Publication | Closed Access
A 40nm 2Gb 7Gb/s/pin GDDR5 SDRAM with a programmable DQ ordering crosstalk equalizer and adjustable clock-tracking BW
32
Citations
6
References
2011
Year
Unknown Venue
Hardware SecuritySystem On ChipCrosstalk EqualizerChannel Crosstalk EqualizerVlsi DesignChannel Crosstalk ReductionEngineeringClock RecoveryMixed-signal Integrated CircuitVlsi ArchitectureChannel CrosstalkChannel EqualizationComputer EngineeringComputer ArchitectureProgrammable DqGddr5 SdramMemory ArchitectureMulti-channel Memory Architecture
Most DRAM interfaces such as GDDR5 and DDR3 use parallel single-ended signaling due to pin-count restriction and backward compatibility. Notwithstanding poor signal and power integrity issues, GDDR5 speed reached beyond 5Gb/s in recent years by utilizing data bus inversion, error-detection coding, data training and channel equalization. However, channel crosstalk is becoming a major barrier to further speed improvement. A common solution for channel crosstalk reduction at the system level is to use a shielding line or wide spacing between signal lines, but increasing the number of layers in a chip package and PCB increase system cost. To remove the shielding lines and increase speed, this paper presents a channel crosstalk equalizer with programmable signal ordering capability for the DRAM transmitter. In addition, this paper addresses tri-mode clocking to reduce the system jitter for better timing margin: PLL off, LC-PLL and injection-locked oscillator.
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