The invention relates to digital low-dropout voltage regulators (DLDOs).
Distributed on-chip voltage regulation in fine temporal and spatial granularity enables fast and timely control of the operating point. Thereby, the operating voltage and frequency can better match the needs of the workload to maximize energy efficiency. As a function of the workload, throughout the execution time, different components of a processor chip exhibit different microarchitectural activities, which translates into different demands for current to be pulled from the respective regulators. Different components of the processor chip also show different degrees of tolerance to errors, which may result from deviation of design parameters from their target values due to device wearout, voltage noise, temperature, or process variations. For example, it has been observed that the emerging recognition, mining, and synthesis applications can tolerate errors in the data flow but not in control.
Heterogeneous distributed on-chip voltage regulation has been explored to best capture spatiotemporal variations in current demand of different processor components, where the regulator operating regimes are tailored to the activity range of the respective load (processor component). Such tailoring can be achieved by: 1) keeping the regulator design constant across chip but making each regulator reconfigurable or 2) by designing each regulator from the groundup to match different load conditions.
The major transistor aging mechanisms of DLDOs include bias temperature instability (BTI), hot carrier injection, and time-dependent dielectric breakdown, among which BTI is the dominant reliability concern for nanometer integrated circuits design. BTI can induce threshold voltage increase and consequent circuit-level performance degradation. Positive BTI (PBTI) induces aging of nMOS transistors while negative BTI (NBTI) causes aging of pMOS transistors. The impact of BTI aging mechanism is a strong function of temperature, electrical stress, and time.
The DLDO 2 needs to be able to supply the maximum possible load current Imax. It is, however, demonstrated that, within most practical applications, including but not limited to smart phone and chip multiprocessors, less than the average power is consumed most of the time. The application environment of DLDO together with the conventional activation scheme of Mi leads to the heavy use of M1 to Mm and less or even no use of Mm+1 to MN. This scheme can therefore introduce serious degradation to M1 to Mm due to NBTI. Meanwhile, the error tolerance capability of different functional blocks can be different, which necessitates area-quality tradeoff for aging mitigation-induced area overhead (OH).
Furthermore, DLDOs experience inherent limit cycle oscillation (LCO) in steady state due to inherent quantization errors. The number of power transistors that are periodically turned ON or OFF in steady state is the mode of LCO. A larger LCO mode under a certain load current Load and clock frequency fclk conditions may lead to larger steady-state output voltage ripple, which can degrade the performance of the DLDO. Larger delay between the clocked comparator and shift register is detrimental to LCO. The BTI-induced control loop degradation can potentially further exacerbate the LCO mode.
A DLDO is disclosed herein having a configuration that mitigates performance degradation of the DLDO caused by LCO. The DLDO comprises a clocked comparator, an array of N power transistors, a digital controller, and a clock pulsewidth reduction circuit. A first terminal of the clocked comparator receives a reference voltage signal, Vref. A second input terminal of the clocked comparator receives an output voltage signal Vout output from an output voltage terminal of the DLDO. A clock terminal of the clocked comparator receives a DLDO clock signal, clk, having a preselected pulse width. The clocked comparator compares the reference voltage signal, Vref, with the output voltage signal and outputs a comparator output voltage, Vcmp. The array of N power transistors are electrically connected in parallel with one another, where N is a positive integer that is greater than or equal to one. The first terminal of each power transistor is electrically coupled to the output voltage terminal of the DLDO. The digital controller comprises control logic configured to activate and deactivate the power transistors of the DLDO in accordance with a preselected activation/deactivation control scheme. The control signals cause the power transistors to be turned ON or OFF in accordance with the preselected activation/deactivation control scheme. The clock pulsewidth reduction circuit is configured to receive an input clock signal, CLK, having a first pulsewidth and to generate the DLDO clock signal, clk, having the preselected pulsewidth. The preselected pulsewidth of the DLDO clock signal, clk, is smaller than the first pulsewidth of the input clock signal, CLK. An output terminal of the clock pulsewidth reduction circuit is electrically coupled to the clock terminals of the clocked comparator and the digital controller for delivering the DLDO clock signal, clk, to the clocked comparator and to the digital controller.
