Title of Invention

"LOW POWER MANAGER FOR STANDBY OPERATION OF A MEMORY SYSTEM"

Abstract A memory system includes a memory array, a plurality of wordline drivers, a row address decoder block which has a plurality of outputs connected to selected ones of the wordline drivers, a row selector block which has a selector lines connected to individual ones of the wordline drivers. A power management circuit having a power input for a power down input signal (WLPWRDN) and a wordline power down output (WLPDN) is connected to the wordline drivers to lower consumption thereof as a function of the power down input signal.
Full Text LOW POWER MANAGER FOR STANDBY OPERATION OF A MEMORY
SYSTEM
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
There is a constant motivation to reduce the active power and/or standby power of semiconductor chips and macros. This current focus is dictated by the increased proliferation of semiconductors in mobile and portable applications. Therefore, a need exists for intelligent power management on memory chips and macros,
In the past power management of memory refresh operations has been described in U.S. patent No. 4,120,047 of Varadi entitled "Quasi-Static MOS Memory Array With Standby Operation. The Varadi patent describes a MOSFET "memory array that uses a single voltage source (i.e.,5 volts) and operates basically as a static memory array rather than as a dynamic memory array that requires the gates of the MOS devices of the memory array to be periodically refreshed to restore or refresh the memory states contained therein. Each of the memory cells of the memory array contains four MOS devices that are cross-coupled into a flip-flop type of memory cell. All of the memory cells connected to a common word line are also connected to a common return line to which is connected a single resistor and a single large MOS or FET device. The large MOS device is turned on during the active operation of the memory array (during write and read operations) and is turned off during the standby operation of the memory array. The resistor functions to insure that some current flow takes place, during the standby operation, from all the memory cells connected to the common return line in order to maintain the data states ("1" or "0") in each of the memory cells." In the intervening years since the issuance of the Varadi patent we have found that there remains a need for a method and device for providing low power standby operation that occupies less silicon area and is applicable to word-line driver architectures as well.
U.S. patent No. 6,236,617 of Hsu et al. entitled "High Performance CMOS Word-line Driver" describes wordline DRAM array having n groups of m wordlines, in which one group is driven by a group decoder circuit (having a voltage swing between ground and a
circuit high voltage and one driver circuit in each group is exposed to a boosted wordiine
high voltage greater than the circuit high voltage, in which the wordiine driver circuits
have an output stage comprising a standard NFET in series with a high threshold voltage
PFET. In the example shown there are 1024 wordiine drivers and a row (group) decoder
"100" which drives the gates of a selected group of four of those wordiine drivers. A
wordiine selector "200" provides an input to the source of a PFET transistors connected
in series to a parallel pair of NFET transistors , one of which has its gate connected to the
row (group) decoder and the other one of which has its gate connected to a restore circuit.
The driver passes voltage Vpp on to a wordiine, since WLDV connected to that driver is
at Vpp. However, for the remaining (m-l) drivers in that group, the WLDV signals are
kept at Vm (e.g. 0.7V) level and even though the gates of those drivers are pulled low,
the high Vt (about -1.2V) of the PFET device, will not prevent the output of those drivers
from being maintained by the restore circuit at a negative level (or -0.5V). The restore
circuit opens a path between a terminal and the wordiine to restore the quiescent state on
the wordiine block.
U.S. patent No. 6,426,914 of Dennard et al. entitled "Floating Wordiine Using A
Dynamic Row Decoder And Bitline VDD Precharge" describes a "wordiine driver D
consisting of a pullup pMOS PU, a pull-down MOS PD, and a second nMOS pull-down
device K which is called a killer device. This killer device is used to deselect the half-
selected wordlines so they will not be floating." Dennard et al states further that "each
decoded output from a level shifter is tied to a group of four wordiine drivers. One of the
four wordiine drivers is selected by decoding the sources of the pull-up pMOS devices as
well as the gates of the killer devices".
Referring to Second Sense Amplifiers (SSA) 11, Hanson et al. U.S. patent No. 6,115,308 entitled "Sense Amplifier and Method of Using the Same with Pipelined Read, Restore and Write Operations" describes a second sense amplifier memory device which may have a sense amplifier circuit and two drivers connected to the sense amplifier circuit. Two data bus lines may be connected to the sense amplifier circuit to receive data signals. A first equalize signal and a second equalize signal are applied to the sense amplifier
