1. Technical Field
The present invention relates generally to memory design evaluation circuits, and more particularly to a memory circuit having a mimicking cell that accurately reflects internal state changes of a memory cell.
2. Description of the Related Art
Storage cell speed, circuit area and environmental operating ranges, e.g., supply voltage and temperature range, are critical limitations in today's processing systems and are predicted to become even more of a critical limitation as technologies move forward. In particular, static random access memory (SRAM) cells are used in processor caches and external storage to provide fast access to data and program instructions. Static storage cells are also used within processors and other digital circuits for storing values internally, for example, in processor registers.
With processor cycle frequencies reaching well above 4 Ghz, development of SRAM cells that can store and provide access to stored values within that period has become necessary. However, actually measuring the internal writeability and write timing margins of memory cells presents a challenge. In a typical storage cell, there is no mechanism for determining writeability and write timing margin, except for empirical evaluation performed by reading the cells after performing write operations under various conditions. If a probe is used to attempt to measure the internal result and timing of a write operation, the probe alters the timing of the cell, yielding incorrect results.
Memory cell transition times involving bitline read operations, sometimes in combination with write operations, have been evaluated using ring oscillator circuits or cascaded cell delay circuits wherein a large number of cells are cascaded. A ring oscillator may be formed with feedback of an output of the last cell to an input of the first cell, or a one-shot delay may be measured through the cascade of cells. The frequency at which the ring oscillator operates or the one-shot delay indicates the transition time performance, which provides some measure of ultimate operating frequency and access times. Typically, the cell design is then changed in subsequent design iterations having parameters adjusted in response to the results of the ring oscillator test.
However, present ring oscillator circuits and other delay-oriented circuits for performing delay tests typically either are not applied on production dies or they do not test the actual storage cells under wordline loading conditions identical to placement of the cells within an array. Further, write cycle measurements are not measured independently, since the inclusion of a cell in the oscillator ring or delay line requires that the cell value will be read in some manner to provide input to the next cell.
It is therefore desirable to provide a test circuit and method for accurately measuring wordline transition times under the complete row loading conditions of an actual array. It would further be desirable to measure access (pass) transistor drive time and internal write state/write timing of a storage cell under actual loading conditions. It is further desirable to provide such a test circuit that can be integrated within a production storage device.
The objective of accurately determining wordline timing including the effect of access transistor drive, as well as the internal written state/write timing of a storage cell design under actual loading conditions, is accomplished in a method and circuit.
The circuit replicates or is integrated within a row of a storage array. A special access timing detection cell is provided as one of the cells in the row, and includes loading circuits that duplicate the actual loading during at least one of the internal transitions of the storage cell in response to a write operation or other access operation. The overall timing is determined from an address input to the array to an output of the detection cell and the detection cells can be cascaded along one or more columns of the array to form a delay line or ring oscillator. The wordline loading of the cell can be made identical to that of an actual wordline.
The access detection cell is coupled to a row sense/output circuit, so that a low impedance output is be provided for measurement without altering the loading. The access detection cell may be formed from a modified 6T, or multiple-ported SRAM cell, in which one of the normally cross-coupled connections to one of the gate latch transistors is instead coupled to a properly-sized output probe drive transistor. The wordline driver may have a separate power supply, so that the required strength of the wordline driver and drive voltage can be evaluated. Evaluation can be made of write timing versus clock and/or address by fixing one of the clock or address signals and using the other as the stimulus signal, e.g., as the signal carrying the ring oscillator or delay line signal path in cascaded configurations.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following, more particular, description of the preferred embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
The novel features believed characteristic of the invention are set forth in the appended claims. The invention itself, however, as well as a preferred mode of use, further objectives, and advantages thereof, will best be understood by reference to the following detailed description of an illustrative embodiment when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals indicate like components, and:
The present invention concerns a test circuit for evaluating access performance of storage cells, e.g., registers or static memory cells, in order to facilitate design improvement and determination of operating and margins. The test circuit provides for characterizing wordline timing, including operation of access (pass) transistors under degraded drive conditions. A special sense circuit cell is incorporated into a row circuit and mimics the internal and external loading of a regular cell in an array. The sense circuit further provides an output that accurately reflects at least one of the state changes within the sense circuit cell caused by a write operation, so that write timing and writeability can be determined for an actual memory cell under actual operating conditions. Multiple rows in an array can be cascaded by connecting the output of the sensing circuit of each row to the wordline driver input of the next row to form a delay chain. The output of the last wordline can be connected to the first, to form a ring oscillator. The loading experienced by the cells in the oscillator is identical to that of an ordinary storage row, providing an accurate measure of the delays of the storage cells in an actual array implementation. A test die may be implemented that includes the test circuit permanently wired-in-place, or a sacrificial metal can be used to implement the circuit on a production wafer, which can then be modified into an operational circuit via a permanent metal layer that replaces the sacrificial layer. A storage array according to the present invention may also alternatively be implemented on the wafer kerf and discarded after testing. Alternatively, the ring oscillator or delay measurement circuit of the present invention can be selectively enabled in a test mode.
