KyeChan-Ho1
KimJihee2
JeongDeog-Kyoon2
ChooMin-Seong3
-
(Dept. of Semiconductor Engineering, The University of Suwon, Hwaseong 18323, Korea)
-
(Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826,
Korea)
-
(School of Electrical Engineering, Hanyang University, Ansan 15588, Korea)
Copyright © The Institute of Electronics and Information Engineers(IEIE)
Index Terms
DRAM test, built-out tester (BOT), LC-VCO, phase-locked loop (PLL), CML driver
I. INTRODUCTION
When mass-producing DRAM, interface testing operates at speeds higher than the product’s
maximum to ensure reliability. The test frequency developed up to 12 GHz for next-generation
graphics double data rate 6 (GDDR6) DRAM. In the previous research [1], an on-chip frequency doubler in GDDR6 DRAM generated a high-frequency write clock
(WCK) internally, utilizing a low-frequency clock received from the automatic test
equipment (ATE). Here, the circuitry of the frequency doubler and clock buffer consumes
a lot of clocking power. A recent study proposed a built-out tester (BOT) that reduces
the power consumption of DRAM and the cost of ATE by employing the tester outside
DRAM and sharing the test board [2]. For the GDDR6 DRAM test, the industry has recently adopted the BOT system with a
commercial XOR chip which generates differential WCK, a reference clock for data reads
and writes in GDDR6 DRAM. Although the XOR chip can be used as a frequency doubler,
the duty and jitter characteristics of the WCK are significantly degraded because
of the low performance of the XOR chip and the path mismatch of the board trace. The
phase-locked loop (PLL) has been the solution as a clock driver in memory systems,
cleaning out high-frequency noise in the overall clock distribution path [3]. Therefore, a frequency multiplier using a PLL can replace the XOR, as shown in Fig. 1.
Fig. 1. Proposed built-out memory test system replacing XOR with a PLL-based clock driver.
In this letter, we propose a 4.5-to-14 GHz PLL-based clock driver designed to support
the wide frequency range of WCK. This work introduces 3-shaped LC-VCOs, a strategy
devised to overcome the inherent narrow tuning range of LC-VCOs with optimized capacitor
array. In addition, we propose an output common mode control with an 8-bit one-hot
code-controlled resistor to support the programmability of the received clock input
crossing point for the GDDR6 DRAM test.
Section II shows the circuit description of this work. Sections III and IV show the
measurement results and the conclusion, respectively.
II. CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
The overall architecture to support WCK from DC-to-14 GHz is illustrated in Fig. 2. In low-frequency mode (DC-to-4.5 GHz), ATE signal is directly delivered to GDDR6
DRAM through the buffer and the driver of the BOT. In high-frequency mode (4.5-to-14
GHz), we employ PLL with LC-VCOs to support wide-range and decent jitter performance.
Even though LC-VCO has better phase noise than the ring-VCO, its frequency tuning
range is narrow. As the C$_{\mathrm{max}}$/C$_{\mathrm{min}}$ ratio for high-Q varactors
is limited in a typical CMOS process, the LC-VCO requires at least two values for
tank L to achieve a wide frequency tuning range (FTR). Although the coupling LC tank
relaxes the overhead of the separate multi-LC tanks [4], coupling LC tank may result in an unexpected resonant behavior. Therefore, we employ
three isolated LC tanks, placing the spiral inductors of the oscillators far apart
to avoid the coupling between them (Fig. 3). Three LC tanks (VCO1, VCO2, and VCO3) cover 16 frequency bands each, which are
mode-switched externally by mode selection code. Each VCO is realized with a center-tapped
symmetric spiral inductor, MOS varactors, 4-bit MOM capacitor array, and negative
G$_{\mathrm{m}}$ cells. Reducing the parasitic resistance of the differential output
nodes enhances both phase noise and the Q-factor. Consequently, we aggregate the capacitor
network, switch, and G$_{\mathrm{m}}$ cells between the differential output nodes
to minimize the parasitic resistance. Table 1 summarizes the designed inductor Q-factor and power consumption of each LC-VCO. The
MOM capacitor array tunes the frequency coarsely, covering 16 frequency bands. The
MOS capacitor varactors finely tune the frequency with the charge pump voltage. From
the post-layout simulation, the free-running FTR of the LC-VCOs covers from 3.7-to-14.7
GHz (Fig. 4). A considerable frequency overlap when switching capacitors ensures continuous frequency
tuning in the face of process variation.
Fig. 2. Overall architecture of proposed PLL-based clock driver.
Fig. 3. Circuit implementation and layout floorplan of each LC-VCO.
Fig. 4. Frequency tuning range of each LC-VCO.