circuit to allow the sense amplifier circuit to receive the data signals across the data bus lines. A switch signal is applied to the sense amplifier circuit to connect the data bus lines to a read data bus. The state of the first equalize signal is changed so that the data bus lines either receive new data or the data bus lines are equalized to a predetermined voltage while the data is on the read data bus and is capable of being read.
U.S. Patent n°6,046,956 discloses a semiconductor memory device comprising a memory cell array having a plurality of memory cells arranged in a row/column array, a plurality of word lines for selecting any row in the memory cell array, and a word line driver circuit for selectively activating /deactivating the word lines. The word line driver circuit has a first discharge circuit for discharging a charge on any word line to a first reference potential at a first stage for deactivating any word line which is discharged to the first reference potential to a second reference potential a a second stage which is lower than the first reference potential. In accordance with this circuit arrangement, a charge on the word line is not discharged all at one time and can be discharged stepwise. Therefore, only a smaller current drive capability is required than when the charge on the word line is discharged to the second reference potential all at one time.
As additional background for this invention, the row architecture of one of the banks 12X of a DRAM 10, which is shown some in detail in FIG 1B, is described next. The row path is comprised of three key blocks; the RDEC (Row address DECoder) block 14, the RSEL (Row SELector level shifter as in Dennard et al.) block 16, and the row or WLDRV (WordLine DRiVer) block 18 in which there are 128, i.e. (X+l), wordline blocks WLDRV, e.g. wordline blocks DRl to DR512 for control codes WLDRV, WLDRV, WLDRV, WLDRV,...WLDRV where X =511. In response to control codes from a data processing system (not shown), the RDEC block 14 and the RSEL block 16 perform a process of hierarchical decoding. First, the RDEC block 14 enables the selection of four (4) wordlines out of the total number of 512 wordlines WLDRV, WLDRV, WLDRV, WLDRV>,... WLDRV. For the example of 512 rows in a bank, the RDEC performs a 1/128 decode. Then the RSEL block 16 performs the final 1/4 decode with a two-bit predecoder (not shown) to activate
one (1) of the four WLDRV blocks activated by the RDEC block 14 with a signal on one of the WLDV lines 20A-20D. For example referring to FIG. 2 the RSEL in FIG. 1B can employ the two-bit predecoder (not shown) to activate line 20A, which is one of the four wordline drivers 20A-20D Thus, the row selector RSEL block 16 has a selector line 20A-20D connected to n/2× of the wordline drivers in said group of n wordline drivers, where x = is an integer greater than 1, e.g the selector line is connected to n/4 or n/8 of the wordline drivers. The signal on WLDECN bus line performs the 1/128 decode, enabling four WLDRVs with horizontal buses. In summary, the RDEC block 14 sends a signal on lines WLDEC-1 to WLDEC-128 to select four WLDRV units. For example, as shown line WLDEC-1 line 15-1 can simultaneously energize four wordline drivers WLDRV, i.e. WLDRV, WLDRV, WLDRV, WLDRV) from the set of the 512 wordlines with the signal on the WLDECN (WordLine DECoder Signal @ low) line to perform a 1/32 decode. The WLDECN-128 line 15-128 can energize the last four wordline drivers WLDRV driver (not shown), WLDRV driver (not shown), WLDRV driver (not shown), and WLDRV driver DR512 which is the only one of the four shown in FIG. 1B for convenience of illustration.
Then the RSEL block 16 decodes a one (1) out of the four (4) signals from the data processing system (not shown) to select one of the four wordlines enabled by the RDEC block 14. The RSEL block 16 then encodes signals on vertical Word Line DriVe (WLDV) lines 20A-20D to enable ¼ of the Word Line DriVe (WLDRV) blocks with signals on WLDV lines 20A-20D. The output of the RSEL block , ¼ of the WLDV bus lines 20A-20D will be active while at the same time ¾ of the Word Line ReSeT (WLRST) bus lines 22A-22D will be activated to ensure the deactivation of the remaining ¾ of the wordline blocks WLDRV. In the current state of the art of multi-banked DRAMs and embedded DRAMs, the process of wordline decoding is performed hierarchically.
The non-activated wordlines are held low by three (3) out of four (4) of the Wordline Reset signals (WLRST) on wordline bus lines 22A-22D. For example, if WLDRV is to be selected value on line 20A for the code WLDV will be high. In
addition the value on bus lines 22A-22D for the three codes WLRST will be high,
the three codes WLDV will be low, and for the single code WLRST > line 22A
is high.
FIG. 2 shows a portion 18' of the WLDRV block 18' of FIG. 1B which includes two of
the prior art wordline driver circuits DR1 and DR2 plus BL bitline 28, and array
transistors A0/A1 with related array capacitors C1/C2.
Block DRl includes pull-up PFET transistor P1, pull-down NFET transistor N1 and killer
