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IEE5011 –Autumn 2013 Memory Systems 3D DRAM using TSV technology

IEE5011 –Autumn 2013 Memory Systems 3D DRAM using TSV technology. Hao-Hsuan, Liu Department of Electronics Engineering National Chiao Tung University h1616161@Hotmail.com. Outline. Introduction 3D Technology-TSV 3D Processor-DRAM Integration Impacts of TSV in 3D DRAM system Conclusion

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IEE5011 –Autumn 2013 Memory Systems 3D DRAM using TSV technology

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  1. IEE5011 –Autumn 2013Memory Systems3D DRAM using TSV technology Hao-Hsuan, Liu Department of Electronics Engineering National Chiao Tung University h1616161@Hotmail.com

  2. Outline Introduction 3DTechnology-TSV 3D Processor-DRAM Integration Impacts of TSV in 3D DRAM system Conclusion Reference

  3. Introduction-Why we use 3D DRAM? Speed-Memory wall -The growing disparity of speed between CPU and memory Area Power Cost

  4. 3Dtechnology (a) 3D packaging technology- Wire bonding, flip-chip bonding, and thinned die to die bonding- Very low interconnect density (b) Transistor build-up 3D technology- High vertical interconnect density- Temperature constraint- Tend to degrade the performance

  5. 3D technology (c) Monolithic wafer-level 3D technology- Wafer alignment- Bonding- Thinning- Inter-wafer interconnection- Realized by TSV can have very high density

  6. Through-Silicon Via (TSV) Device Process:FEOL(Front-End OF Line)-> BEOL(Back)-> Bonding Via-First:- Before FEOL Via-Middle:- After FEOL, before BEOL Via-Last:- (1) After BEOL- (2) After Bonding[21]

  7. Through-Silicon Via (TSV) TSV process flow

  8. Through-Silicon Via (TSV) Via-First- Vias are made before CMOS

  9. Through-Silicon Via (TSV) Via-Middle- Vias are made between CMOS and BEOL

  10. Through-Silicon Via (TSV) Via-Last( After BEOL before Bonding)- Vias are made after BEOL

  11. Through-Silicon Via (TSV) Via-Last( After Bonding)- Vias are made after Bonding

  12. 3D DRAM Integration Processor consume more energy and generate more heat Stacking a single processor with multiple DRAM dies Processor locates closest to the heat sink

  13. 3D DRAM Integration 3D Process-DRAM integrated system architecture

  14. 3D DRAM Integration Clearly, through-DRAM TSVs will- Impact the 3D DRAM design- Degrade DRAM storage capacity- Power consumption How to design the TSVs placement?

  15. 3D DRAM Integration Proposed design to allocate through-DRAM TSVs

  16. 3D DRAM Integration Signal TSVs- minimum allowable TSV size- Tend to occupy a very small area- At the center of DRAM dies Power TSVs- Much bigger impact and design trade-offs- Power consumption overheadReduce the resistance of power TSVs Increase size

  17. 3D DRAM Integration Propose to arrange a regular power TSV network around those DRAM sub-arrays

  18. Impacts of TSV in 3D DRAM system Impacts of the size of each power TSV

  19. Impacts of TSV in 3D DRAM system Impacts of the DRAM Sub-array Size

  20. Impacts of TSV in 3D DRAM system Impacts of the DRAM substrate thickness

  21. Impacts of TSV in 3D DRAM system Impacts of the contact resistance

  22. Conclusion 3D DRAM integration drive innovational changes in performance, power, and cost. Through-silicon-via(TSV) is widely used in the 3D technology, and its parameter will impact the performance and power in 3D system A simple method to allocate power and signal TSVs lead to simply consider the trade-offs.

  23. Reference [1] P. Kogge, et al., “Exascale computing study: Technology challenges in achieving exascale systems,” 2008. [2] F. Fishburn, et al., “A 78nm 6F2 DRAM Technology for Multigigabit Densities,” in VLSIT, 2004. [3] M. A. Horowitz, “Timing Models for MOS Circuits,” Stanford University ,Tech. Rep., 1984. [4] J. Kim, et al., “A 1.2V 12.8GB/s 2Gb Mobile Wide-I/O DRAM with 4x128 I/Os Using TSV-Based Stacking,” in ISSCC, 2011. [5] K-H. Kyung, et al., “A 800Mb/s/pin 2Gb DDR2 SDRAM using an 80nm Triple Metal Technology,” in ISSCC, 2005, pp. 468–469. [6] M. Nakamura, et al., “A 29ns 64Mb DRAM with Hierarchical ArrayArchitecture,” in ISSCC. IEEE, 1995, pp. 246–247. [7] G. Katti, et al., “Electrical Modeling and Characterization of Through Silicon via for Three-Dimensional ICs,” IEEE Trans. on Electron Devices, no. 1, pp. 256–262, January 2010.

  24. Reference [8] T.A.C.M. Claasen, “An Industry Perspective on Current and Future State of the Art in System-on-Chip (SoC) Technology,” Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 94, pp. 1121–1137, June 2006. [9] J.-Q. Lu, T.S. Cale, and R.J. Gutmann, “Wafer-level three-dimensional hyper-integration technology using dielectric adhesive wafer bonding,” Materials for Information Technology: Devices, Interconnects and Packaging (Eds. E. Zschech, C. Whelan, T. Mikolajick), pp. 386–397, Springer- Verlag (London) Ltd, August 2005. [10] R.S. Patti, “Three-dimensional integrated circuits and the future of systemon-chip designs,” Proceedings of the IEEE, vol. 94, pp. 1214–1224, June2006. [11] K. Itoh, VLSI Memory Chip Design, Springer, 2001. [12] G. H. Loh, “3D-Stacked Memory Architectures for Multi-Core Processors,” in Proceedings of the 35th ACM/IEEE International Symposium on Computer Architecture, 2008. [13] G. H. Loh, Y. Xie, and B. Black, “Processor Design in 3D Die-Stacking Technologies,” IEEE Micro, vol. 27, pp. 31–48, May-June 2007. [14] Y.-F. Tsai, F. Wang, Y. Xie, N. Vijaykrishnan, and M. J. Irwin, “Design Space Exploration for 3-D Cache,” IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, vol. 16, pp. 444–455, April 2008.

  25. Reference [15] S. Thoziyoor, J. Ahn, M. Monchiero, J. B. Brockman, and N. P. Jouppi, “A Comprehensive Memory Modeling Tool and Its Application to the Design and Analysis of Future Memory Hierarchies,” in ISCA, 2008. [16] T. Vogelsang, “Understanding the Energy Consumption of Dynamic Random Access Memories,” in MICRO, 2010, pp. 363–374. [17] U. Kang, et al., “8 Gb 3-D DDR3 DRAM Using Through-Silicon-Via Technology,” JSSC, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 111–119, 2010 [18] J. T. Pawlowski, “Hybrid Memory Cube (HMC),” in Proceedings of Hot Chips 23, 2011. [19] Y.-F. Tsai, Y. Xie, V. Narayanan, and M. J. Irwin, “Three-Dimensional Cache Design Exploration Using 3D Cacti,” in ICCD, 2005 [20] I. Savidis and E. Friedman, “Closed-Form Expressions of 3-D Via Resistance, Inductance, and Capacitance,” IEEE Trans. on Electron Devices, vol. 56, no. 9, September 2009. [21] R. Weerasekera, et al., “Compact Modelling of Through-Silicon Vias (TSVs) in Three-Dimensional (3-D) Integrated Circuits,” in 3DIC, 2009.

  26. Thanks for your attention!

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