The differential WCK transmission line and the termination of the GDDR6 DRAM are 50
${\Omega}$ impedance for high-speed signaling. As the termination level of the V$_{DDQ}$
at the receiving GDDR6 DRAM is adjusted during the testing, the common mode level
(V$_{CM}$) of the transmitting WCK needs to be controllable. This work provides programmability
of the clock input crossing point of the GDDR6 DRAM. The test evaluation range is
180 mV centered at 0.7${\cdot}$V$_{DDQ}$. Therefore, we employ a current-mode logic
(CML) type output driver for 50 ${\Omega}$ impedance matching and V$_{CM}$ control
as shown in Fig. 5. The V$_{CM}$ of WCK is controllable through an 8-bit one-hot code-controlled resistor
adjusting the V$_{DDQ,TERM}$. The V$_{DDQ,TERM}$ is expressed as
where R$_{EQ,n}$ = R$_{ON}$|| R$_{n}$ (n = 1 ~ 7). The values of R$_{ON}$ and R$_{n}$
are set to linearize the change of the V$_{CM}$. The V$_{CM}$ changes 25 mV per code
in this design. Consequently, the peak-to-peak variation of V$_{CM}$ is 200 mV by
measurement. 10 pF capacitor suppresses the supply noise. The tail current source
controls the output amplitude, resulting in a maximum amplitude of 190~mV$_{\mathrm{pp,diff}}$
at 14 GHz.
Table 1. Designed inductor Q-factor and power consumption of each LC-VCO
|
VCO1
|
VCO2
|
VCO3
|
Center frequency (GHz)
|
5
|
8
|
11
|
L (H)
|
603p
|
356p
|
257p
|
Q-factor
|
21.4
|
25.3
|
33.9
|
Power (mW)
|
4.2
|
6.5
|
9.1
|
III. MEASUREMENT RESULTS
This work was fabricated in a 40 nm CMOS technology. Fig. 6 shows the chip photomicrograph and measurement setup. The total active area is 0.22
mm$^{2}$. The input differential CLK signal is provided by a CLK source converted
with balun and bias tee, while the WCK phase noise is measured by a spectrum analyzer.
In this test, we adopt a quad flat no-lead (QFN) package for low cost. The packaged
prototype is mounted with the socket in the GDDR6 DRAM test board.
Fig. 5. Proposed CML driver with common mode level control.
Fig. 6. Chip photomicrograph and measurement setup.
Fig. 7. Measured WCK output eye diagrams (upper: input, lower: output) of various frequencies.
Fig. 8. Measured WCK output spectrum at 7 GHz, 11 GHz, and 14 GHz.
Fig. 7 shows the measured input (upper) and WCK output (lower) eye diagrams to verify the
frequency range of the BOT. The measured FTR of the PLL is from 4.5-to-14 GHz (FTR
= 102.7 %). Fig. 8 shows the measured WCK output spectrum. The measured integrated RMS jitter from 10
kHz to 100 MHz is 129 fs$_{\mathrm{rms}}$, 180 fs$_{\mathrm{rms}}$, and 365 fs$_{\mathrm{rms}}$
at 7 GHz, 11 GHz, and 14 GHz, respectively. The measured phase noise at 1 MHz offset
is -123 dBc/Hz, -120 dBc/Hz, and -106 dBc/Hz at 7 GHz, 11 GHz, and 14 GHz, respectively.
Table 2 shows a performance summary and comparison results. This work exhibits the best FTR
and FoM among the prior-art wide-range LC-PLLs.
Table 2. Performance summary and comparison with the prior-art wide-range LC-PLLs
|
[4]
|
[5]
|
[6]
|
This Work
|
Process (nm)
|
45
|
28
|
16
|
40
|
FTR (GHz)
|
6-12
|
9.2-12.7
|
9-18
|
4.5-14
|
Output (GHz)
|
12
|
10
|
18
|
7/11/14
|
Jitter (fsrms)
|
362
(10k-40M)
|
280
(10k-100M)
|
164
(1k-100M)
|
129/180/365
(10k-100M)
|
Power (mW)
|
21
|
13
|
29.2
|
32/38/45
|
aFoM (dB)
|
-234
|
-235
|
-239
|
-243/-239/
-232
|
Area (mm2)
|
0.111
|
1
|
0.39
|
0.22
|
$
{ }^{\mathrm{a}} \mathrm{FoM}=10 \log \left(\left(\frac{\delta_{r m s}}{1 s}\right)^2\left(\frac{P}{1
m W}\right)\left(\frac{f_{\text {mid }}}{f_{\max }-f_{\min }}\right)\right)
$
IV. CONCLUSIONS
We propose a 4.5-to-14 GHz PLL-based clock driver with wide-range 3-shaped LC-VCOs
for the GDDR6 DRAM test. We employ 3 LC-VCOs with an optimized capacitor array to
improve phase noise over a wide frequency tuning range. The output common mode level
is programmable to support the variation of the clock input crossing point of the
GDDR6 DRAM. According to the measurement results, the presented PLL-based clock driver
operates from 4.5-to-14 GHz. The resulting BOT system provides wide-range and low-jitter
WCK to GDDR6 DRAM, overcoming the limitation of XOR and reducing the test cost of
the ATE.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The EDA Tool was supported by the IC Design Education Center (IDEC).