NFET transistor N2. For pull-up PFET P1 the source is connected to WLDV line
20A and the drain is connected to node B2, as are the drains of pull-down NFET N1 and
killer NFET N2. The gates of transistors P1 and Nl are connected via node Bl to
WLDECN line 15-1. The gate of NFET N2 is connected to WLRST line 22A. The
sources of transistors N1 and N2 are connected to ground (reference potential). The
drains of transistors P1, N1 and N2 are connected via node B2 to the wordline.output
WL line 26-1 which connects to the gate of NFET array transistor A0 which has its
source connected to capacitor C1 (connected to ground) and its drain connected to node
B5, which is the BL line 28.
Block DR2 includes pull-up PFET transistor P2 and pull-down NFET transistor N3 and killer NFET transistor N4. For PFET P2 the source is connected to WLDV line 20B and the drain is connected to node B4, as are the drains of transistors N3 and N4. As in block DRl, the gates of transistors P2 and N3 are connected via node B3 to WLDECN line 15-1. The gate of transistor N4 is connected to WLRST line 22B. The sources of transistors N3 and N4 are connected to ground (reference potential). The drains of transistors P2, N3 and N4 are connected via node B4 to the wordline output WL line 26-2 which connects to the gate of NFET array transistor Al which has its source connected to capacitor C2 (connected to ground) and its drain like the drain of NFET array transistor AO is also connected to node B5, which is the BL line 28. Examples of voltages applied to the circuit are VDD which has a value of about 1.2V, Vpp which varies between a value of OV and about 1.5V to 2.5V and WLRST which varies between
about 0V and VDD, i.e. 1.2V. The value of WLDV is shown to be VPP (e.g. 2.5V)
after rising from 0V. The value of WLDV is shown to be 0V after falling from VPP
(e.g. 2.5V).
As stated above with respect to FIG. 1B, in the RSEL 16 a two-bit predecoder (not shown is used to activate line 20A which is one of the four wordline drivers 20A-20D. Then referring to FIG. 2, in order to activate WL line 26-1, the source of the pMOS pull-up device P1 is tied to VPP, while the gate of the killer device is tied to Ground on line 22A. At this moment, the sources of the other three pMOS pullup devices in drivers DR1, DR2, DR3 and DR4 stay at ground, and the gates of the other three killer devices stay at VDD. This second level decoding is applied to all the wordline drivers in the first level decoded group of four.
Referring to FIG. 2 and the above example, the signal on the shared WLDECN line 15-1 from the RDEC block 14 in FIG 1B is low, preventing NFET transistors N1 in driver DR1 WLDRV and N3 in WLDRV in driver DR2 from conducting. The input for code WLDV on line 20B to the source circuit of PFET P2 in driver DR2 will be low and for the gate terminal of NFET N4 single code WLRST in driver DR2 the value will be high, preventing PFET P2 from conducting and enabling NFET N4 in driver DR2 to conduct, respectively. The input WLDV on the source terminal of PFET P1 is high enabling PFET P1 to conduct and charge the WL wordline 26-1, up to VPP, its boosted logic level '1'. The reset value on bus 22B for code WLRST would be high on the gate of NFET N4, thereby enabling NFET N4 to conduct and to discharge the wordline 26-2, WL up to ground, its logic level '0'. The activated WL wordline 26-1 drives the gate of the array transistor PFET Al to read data from or to write data into the memory element.
When the memory array is placed in a standby state, none of the wordlines are activated. Therefore, in that case, all of the array transistor gates will be at the logic level '0' or ground.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance of the present invention, a memory system is provided which includes a memory array with a plurality of wordline drivers included in a group. A row address decoder block has an output connected to each of the wordline drivers in the group of wordline drivers. A row selector block has a selector line connected to n/2x of said wordline drivers in the group of n wordline drivers, where x = is an integer greater than 1. A power management circuit having a power down input for a power down input signal (WLPWRDN) and a wordline power down output (WLPDN) are connected to the wordline drivers to lower power consumption thereof as a function of the power down
input signal.
Preferably, the power management circuit includes a plurality of FET devices, an inverter and a negative bias voltage, one of the FET devices connecting a reference potential to the WLPDN output in the absence of a WLPWRDN signal, and another FET connecting a negative voltage WLNEG to the WLPDN output in the presence of a WLPWRDN signal.
Preferably, the standby power management circuit includes an input terminal and an
output terminal, and the output terminal is connected to vary bias to said driver circuits in
the wordline driver to vary operation thereof between full power current operation and
i reduced standby current operation.