A method is disclosed herein for mitigating performance degradation in a DLDO caused by LCO. The method comprises:
These and other features and advantages will become apparent from the following description, drawings and claims.
The example embodiments are best understood from the following detailed description when read with the accompanying drawing figures. It is emphasized that the various features are not necessarily drawn to scale. In fact, the dimensions may be arbitrarily increased or decreased for clarity of discussion. Wherever applicable and practical, like reference numerals refer to like elements.
The present disclosure discloses a DLDO having a configuration that mitigates performance degradation of the DLDO caused by LCO. The DLDO comprises a clocked comparator, an array of power transistors, a digital controller and a clock pulsewidth reduction circuit. The clocked comparator and the digital controller have clock terminals for receiving a DLDO clock signal having a preselected pulsewidth. The digital controller comprises control logic configured to control signals that cause the power transistors to be turned ON or OFF in accordance with the preselected activation/deactivation control scheme. The clock pulsewidth reduction circuit comprises clock reduction logic configured to receive a clock signal having a first pulsewidth and to generate the DLDO clock signal having the preselected pulsewidth that is narrower that the first pulsewidth. The DLDO clock signal is delivered to the clock terminals of the clocked comparator and of the digital controller. The narrower pulsewidth of the DLDO clock reduces the LCO mode to mitigate performance degradation caused by LCO.
In the following detailed description, for purposes of explanation and not limitation, exemplary, or representative, embodiments disclosing specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of inventive principles and concepts. However, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of the present disclosure that other embodiments according to the present teachings that are not explicitly described or shown herein are within the scope of the appended claims. Moreover, descriptions of well-known apparatuses and methods may be omitted so as not to obscure the description of the exemplary embodiments. Such methods and apparatuses are clearly within the scope of the present teachings, as will be understood by those of skill in the art. It should also be understood that the word “example,” as used herein, is intended to be non-exclusionary and non-limiting in nature.
The terminology used herein is for purposes of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to be limiting. The defined terms are in addition to the technical, scientific, or ordinary meanings of the defined terms as commonly understood and accepted in the relevant context.
The terms “a,” “an” and “the” include both singular and plural referents, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, “a device” includes one device and plural devices. The terms “substantial” or “substantially” mean to within acceptable limits or degrees acceptable to those of skill in the art. The term “approximately” means to within an acceptable limit or amount to one of ordinary skill in the art.
An area that has not yet been explored is how the aforementioned heterogeneous distributed on-chip voltage regulation can help in trading the program output quality for area overhead (OH) by, e.g., assigning error-prone (i.e., slower and/or less accurate) regulators to feed processor components in charge of data flow which can tolerate errors. Control heavy components, on the other hand, should not be permitted to leave the error-free zone to avoid catastrophic program termination or excessive loss in program output quality even if the program does not crash.
To this end, it is important to understand the type and impact of errors that voltage regulators can introduce to the system in order to assess what extent such regulator-induced errors can be masked by their respective loads (i.e., data flow heavy processor components) and how regulator-induced errors interact with load-induced potential errors in determining the final computation accuracy. This disclosure sheds light on this issue by quantifying the impact of one of the most prevalent reliability concerns, aging, on regulator robustness.
As an essential part of large scale integrated circuits, on-chip voltage regulators need to be active most of the time to provide the required power to the load circuit. The load current and temperature can vary quite a bit, especially for microprocessor applications. These variations partially contribute to different aging mechanisms of on-chip voltage regulators, which should be considered to avoid overdesign for a targeted lifetime. Additionally, in certain processor components that can show higher degrees of tolerance to errors, the regulators can be intentionally under-designed to save valuable chip area and potentially power-conversion efficiency. In other words, a heterogeneous distributed power delivery network can be designed comprising different DLDOs including accurate DLDOs that house additional circuitry to mitigate the aging-induced supply voltage variations and approximate DLDOs that are intentionally under-designed to mitigate, just enough, aging-induced variations. The quality of the supply voltage directly affects the data path delay and signal quality, and fluctuations in the supply voltage result in delay uncertainty and clock jitter. According to one aspect of the present disclosure, the supply noise tolerance of certain processor components is used as an “area quality control knob” that compromises the quality of the supply voltage to save valuable chip area.
