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On microarchitectural mechanisms for cache wearout reduction

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Miralaei, N 
Petit, S 
Sahuquillo, J 
Jones, TM 

Abstract

Hot carrier injection (HCI) and bias temperature instability (BTI) are two of the main deleterious effects that increase a transistor's threshold voltage over the lifetime of a microprocessor. This voltage degradation causes slower transistor switching and eventually can result in faulty operation. HCI manifests itself when transistors switch from logic ''0'' to ''1'' and vice versa, whereas BTI is the result of a transistor maintaining the same logic value for an extended period of time. These failure mechanisms are especiall in those transistors used to implement the SRAM cells of first-level (L1) caches, which are frequently accessed, so they are critical to performance, and they are continuously aging. This paper focuses on microarchitectural solutions to reduce transistor aging effects induced by both HCI and BTI in the data array of L1 data caches. First, we show that the majority of cell flips are concentrated in a small number of specific bits within each data word. In addition, we also build upon the previous studies, showing that logic ''0'' is the most frequently written value in a cache by identifying which cells hold a given logic value for a significant amount of time. Based on these observations, this paper introduces a number of architectural techniques that spread the number of flips evenly across memory cells and reduce the amount of time that logic ''0'' values are stored in the cells by switching

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Keywords

Bias temperature instability (BTI), cache memories, cell flips, duty cycle distribution, hot carrier injection (HCI), threshold voltage degradation

Journal Title

IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1063-8210
1557-9999

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/J016284/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/K026399/1)
This work was supported in part by the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad within the Plan E Funds under Grant TIN2015-66972-C5-1-R, in part by the HiPEAC Collaboration Grant funded by the FP7 HiPEAC Network of Excellence under Grant 287759, and in part by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council under Grant EP/K 026399/1 and Grant EP/J016284/1.