Preferably, the power management circuit includes a plurality of FET devices, an inverter and a negative bias voltage. One of the FET devices connecting a reference potential to the WLPDN output in the absence of a WLPWRDN signal and another FET connecting a negative voltage WLNEG to the WLPDN output in the presence of a WLPWRDN signal.
In accordance with another aspect of this invention, a standby power management circuit includes an input terminal and an output terminal. Switching means are provided including MOSFET devices for switching between a positive output and a negative
output signal at said output terminal as a function of an input on said input terminal. The switching means include at least one inverter and NMOS and PMOS devices.
Preferably, the input terminal is connected through an inverter to the gate of a pull-up transistor. The output terminal is connected in series with a pass through transistor. A pull down FET transistor having a source/drain circuit is connected in series with a source of negative potential coupled to said output, and control FET transistors are connected to switch the gate of the pull down FET transistor as a function of a power down signal applied to the input.
The present invention uses a logic device for the array transistor to boost the array performance. The problem caused by using this device is that the cost of the additional performance is standby power of the device is 1000X (pA) that of the DRAM-based array transistor (fA). Therefore, a need exists for a means to manage the standby power of the logic-array device and the memory array constructed with those devices.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIGS. 1A and 1B describe a prior art DRAM memory configuration with the problem or achieve an of excessive consumption of power during standby operation.
FIG. 2 shows a portion of the prior art WLDRV block of FIG. 1B which includes two of the prior art wordline driver circuits plus A BL bitline , and array transistors with related array capacitors.
FIG. 3 illustrates modified row architecture in accordance with this invention, which provides a means for providing the two operatingmodes including a high-performance mode or a low-power mode.
FIG. 4 shows a modification of the circuit diagram of FIG. 2 in accordance with this invention which demonstrates incorporation therewith of an embodiment of the Standby Power Management (SPM) block of FIG. 3,
FIG. 5 illustrates an embodiment of the SPM power management block in accordance with this invention comprising a circuit incorporating MOSFET devices including pull-up PFET transistors; pull-down NFET transistors, a pass-through NFET transistor and an inverter.
FIG. 6 illustrates a modification of FIG.5 in which a SPM' power management block comprising a circuit incorporating MOSFET devices including PFET transistors, NFET transistors and two inverters.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIGS. 3-6, the present invention provides a means for managing the standby power of the type of logic-array device shown in FIG. 2. A standby power manager is provided that will modulate the bias of the array device depending on whether the memory array needs to be operated in two operating modes including a high-performance mode or a low-power mode,
FIG. 3 illustrates modified row architecture in accordance with this invention, which provides a means for providing the two operating modes including a high-performance mode or a low-power mode. For a memory array 30, the architecture is comprised of four other blocks; the row address decoder block 14, the row selector block 16, the wordline drivers block DR, and the standby power management block 40. The Standby Power Management (SPM) block 40 generates a WLPDN output on line 32 which modulates the bias point of the array transistor and the logic level '0' of the outputs of the row decoder 14 and wordline driver blocks DR. In normal operation (high performance mode) the logic level '0' of the outputs 15-1 to 15-128 of the row decoder 14 and wordline driver
blocks DR lines 26-1 to 26-512 is ground. This maintains a bias upon the array the transistor that yields the highest performance. In standby operation (low power mode) the logic level '0' of the outputs of the row decoder 14 and wordline driver blocks DR is a voltage that is negative with respect to ground. Depending upon the technology this voltage can range from -0.2V to -1.5V. This bias condition reduces the array standby current by three orders of magnitude (from Pico-amps to femto-amps). As stated above, the row selector (RSEL) block 16 has a selector line 20A-20D connected to n/2× of said wordline drivers in a group of n wordline drivers, where x = is an integer greater than 1, e.g. the row selector is connected to n/4 or n/8 of the wordline drivers.
FIG. 4 shows a modification of the circuit diagram of FIG. 2, which demonstrates incorporation therewith of an embodiment of the Standby Power Management (SPM) block 40 of FIG. 3. In FIG. 4 the SPM block 40 is interfaced with two (2) wordline driver circuits DR1 and DR2 for purposes of illustration of an implementation which would include the full array of say 512 driver circuits DR1-DR512 as indicated in FIG. 1B. In FIG. 4, the difference in the drivers DR1 and DR2 from FIG. 2 is that the sources of the pull-down NFET transistor Nl and killer NFET transistor N2 in driver DR1 and the sources of pull-down NFET transistor N3 and killer NFET transistor N4 in driver DR2 are connected via node B6 to Word Line Power DoWN (WLPDN) line 32 instead of ground (reference potential).