Several studies have been performed regarding the reliability issues in nanometer CMOS designs. To date, only a limited amount of work has been done on the reliability of on-chip voltage regulators. To this end, the present disclosure provides a quantitative analysis of aging effects on on-chip voltage regulators considering load current characteristics and temperature variations as well as efficient reliability enhancement techniques under arbitrary load conditions.
As compared to other voltage regulator types, the emerging DLDO has gained impetus due to the design simplicity, easiness for integration, high power density, and fast response. DLDOs have demonstrated major advantages in modern processors including the recent IBM POWER8 processor. More importantly, as compared to the analog LDOs, a DLDO can provide certain advantages for low-power and low-voltage IoT applications due to its capability for low supply voltage operations. However, as pMOS is used as the power transistor for DLDOs, NBTI-induced degradations largely affect important performance metrics such as the maximum output current capability Imax, load response time TR, and magnitude of the droop ΔV. Meanwhile, as indicated above, the combined NBTI- and PBTI-induced control loop degradations can potentially increase the mode of LCOs within DLDOs and adversely affect the steady-state output voltage ripple performance. It is, therefore, imperative to investigate aging mitigation techniques for DLDOs to achieve reliable operation of critical components. Alternatively, when a circuit component can tolerate higher degrees of errors, the DLDOs can be designed with minimal area OH, achieving heterogeneous power delivery. Based on this understanding, the present disclosure discloses a methodology for designing a DLDO that allows the DLDO to be designed at the design time based on the supply noise resiliency requirement of the circuitry it the DLDO powers. Since the number of DLDOs can be as high as several hundred in modern processors, the area and number of DLDOs can be easily scaled to satisfy the diverse needs of systems that house components with varying degrees of noise tolerance.
The present disclosure is organized as follows. Background information regarding the conventional DLDO shown in
A. Bias Temperature Instability of the Conventional DLDO
NBTI can introduce significant Vth degradations to pMOS transistors due to negatively applied gate to source voltage Vgs. The increase in |Vth| due to NBTI is considered to be related to the generation of interface traps at the Si/SiO2 interface when there is a gate voltage. |Vth| increases when electrical stress is applied and partially recovers when stress is removed. This process is commonly explained using a reaction-diffusion (R-D) model. The Vth degradation can be estimated during each stress and recovery phase using a cycle-to-cycle model and can also be evaluated using a long-term reliability model. As the long-term reliability evaluation is the focus of this work, the analytical model for long-term worst case threshold voltage degradation ΔVth estimation can be expressed as:
where Cox, k, T, α, and t are, respectively, the oxide capacitance, Boltzmann constant, temperature, the fraction of time (activity factor) when the device is under stress, and operation time. Klt and Ea are the fitting parameters to match the model with the experimental data. Note that NBTI recovery phase is already included in the model.
Imax, TR, and ΔV are among the most important design parameters for DLDOs. The effect of NBTI-induced degradations on these important performance metrics is examined in this section.
A. Maximum Current Supply Capability
Without NBTI induced degradations, Imax=NIpMOS, where IpMOS is the maximum output current of a single pMOS stage. For the DLDO, |Vgs| in Equation (1) is equal to Vin when Mi is active. The pMOS transistor Mi operates in linear region when turned on and the on-resistance Ron of a single pMOS stage can be approximated as:
Ron≈[(W/L)μpCox(Vin−|Vth|)]−1 (2)
where W, L, μp, and Cox are, respectively, the width, length, mobility, and oxide capacitance of Mi. IpMOS can thus be expressed as:
where Vsd is the source drain voltage of Mi. NBTI induced degradation factor DFi for Mi can be defined as:
where ΔVth
B. Load Response Time
Load response time TR measures how fast the feedback loop responds to a step load. TR can be estimated as:
where R, C, fclk, and Δiload are, respectively, the average DLDO output resistance before and after Δiload, capacitance, clock frequency, and amplitude of the load change. Considering NBTI effect, degraded TR can be expressed as:
As 0<DF<1 and TR<TRdeg, NBTI induced degradation slows down DLDO response.
