheme but keep the cell array and sense amplifiers (SAs) untouched to avoid modifications to the DRAM process for cost and reliability considerations. Our circuit simulation shows that the low-latency mode can reduce row-to-column delay and row access strobe time by 25.7% and 23.2%, respectively. We evaluate the reduced-latency LPDDR4 DRAM on various workloads. Compared with the JEDEC standard DRAM, our proposal provides a maximum system performance improvement of 8.5%. We believe that our proposal is a reliable and cost-friendly solution to DRAM latency reduction.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)128-141
Number of pages14
JournalIEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems
Volume31
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2023

Keywords

  • DRAM
  • memory design
  • memory structures

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A Low-Cost Reduced-Latency DRAM Architecture With Dynamic Reconfiguration of Row Decoder'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this