FIG. 5 illustrates an embodiment of the SPM power management block 40 comprising a circuit incorporating MOSFET devices including pull-up PFET transistors P3 and P4, pull-down NFET transistors N5, N6, and N8, pass-through NFET transistor N7 and an inverter I1. WLPDN line 36 is connected to the gate of pull-up PFET P3 and the input of inverter 11. The sources of pull-up PFET transistors P3 and P4 are connected via node B10 to positive voltage VDD, e.g. about 1.2V. The drain of pull-up PFET P3 is connected through node B8 to the gate of pull-down NFET N5 and the drain of pull-down NFET N6. The drains of pull-up PFET P4 and pull-down NFET N5 as well as the source of pass-through NFET N7 and the gate of NFET N6 are connected via node B7 to the gate of pull-down NFET N8. The sources of pull-down NFET transistors N5 and N6 are connected through node B09 to WordLine NEGative voltage WLNEG, e.g. from
about. -0.2 to about -1.0V. The drain of pass-through NFET N7 and the source of pull-down NFET N8 are connected via node B6 to the Wordline Power Down Bus (WLPDN) line 32.
The operation of the SPM block 40 is as follows. During high performance mode, the
input to the circuit, WLPWRDN on line 36, is high or logic level T. Pull-up PFET
transistor P3 will be off, the output of inverter I1 having its input connected to
WLPWRDN line 36 and its output connected to node B12 will be logic level '0'. The
gates of pull-up PFET transistor P4 and of pass-through NFET transistor N7 are
connected to node B12. The inverter I1 which is at logic level '0' produces a low potential
on node B12 which prevents pass-through NFET N7 from conducting. This same low
potential on node B12 at the gate of pull-up PFET P4 wilt enable conduction thereof and
the drain terminal of pull-up PFET P4 that is connected to node B7 will be charged to a
logic level T. The gate of pull-down NFET N8 is also connected to node B7, so the
potential (logic level T) at the gate of NFET N8 will turn-on transistor N8 discharging
the WLPDN output line 32 of the SPM block 40 to ground, which was the condition in
the circuit of FIG. 2. The same potential will also enable conduction of pull-down NFET
N6. Conduction will pull the drain of pull-down NFET N6, which also the gate of pull-
down NFET N5 to the WLNEG voltage. This will ensure that pull-down NFET transistor
N5 does not conduct.
During standby mode, the input to the circuit, WLPWRDN, is low or logic level '0'. Pull-up PFET transistor P3 will conduct and charge its drain to logic level T, the output of inverter I1 will also be logic level T. This potential at the gate of pass-through NFET N7 will allow it to conduct and pull its drain voltage to the same potential as its source terminal that is connected to node B7, The source potential on pass-through NFET N7 is set in the following manner. The logic level '1' on node B12 at the gate of pull-up PFET transistor P4 will disable conduction thereof into node B7. With the drain of P3 at a logic level '1' node B8 will be at the potential of node B10, so of pull-down NFET transistor N5 will conduct and discharge its drain terminal that is connected to node B7 to the WLNEG potential on node B9. Node B7 is also the source terminal of pass-through
NFET transistor N7. Therefore, the WLPDN bus line 32, which is connected to node B6 will be discharged to the WLNEG voltage. This lower voltage on node B6, unlike the ground potential of FIG. 2 will bias the row driver circuits DR1, DR2 (up to DR 512) and array transistor circuits A0/A1, etc. to a reduced standby current state. When the WLNEG voltage is connected to the node B6, all of the sources of the NFETs in the driver circuits DR1-DR512 are lowered to near the WLNEG voltage, which, when the respective NFETs are conducting lowers the voltage on nodes B2 and B4 in FIG.4 to near WLNEG turning off the wordlines 26-1 and 26-2, etc. and placing a negative bias on the gates of the array transistor circuits A0/A1, etc. which causes the bias of the gate-drain terminals of the memory pass transistor to become reverse biased. This will greatly reduce the leakage current in the capacitive memory elements in which high data or logic level '1' is stored. Since all of the wordlines and consequently all gate-drain terminals of the memory pass transistors will be biased to the standby potential, the total standby current of the memory chip will be reduced by several orders of magnitude.