C. Magnitude of the Droop
Magnitude of the droop ΔV reflects the Vout noise profile under transient response and can be estimated as:
Considering NBTI effect, degraded ΔV can be expressed as:
Let Δiload/IpMOSfclkRC=A, A>0. Under 0<DF<1, the following holds:
and ΔV<ΔVdeg, which means NBTI can degrade the transient voltage noise profile.
D. Limit Cycle Oscillation
In the conventional DLDOs, when the shift register turns ON/OFF the pass transistor, the output voltage of the DLDO cannot change instantaneously due to the output pole of the DLDO. The delay between the operation of the shift register and fluctuation of the output voltage, together with the quantization effects of the comparator and the delay between the sampling instant and the time of pMOS array actuation lead to the occurrence of LCO. Such behavior can be examined by a nonlinear sampled feedback model to determine the possible modes and amplitudes of LCOs.
N(A,ϕ), P(z), S(z), and D(z) can be expressed, respectively, as:
where KOUT=KdcIpMOS, T=1/fclk, Fl=1/(RL∥RpMOS)C, and ϕ∈(0, π/M). D, Fl, KOUT, Kdc, RL, and RpMOS are, respectively, the amplitude of comparator output, load pole, gain of P(z), direct current (dc) proportional constant, load resistance, and resistance of power transistor array.
The mode and amplitude of LCO can be determined by the following Nyquist criterion:
N(A,φ)P(ejωT)S(ejωT)D(ejωT)=1∠(−π) (16)
where ω=π/TM is the angular LCO frequency. The phase shift ϕLCO for a steady LCO can thus be expressed as:
ϕLCO needs to be within (0, π/M) for mode M to exist.
Transistor aging can lead to increased path delay. Considering BTI-induced propagation delay degradation of the clocked comparator and shift register, the delay element in
where tcd and tsd are, respectively, the degraded propagation delay of the clocked comparator and of the shift register. It should be noted that tcd is canceled out in D′(z), and thus, the propagation delay of the clocked comparator has negligible effects on the mode of LCO. ϕLCO then becomes:
The negative effect of the propagation delay of the shift register on LCO can be explained as follows. If an LCO mode Ma exists and the propagation delay of the shift register is not considered, the phase shift ϕLCO is within (0, π/Ma). That is, 0<π/2−π/2Ma−tan−1(π/MaTFl)<π/Ma. For a larger LCO mode, Ma+1, to exist, the following condition needs to be satisfied:
Typically
and if π/2βn/2Ma−tan−1(π/MaTFl) is very close to π/Ma, it is likely that:
such that LCO mode Ma+1 cannot exist as (20) is violated.
However, if the propagation delay of the shift register is included, for LCO mode Ma+1, ϕLCO becomes:
The contribution of the πtxd/(Ma+1)T term may push ϕLCO′|M=Ma+1 to be within the range of (0, π/(Ma+1)), making a larger LCO mode Ma+1 possible. This demonstrates the potential negative effect of the propagation delay of the shift register on LCO.
It should be noted that aging-induced propagation delay degradation is not a sufficient condition to incite a larger LCO mode. However, as will be discussed below in Sections III and IV, due to a small aging-induced shift register delay degradation, the lower boundary of the timing constraint for normal DLDO operation can be significantly smaller than half of the clock cycle such that beneficial effects of the reduced clock pulsewidth scheme can be achieved.
Considering the side effects of power transistor array and control loop degradations, a representative embodiment of an A-A DLDO 100 is shown in
N parallel pMOS power transistors Mi (i=1, . . . , N) of the DLDO 100 are connected between the input voltage Vin and output voltage Vout, and a feedback control loop is implemented with a clocked comparator 101 and the uDSR 110, which operates as the digital controller of the DLDO 100. The value of Vout and reference voltage Vref are compared through the comparator 101 at the rising edge of the clock signal clk. The power transistors Mi are turned on or off in the manner described below with reference to
A. Unidirectional Shift Register
To mitigate NBTI-induced IpMOS, TR and ΔV degradations, distributing the electrical stress among all available power transistors as evenly as possible under arbitrary load current conditions is desirable. Reliability is not considered in conventional bDSR-based DLDO designs, and therefore too much stress is exerted on a small portion of Mis. A representative embodiment of the uDSR is disclosed herein that evenly distributes the electrical stress among all of the Mis to realize an A-A DLDO with enhanced reliability.