With reference now to the figures, and in particular with reference to
The end of the wordline in the row circuit of
Referring now to
The operation of access detection cell 20A is such that prior to access detection cell 22A being enabled, wordline signal WL is at a low voltage level and transistor P10 is conducting, forcing the input of the inverter formed by transistors P11 and N11 to be at a high voltage level (VDD). When wordline signal WL transitions from low voltage (ground) to high voltage (VOD), pass transistors N12 and N13 in access detection cell 20A are enabled, forcing the input of the inverter formed by transistors P11 and N11 to ground, which causes the inverter output to rise, turning on transistor N10. Transistor N10 turns off transistor N21, previously enabled by the wordline signal WL applied to transistor N20A, which coupled a pre-charge circuit 22A that pulls up the gate of transistor N21 to duplicate the conditions that appear on wordlines of storage cells 10. Thus the rising transition at the output of transistor N21 is reflective of the end of the total state change within access detection cell 20A under actual loading and operating conditions of storage cells 10.
The above-described action of access detection cell 20 can be viewed as a one-shot “delay” imposed on the gate of transistor N21 with respect to the alternative connection of wordline signal WL to the input of inverter I1 as in the reference row circuit of
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
A workstation computer 58, having a processor 56 coupled to a memory 57, for executing program instructions from memory 57, wherein the program instructions include program instructions for receiving data from wafer tester 50 and/or circuits within wafer 52 in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, is coupled to wafer tester 50. Generally the methods of the present invention either enable the reference and test ring counters, count their frequency of oscillation, subtract the results and divide by the number of rows in the rings to obtain the true access delay. Alternatively, a similar delay measurement is performed by stimulating the reference and test delay chain, measuring the delay times and subtracting the results, and dividing by the number of rows. Counters may be included within the die circuits to count the frequency or measure the delay, or the frequency/delay counters may be located in wafer tester 50. Program instructions obtain the counts from wafer tester 50 or read the counts from wafer 52, then process the counts to obtain the cell access delay and/or determine whether the cells are writeable under the currently-set operating conditions. The program instructions may be loaded from a storage media such as optical disc CD via a CD-ROM drive 55 or other suitable optical or magnetic/non-volatile memory drive. The data produced by embodiments of the present invention are collected from multiple ring oscillator or delay tests of storage cells 10 within dies 52A as one or more of the power supply voltages are varied by programmable power supply 50B The results of all of the measurements can then be evaluated to either change the design of the array or storage cells 10, determine whether fabrication process has deviated exceedingly from tolerable norms or to determine operational ranges such as power supply voltage tolerances and access cycle times.
Data from ring oscillator/delay line tests in accordance with embodiments of the invention are transferred to workstation computer 58 via wafer tester 50 and stored in memory 57 and/or other media storage such as a hard disk. Workstation computer 58 is also coupled to a graphical display 59 for displaying program output such as the results of memory tests described hereinafter. Workstation computer 58 is further coupled to input devices such as a mouse 54B and a keyboard 54A for receiving user input. Workstation computer 58 may be coupled to a public network such as the Internet, or may be a private network such as the various “intra-nets” and software containing program instructions for analyzing data produced by methods and circuits in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may be located on remote computers or locally within workstation computer 58. Further, workstation computer 58 may be coupled to wafer tester 50 by such a network connection.
While the system of
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in form, and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/609,598, filed on Dec. 12, 2006 by the same inventors and assigned to the same Assignee.
This invention was made with government support under DARPA, PERCSII, NBCH3039004. THE GOVERNMENT HAS CERTAIN RIGHTS IN THIS INVENTION.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11609598 | Dec 2006 | US |
Child | 12125011 | US |