FIG. 6 illustrates a modification of FIG.5 in which a SPM' power management block 40' comprising a circuit incorporating MOSFET devices including PFET transistors P5 and P6 and NFET transistors N15, N16, N17 and two inverters 12/13. WLPDN line 32 is connected to the input of inverter I2,the output of which is connected via Node B21 to the gate of PFET P5 and the input of inverter 13, the output of which is connected via node B22 to the gates of NFET 17 and PFET P6. The drain of PFET P5 is connected to the gate of NFET 15. The sources of PFET transistors P5 and P6 are connected via node B20 to positive voltage VDD, e.g. about 1.2V. The drain of PFET P6 is connected through node B17 to the gate of NFET N16 and the drain of NFET N15. The sources of NFET transistors N15 and N16 are connected through node B19 to WordLine NEGative voltage WLNEG, e.g. from about. -0.2 to about -l.OV. The drains of NFET 17 and the drain of NFET16 are connected via node B6 to the Wordline Power Down Bus (WLPDN) line 32.
Basically the system of SPM' 40' is analogous to the operation of the SPM 40 in FIG. 5. The conduction of NFET 16 when the node B17 is high causes the node B6 to be lowered
to the WLNEG potential.
The operation of the SPM block 40' is as follows. During high performance mode, the input to the circuit, WLPWRDN on line 36, is high or logic level T. The output of inverter I2 having its input connected to WLPWRDN line 36 and its output connected to node B21 will be logic level '0'. The output of inverter I3 having its input connected to the output B21 of inverter I2 and its output connected to node B22 will be logic level '1'. The gate of pull-up PFET transistor P5 is connected to node B21. The logic level '0' or low potential on node B21 allows pull-up PFET transistor P5 to conduct and charge its drain terminal to VDD. The drain terminal of PFET P5 is connected to the gate terminal of pull-down transistor N15. The high potential at its gate terminal will cause pull-down transistor Nl5 to conduct and discharge node B17 to the WLNEG potential. Node B17 is also connected to the gate terminal of pull-down NFET transistor N16 and the drain of pull-up PFET transistor P6, respectively. The WLNEG potential on node B17 will disable conduction of pull-down NFET transistor N16. Node B22, which is at a logic level '1' is connected to the gate of pull-down NFET transistor N17 and the gate of pull-up PFET transistor P6, respectively. The high potential on node B22 will disable conduction of pull-up PFET transistor P6 and will enable conduction of pull-down NFET transistor N17, respectively. The conduction of pull-down NFET transistor N17 will discharge the WLDPN bus 32 to ground, the logic level '0' for high performance mode.
During standby mode, the input to the circuit, WLPWRDN on line 36, is low or at logic level '0'. In that case, the output of inverter 12, having its input connected to WLPWRDN line 36 and its output connected to node B21, will be at logic level '1'. The output of inverter 13, having its input connected to the output of inverter 12 via node B21 and its output connected to node B22, will be at logic level '0' The gate of pull-up PFET transistor P5 is connected to node B21. The high potential on node B21 will prevent pull-up PFET transistor P5 from conducting. Node B17 is also connected to the gate terminal of pull-down NFET transistor N16 and the drain of pull-up PFET transistor P6, respectively. Node B22, which is at a logic level '0', is connected to the gate of pull-down NFET transistor N17 and the gate of pull-up PFET transistor P6, respectively. The low
potential on node B22 will enable conduction of pull-up PFET transistor P6 and will disable conduction of pull-down NFET transistor N17, respectively. The conduction of pull-up PFET transistor P6 will charge the gate terminal of pull-down NFET transistor N16 to VDD, This will enable pull-down NFET transistor N16 to conduct and discharge the WLDPN bus 32 to WLNEG, the logic level '0' for standby mode.
This lower voltage on node B6, unlike the ground potential of FIG. 2 will bias the row
driver circuits DR1, DR2 (up to DR 512) and array transistor circuits A0/A1, etc. to a
reduced standby current state. When the WLNEG voltage is connected to the node B6, all
of the sources of the NFETs in the driver circuits DR1-DR512 are lowered to near the
WLNEG voltage, which, when the respective NFETs are conducting lowers the voltage
on nodes B2 and B4 in FIG.4 to near WLNEG turning off the wordlines 26-1 and 26-2,
etc. and placing a negative bias on the gates of the array transistor circuits A0/A1, etc.
which causes the bias of the gate-drain terminals of the memory pass transistors to
become reverse biased. This will greatly reduce the leakage current in the capacitive
memory elements in which high data or logic level T is stored. Since all of the wordlines
and consequently all gate-drain terminals of the memory pass transistors will be biased to
the standby potential, the total standby current of the memory chip will be reduced by
several orders of magnitude.
While this invention has been described in terms of the above specific embodiment(s), those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modifications within the spirit and scope of the appended claims, i.e. that change can be made in form and detail, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly all such changes come within the purview encompasses the subject matter of the claims which follow.