An inactive power transistor at the right boundary is turned on if Vcmp is logic high. An active power transistor at the left boundary is turned off if Vcmp is logic low. The uDSR 110 is realized through this activation/deactivation scheme, as demonstrated in
Considering the similar area of DFF and TFF, the proposed uDSR only induces ˜3.8% area overhead per control stage compared to bDSR. The total area overhead is thus ˜2.6% of a single DLDO area designed with μA current supply capability. As little extra transistors are added per control stage and the bDSR only consumes a few μW power, the uDSR induced power overhead is also negligible. With larger ipMOS for higher load current rating, both the area and power overhead can be significantly less.
1. Steady-State Operation
Under steady-state conditions, LCO occurs to supply the required current. The number of active power transistors changes dynamically at the rising edge of each clock cycle. Due to LCO, the changing number of active power transistors leads to the flip of control logics and power transistors for both conventional DLDOs and for the DLDO 100. The number of active/inactive power transistors is the same during each clock cycle for both the bDSR shown in
With reference to
2. Transient Load Operation
Under transient load conditions, operations of the bDSR and uDSR follow similar activation/deactivation patterns to those demonstrated in
Thus, regardless of the load current conditions, electrical stress can always be more evenly distributed among all of the available power transistors of the DLDO 100. Furthermore, as compared to the conventional bDSR-based DLDO 2, the number of activated/deactivated power transistors per clock cycle remains the same, and thus, bDSR and uDSR have the same transfer function S(z). Leveraging uDSR to evenly distribute electrical stress within the power transistor array does not negatively affect control loop performance.
B. Reduced Clock Pulsewidth
The clock signal that is typically used with the DLDOs of the type shown in
tc>tcd+tld+ttst (24)
where tld and tlst are, respectively, the total propagation delay of the logic gates 1121 connected to the first stage TFF 1111 within the uDSR 110 and the setup time of the TFF 1111. Aging-induced degradation of tld, ttst and tcd, needs to be considered with the targeted lifetime to decide the value of tc. A known one-shot pulse generator can be leveraged for reduced pulsewidth clock generation. For example,
The one-shot pulse generator 120 comprises a delay element 121, an XNOR gate 122, a first inverter 123, a NOR gate 124, a NAND gate 125, and a second inverter 126. When using the one-shot pulse generator 120 as the clock pulsewidth reduction circuit for the DLDO 100, the minimum pulsewidth of the PULSE-R signal is limited by the delay element 121 and the maximum pulse width is limited by the pulsewidth of the CLK signal. The PULSE-R signal that will be used as the clk signal of the DLDO 100 shown in
It should be noted that the clock pulsewidth reduction circuit is discussed herein in terms of its use with the DLDO 100 shown in
Within the A-A DLDO 100, ϕLCO becomes:
The effectiveness of the DLDO 100 having a reduced clock pulsewidth DLDO regarding LCO mode reduction will be described below in Section IV-B.
C.1 Overhead
Considering the similar area of DFFs and TFFs, the uDSR 110 only induces ˜3.8% area OH per control stage compared to the bDSR 5. The total area OH including the one-shot pulse generator is ˜2.6% of a single active DLDO area designed with μA current supply capability. As few extra transistors are added per control stage and the bDSR 5 only consumes a few μW power, the uDSR-induced power OH is also negligible. With larger IpMOSs for higher load current rating, both the area and power OH can be significantly less. It should be noted that the area OH discussed here is different from the area OH that will be discussed in Section V to compensate aging-induced degradation.