References
K.-D. Hwang, et al, “A 16Gb/s/pin 8Gb GDDR6 DRAM with Bandwidth Extension Techniques
for High-Speed Applications,” in ISSCC, Dig. Tech. Papers, Feb. 2018, pp. 210-211.
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in A-SSCC, Dig. Tech. Papers, Nov. 2022, pp. 6-8.
Y. Song, et al, “A 1.05-to-3.2 GHz All-Digital PLL for DDR5 Registering Clock Driver
With a Self-Biased Supply-Noise-Compensating Ring DCO,” IEEE Trans. on Circuits Syst.
II, Exp. Briefs, vol. 69, no. 3, pp. 759-763, Mar. 2022.
A. Goel, et al, “A compact 6 GHz to 12 GHz digital PLL with coupled dual-LC tank DCO,”
in VLSI-C, Dig. Tech. Papers, Jun. 2010, pp. 141-142.
K. Raczkowski, et al, “A 9.2–12.7GHz Wideband Fractional-N Subsampling PLL in 28 nm
CMOS With 280 fs RMS Jitter,” IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 50, no. 5, pp. 1203-1213,
Mar. 2015.
M. Raj, et al, “A 164fsrms 9-to-18GHz sampling phase detector based PLL with in-band
noise suppression and robust frequency acquisition in 16nm FinFET,” in VLSI-C, Dig.
Tech. Papers, Jun. 2017, pp. 182-183.
Chan-Ho Kye received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Korea University,
Seoul, South Korea, in 2016, and the Ph.D. degree in electrical and computer engi-neering
from Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea, in 2021. In 2021, he was with
the Inter-University Semiconductor Research Center, Seoul National University. In
2022, he was a Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Lausanne (EPFL), Neuch\^{a}tel, Switzerland. In 2023, he was a Post-Doctoral Research
Fellow at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. From Oct. 2023, he is currently
an Assistant Professor at the University of Suwon, Hwaseong, South Korea. His current
research interests include the design of high-speed I/O circuits and high-speed analog-to-digital
converters (ADCs).
Jihee Kim received the B.S. degree and M.S. degree in electronic and computer engineering
from Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea in 2020 and 2022, where she is
currently pursuing the Ph.D. degree. Her current research interests include designing
high-speed I/O interfaces, clock recovery techniques and clocking circuits.
Deog-Kyoon Jeong received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in electronics engineering
from Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea, in 1981 and 1984, respectively,
and the Ph.D. degree in electrical engi-neering and computer sciences from the University
of California, Berkeley, CA, USA, in 1989. From 1989 to 1991, he was with Texas Instruments,
Dallas, TX, USA, as a Member of the Technical Staff and worked on the modeling and
design of BiCMOS gates and the single-chip implementation of the SPARC architecture.
Then, he joined the faculty of the Department of Electronics Engineering and Inter-University
Semiconductor Research Center, Seoul National University, where he is currently a
Professor. He was one of the cofounders of Silicon Image, now Lattice Semiconductor,
which specialized in digital interface circuits for video displays such as DVI and
HDMI. His main research interests include the design of high-speed I/O circuits, phase-locked
loops, and memory system architecture. Dr. Jeong was one of recipients of the ISSCC
Takuo Sugano Award in 2005 for Outstanding Far-East Paper.
Min-Seong Choo received B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical and computer engineering
from Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea, in 2012 and 2019, respectively.
In 2019, he was a Post-Doctoral Researcher with the Inter-University Semiconductor
Research Center, Seoul National University in the design of RCD/DB interface circuits
for commercial DDR5 memory. From 2019 to 2020, he was a Research Scholar with the
Center for Nanotechnology, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffet Field, CA in research
of radiation-hardened neuromorphic processor design. From 2020 to 2022, he was a Post-Doctoral
Research Scientist at Columbia University, New York, NY in the design of a multi-wavelength
optical transceiver. He is currently an Assistant Professor at Hanyang University,
Ansan, South Korea, in the school of electrical engineering. His research interests
include phase-locked loops (PLLs), clock and data recovery (CDR) circuits, injection-locked
oscillators (ILOs), memory system architecture, neuromorphic computing, in-memory
computing, optical interfaces, and design automation. He serves as a reviewer for
various journals, including the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Transactions
on Circuits and Systems I/II, IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated
Circuits and Systems, and IEEE ACCESS.