We claim:
1. A memory system comprising:
a memory array (30);
a wordline driver for said memory array including driver circuits (DRl, DR2);
a standby power management circuit (40) connected to said driver circuits (DRl, DR2);
said driver circuits (DRl, DR2) are connected to a power supply voltage line (20) and a reference supply voltage line (32);
said system wherein said standby power management circuit (40) supplies a negative voltage (WLNEG) to the reference supply voltage line (32) when in a reduced standby current mode of operation (WLPWRDN= 0) and supplies ground to the reference supply voltage line (32) when in normal operation (WLPWRDN=1).
2. The memory system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said standby power management circuit (40) includes an input terminal (36) and an output terminal (B6), and said output terminal is connected to vary bias to said driver circuits (DRl, DR2) in said wordline driver to vary operation thereof between full power current operation and reduced standby current operation.
3. The memory system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the standby power management circuit (40) includes an input terminal (36) and an output terminal (B6), said input being connected through an inverter (I1) to the gate of a pull-up transistor (P3, P4), said output being connected in series with a pass through transistor (N7), a pull down FET transistor
(N5, N6) having a source/drain circuit connected in series with a source of negative potential coupled to said output, and control FET transistors (P3, P4) connected to switch the gate of the pull down FET transistor (N5, N6) as a function of a power down signal applied to the input (36).
4. The memory system as claimed in claim 1 , wherein said standby power management circuit (40) includes an input terminal (36) and an output terminal (B6), said output terminal is connected to vary bias to said driver circuits in said wordline driver to vary operation thereof between full power current operation and reduced standby current operation, said output terminal being connected in series with a pass through transistor (N7), a pull-down FET transistor (N5, N6) having a source/drain circuit connected in series with a source of negative potential coupled to said output terminal, and control FET transistors (P3, P4) connected to switch the gate of the pull-down FET transistor (N5, N6) as a function of a power down signal applied to said input terminal.
5. The memory system as claimed in claim 3, wherein an inverter (I1) with an input and an output connected to a first node (B12), a first pull-up FET transistor (P3) having a gate and having a source/drain circuit connected through a second node (B8) in series with a source/drain circuit of a first pull-down FET transistor (N6) between positive and negative power supply voltages, said first pull-down FET transistor having a gate connected to a third node (B7), a second pull-up FET transistor (P4) having a source/drain circuit connected through said third node (B7) in series with a source/drain circuit of a second pull-down FET transistor (N5) between positive and negative power supply voltages, a third pull-down FET transistor (N8) with a source/drain circuit connected between said output terminal and ground, a pass-through transistor (N7) having a source connected to said output terminal, a drain connected to said third node (B7), said inverter input and said gate of said first pull-up transistor being connected in parallel to said input terminal, said inverter output being connected through said first node (B12) to said gates of said second pull-up transistor (P4) and said pass-through transistor (N7), said drain of said first pull-up transistor (P4) being connected through a fourth node (B8) to said gate of said second pull-down transistor (N5), and said drain of
said second pull-up transistor (P4) being connected through said third node (B7) to said drain of said pull-down transistor (N7) and said gates of said third pull-down transistor (N8) and said first pull-down transistor (N6).
6. The memory system as claimed in claim 3, wherein a first pull-up FET transistor (P5) having a gate connected to a first node (B21) and a source/drain circuit, a first pull-down FET (N15) having a drain connected to a second node (B17) and a source connected to a negative power supply voltage, a second pull-up FET transistor (P6) having a gate connected to a third node (B22) a source/circuit connected to a positive power supply voltage and a drain connected to said second node (B17), a second pull-down FET (N16) having a gate connected to said second node, a drain connected to said output terminal, and a source connected to a negative power supply voltage, a pass-through transistor (N17) having a gate connected to said third node (B22) a drain connected to said output terminal and a source connected to ground, a first inverter with an input connected to said input terminal and an output connected to said first node (B21), and a second inverter with an input connected to said first node (B21), and an output connected to said third node (B22).
7. The memory system as claimed in claim I, wherein the standby power management circuit (40) includes an input terminal and an output terminal, said input being connected through an inverter to the gate of a pull-up transistor, said output being connected in series with a pass through transistor (N7), a pull down FET transistor (N5, N6) having a source/drain circuit connected in series with a source of negative potential coupled to said output, control FET transistors (P3, P4) connected to switch the gate of the pull down FET transistor as a function of a power down signal applied to the input, and the output terminal is connected to control the bias row driver circuits (DR1, DR2) to a reduced standby current.
8. The memory system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said wordline driver circuits (DR1, DR2) being included in a group of wordline driver circuits (DR) with n wordline driver circuits in a group, a row address decoder block (14) which has an output connected to
each of said wordline driver circuits (DR1, DR2) in said group of wordline driver circuits (DR), a row selector block which has a selector line connected to n/2× of said wordline driver circuits in said group of n wordline driver circuits (DR), where x = is an integer greater than 1, said power management circuit (40) being connected to all word line driver circuits of said group.
9. The memory system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said standby power management circuit further comprises :
an input terminal (36) and an output terminal (B6);switching means including MOSFET devices for switching between a positive voltage and said negative voltage (WLNEG) at said reference supply voltage line
(32).