C.2 Compatibility with Quiescent Current Saving Technique
In accordance with a representative embodiment, known freeze mode operation and clock gating techniques are employed in the DLDO 100 to save quiescent current at steady state. For freeze mode operation, the DLDO control circuit can be disabled once the number of active power transistors converges to save the quiescent current. In this case, the operation of the uDSR 110 would also be stopped. However, after many load current changes and different steady-state operations for long-term reliability concern, the active power transistor region (darkened region shown in
Furthermore, in accordance with an embodiment, a known sliding clock gating technique can also be utilized to save the steady-state quiescent current. For this purpose, the power transistor array and the control flip-flops are divided into multiple sections with equal number within each section. During steady-state operation, if the left boundary of the active power transistor region falls within one section and the right boundary falls within another section, other sections not covering the two boundaries can be temporarily clock gated to save quiescent current. The active power transistor region still dynamically moves rightward to evenly distribute the electrical stress and the clock-gated sections also dynamically change. For this case, as not all flip-flops are clock gated, the steady-state quiescent current can be higher than that in the freeze mode operation discussed earlier. Thus, the unidirectional shift scheme is still beneficial even when a steady-state quiescent current saving technique is employed. However, a tradeoff exists between the steady-state quiescent current saving and reliability enhancement enabled by the unidirectional shift scheme.
To evaluate the benefits of the proposed AA DLDO architecture in terms of reliability enhancement and to provide design insights for a targeted lifetime, an IBM POWER8 like microprocessor simulation platform is constructed.
A. 1 Simulation Framework
An IBM POWER8 Like Microprocessor was used for the simulation framework. The IBM POWER8 microprocessor is currently among one of the state-of-the-art server-class processors and, thus, a representative for evaluation of the proposed A-A DLDO design scheme.
A. 2 DLDO Design Specifications
Distributed microregulators are implemented in IBM POWER8 microprocessor. In this simulation example, a switch array of 256 pMOS transistors, which is typical in DLDO designs, is implemented in each microregulator. Two different DLDO designs with bDSR and uDSR controls are implemented using 32-nm PTM CMOS technology where Vin=1.1V and Vout=1V. In the simulation, IpMOS=2 mA and Imax=512 mA are used, leading to 7, 24, 3, 10, and 5 microregulators (DLDOs) in the, respectively, IFU, LSU, ISU, EXU, and L2 blocks shown in
A. 3 Evaluation of Aging-Induced Performance Degradation
Equations (1), (3), (6), and (8) are leveraged for the evaluation of aging-induced performance degradation. A typical temperature profile of 90° C., 69° C., 67° C., 63° C., and 62° C. for, respectively, LSU, EXU, IFU, ISU, and L2 is adopted for evaluations. The activity factors for both DLDO designs under different benchmarks and functional blocks are estimated through simulations in Cadence Virtuoso. The worst case IpMOS degradations are used for evaluations of both designs, which is reasonable due to load characteristics of typical applications and the consequent heavy use of a portion of Mis in conventional DLDOs.
B. 1 Simulation Results: Performance Degradation within Conventional DLDO
Table III shown in
B. 2 Simulation Results: IpMOS, TR, and ΔV Mitigation with the Aging-Aware DLDO
Simulation results for all benchmarks for IpMOS, TR, and ΔV degradation mitigation of the uDSR-based DLDO 100 as compared to the conventional DLDO design for a 5-year time frame indicated up to 39.6%, 43.2%, and 42% performance improvement is achieved for, respectively, IpMOS, TR, and ΔV. The highest performance improvement is obtained for the LSU functional block with the highest operation temperature. Even at the lowest operation temperature within the L2 functional block, degradation mitigations of up to 15.1%, 16.4%, and 15.9% are achieved for, respectively, IpMOS, TR, and ΔV.
