Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Memory Designing Using Josephson Gates Susmit Biswas 02/07/2006 Outline Refreshing Memory Memory Circuits CMOS Memory Circuits Need For New Memory Technology Josephson PC Memory Previous Work Josephson Junction Memory Designing Using Josephson Gate Performance Evaluation Conclusion Standard Memory Technology The Memory Hierarchy CPU Registers L1 Cache (SRAM) L2 Cache (SRAM) Main Memory SRAM DRAM FPM DRAM (Fast Page Mode DRAM) EDORAM (Extended Data Out DRAM ) SDRAM (Synchronous DRAM) DDR DRAM (Double Data Rate DRAM) DRAM High Density and low power but Slower than SRAM DRAM Performance (August 2005) Need For New Technology Memory is the main bottleneck now Multiprocessor system suffers most SIMD and MIMD architecture Data hungry Josephson Memory: Previous Work Josephson Junction: Discovered and Demonstrated in early 60’s IBM till 1983 Nearly functional 1kBit memory using lead-alloy 1980s : ETL, NTT using Nb/Al0x/Nb 1993 : UC Berkeley designed a 4 kBit RAM 1997 : NEC developed a 4 kBit Memory 2002 : Hybrid Josephson memory Looking Back 1962: Josephson predicted that a sandwich of S-I-S will show remarkable properties when the insulator is sufficiently thin ~ 10Å or so Current can flow through the junction with no voltage appearing across the junction until a critical current IJ is exceeded The magnitude of IJ, depends sensitively on magnetic fields. A voltage Vdc, impressed across the junction leads to an oscillating supercurrent whose frequency is proportional to the voltage. The frequency is very high for even modest voltages (483 MHz/μV). Josephson Effect Two-fluid model of Superconductor: One of the fluids is the normal fluid, the other the superfluid. Superfluid consists of paired electrons (Cooper pairs) of equal but opposite momentum and spin Josephson Effect Bound pairs electrons all lie near the Fermi energy EF of the normal metal; the resulting pairs are in an energy state lower than EF by an amount Δ (binding energy of the pair (per electron) As T becomes less than Tc, pairs begin to form and condense into the superconducting state At V = 2 Δ /e the tunneling current increases sharply (with +∞ slope) For V >> 2 Δ/e the current increases linearly with V Josephson Junction Josephson Effect: In superconducting state of certain metals, electrons are attracted by each other and form bound pairs, called Cooper pairs. When these pairs of electrons tunnel through a thin insulating barrier placed between two superconductors, the whole is called Josephson junction. Josephson Junction Characteristics Control currents Ic, Josephson threshold Im. Gate current Ig, I-V Curve Threshold Curve Josephson Junction As Memory Consists of a loop with three Josephson junctions in series that encloses a magnetic flux Ф driven by an external magnet. The loop may have multiple stable persistent current states when the enclosed magnetic flux is close to half a superconducting flux quantum Ф Ф = h / 2e System has two stable states ׀0› and ׀1› with opposite circulating persistent currents Josephson Junction As Memory ( cont.) Operated by resonant microwave modulation of the enclosed magnetic flux by a superconducting control line on top of the qubit, separated by a thin insulator. The state of a bit (0 or 1) depends on the sum of the external magnetic flux generated by the circulating currents on the surrounded loops: 0 if magnetic field is < 1/2 Ф 1 if magnetic field is > 1/2 Ф The state of the system is the superposition of all the states generated by the circulating current in each loop. Josephson Junction As Memory ( cont.) Combining several junctions results in different gates e.g. inverter Can be designed in two ways coupling two superconductive loops directly through magnetic interference Coupling two loops through a superconductive flux transporter Josephson Junction As Memory ( cont.) Stronger interaction between the PC loops and better coupling to each other with the facilitation of transporter But! Coupling between neighboring loops makes it difficult for long-range communication Solution Transporter: fast data propagation Josephson Junction As Memory ( cont.) NMV Gate can serve as NAND, NOR and NOT gate by setting instruction bits. Not Majority Vote (NMV) Gate Memory Designing Using Josephson Gate Memory Designing Using Josephson Gate (cont.) A memory cell can not be refreshed by either a row or a column addressing line independently the addressing lines are designed in such a way that the states of other cells in the same column are suppressed during reading, the selected one gets the bit from its adjacent memory cell, without interacting with its neighbors in the same column. Performance Evaluation Pros: Speed: 750GHz for single asynchronous cells and up to 320GHz for LSI devices Low power consumption 0.2nanowatt/GHz per pulse and 0.1mW for LSI devices Simple fabrication technology : lithography Cons: Low density Operational temperature <20K Performance Evaluation (cont.) Comparison of projected 2.5μm technology Josephson NDRO and DRO chip designs with advanced silicon memories having comparable line widths. Conclusion Josephson memory can become more and more popular because of its speed and low power characteristics Designing larger memory is difficult Low density Limitation of fabrication technology References 1. “Novel Computing Architecture on Arrays of Josephson Persistent Current Bits” : Jie Han, Pieter Jonker [Proc. MSM 2002 ] 2. “Memory-Cell Design in Josephson Technology” : Hans H. Zmpe [IEEE Transactions On Electron Devices, VOL. ED-27, NO. 10, OCTOBER 1980] 3. “570-ps 13-mW Josephson 1kbit NDRO RAM” : Shuichi Nagasawa et. al. [IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, Vol 24, No 5, October, 1989] References 4. “Design Of A 16-kbit Variable Threshold Josephson RAM”: I. Kurosawa, [IEEE Transactions On Applied Superconductivity, Vol. 3, No.l, March1993] 5. “Josephson Type Superconductive Tunnel Junctions and Applications” : Juri Matisoo [IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON XAGNETICS, DECEMBER 1969] 6. http://www.lne.fr/en/r_and_d/electrical_metrology/josep hson_effect_ej.shtml