Documents:

286-delnp-2006-abstract (21-07-2009).pdf

286-delnp-2006-abstract.pdf

286-delnp-2006-claims.pdf

286-delnp-2006-complete specification-granted.pdf

286-delnp-2006-correspondence-others (21-07-2009).pdf

286-DELNP-2006-Correspondence-Others.pdf

286-delnp-2006-description (complete).pdf

286-delnp-2006-drawings.pdf

286-delnp-2006-form-1 (21-07-2009).pdf

286-delnp-2006-form-1.pdf

286-DELNP-2006-Form-18.pdf

286-delnp-2006-form-2.pdf

286-delnp-2006-form-3.pdf

286-delnp-2006-form-5.pdf

286-delnp-2006-gpa (21-07-2009).pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-101.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-210.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-220.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-237.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-401.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-408.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-409.pdf

286-delnp-2006-pct-416.pdf


Patent Number 248098
Indian Patent Application Number 286/DELNP/2006
PG Journal Number 24/2011
Publication Date 17-Jun-2011
Grant Date 17-Jun-2011
Date of Filing 16-Jan-2006
Name of Patentee INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION
Applicant Address ARMONK, NEW YORK 10504, U.S.A.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 HANSON DAVID 30 HARVEST DRIVE, BREWSTER, NEW YORK, NY 10509, U.S.A.
2 FREDEMAN GREGORY 27 LOUISE PLACE, STAATSBURG, NY 12580, U.S.A.
3 GOLZ JOHN 293 OLD WEST POINT ROAD, GARRISON, NY 10524, U.S.A.
4 KIM HOKI 48 SANDY PINES BOULEVARD, HOPEWELL JUNCTION, NY 12533, U.S.A.
5 PARRIES PAUL 32 TANGLEWOOD DRIVE, WAPPINGERS FALLS, NY 12590, U.S.A.
PCT International Classification Number G11C 8/08
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2004/050867
PCT International Filing date 2004-05-19
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10/250,233 2003-06-16 U.S.A.