B. 3 Simulation Results: LCO Mitigation with Aging-Aware DLDO
To verify the benefits of the DLDO 100 used in combination with the reduced clock pulsewidth generation circuit (e.g., one-shot pulse generator 120) regarding LCO mitigation, the theoretical maximum LCO mode for dual-edge-triggered and reduced clock pulsewidth DLDOs with the uDSR implementation is examined by considering BTI-induced threshold voltage degradation of the control loop. An average IBM POWER8 microprocessor temperature profile of 70° C. is utilized for Vth degradation evaluation. NBTI and PBTI are considered as the major Vth degradation factor for pMOS and nMOS transistors in the control loop, respectively. Under different load current conditions, the activity factor of each transistor within the control loop is obtained through simulations in Cadence Virtuoso. Equation (1) is then leveraged to calculate the Vth degradation for each transistor within a 5-year time frame. The calculated Vth degradation is embedded in each transistor by adopting a known subcircuit model for BTI effect within Cadence Virtuoso simulations.
In many applications, the clock frequency can be much higher than 10 MHz such as 1 GHz, for example. However, the 1-GHz sampling clock sacrifices the quiescent current. Recently, it has been known to utilize a high clock frequency for fast transient and a much lower frequency for steady-state operation. Table V shown in
V. Tradeoff Between Area Overhead and Program Output Quality
Considering aging effects, regulators are typically designed and optimized for the expected service life of the processor. Deploying regulators optimized for a shorter service life cannot guarantee error-free operation. However, if such regulators are confined to feed error-tolerant loads, the service life can be traded for lower hardware complexity, which almost always directly translates into area savings. It should be noted that the area represents a scarce on-chip resource for distributed voltage regulators as many of these regulators are squeezed between various circuit blocks. Such area savings can enable a higher number of on-chip voltage regulators, and hence enhance the scalability of on-chip voltage regulation. A large area OH can be introduced to mitigate aging-induced transient voltage noise degradation for conventional DLDOs. The area penalty required to compensate for the aging-related deterioration of ΔV is significant, especially in the first two years. The percentage area OH also plateaus to within 10% after two years. These trends should be considered to realize optimal design based on different application environment and lifetime targets. Furthermore, leveraging the A-A DLDO 100, due to mitigation of aging-induced ΔV degradation, significant area OH savings compared to the conventional DLDO case can be achieved.
With regard to the temperature variation effects on percentage area OH (saving), analysis similar to the analysis described above with reference to
Considering a 5-year aging period, an analysis was performed by the inventors of the percentage area OH within each functional unit for percentage error rate degradation mitigation utilizing bDSR and uDSR-based DLDOs. The analysis showed that with negligible area OH, the uDSR-based DLDO achieves a certain amount of error rate degradation mitigation compared to bDSR-based DLDO. Also, for the same amount of error rate degradation mitigation, the area OH needed for uDSR-based DLDO is lower than that of bDSR-based DLDO.
As an emerging and essential part of the modern processor power delivery network, DLDOs experience serious aging-induced performance degradations including IpMOS, TR, and ΔV. In particular, DLDO degradation can increase noise in the supply voltage and further deteriorate the program output quality. Area OH needed to fully compensate these degradations can be significant, especially when a conventional DLDO design is utilized. Algorithmic noise tolerance of different processor components can be leveraged as an “area quality control knob” to alleviate the area OH requirement through scalable on-chip voltage regulation at design time. Furthermore, DLDO designed in an A-A fashion mitigates aging-induced performance degradations with negligible power and area OH. With reduced DLDO performance degradation, a significantly better area and quality tradeoff can be achieved due to A-A DLDO-induced area OH savings. Therefore, more efficient scalable on-chip voltage regulation can be realized with the A-A DLDO design. Simulation showed that up to 43.2% transient and 3× steady-state DLDO performance improvement as well as more than 10% area OH saving can be achieved utilizing the A-A paradigm disclosed herein.
It should be noted that the illustrative embodiments have been described with reference to a few embodiments for the purpose of demonstrating the principles and concepts of the invention. Persons of skill in the art will understand how the principles and concepts of the invention can be applied to other embodiments not explicitly described herein. For example, while the uDSR has been described with reference to
This application claims priority to, and the benefit of the filing date of, U.S. provisional application No. 62/729,728, filed on Sep. 11, 2018, entitled “Reduced Clock Pulse Width Digital Low-Dropout Regulator,” which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
This invention was made with government support under grant No. CCF1350451 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The government has certain rights in this invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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62729728 | Sep 2018 | US |