WEDC WEDPN8M64V

White Electronic Designs
WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
8Mx64 Synchronous DRAM
FEATURES
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The 64MByte (512Mb) SDRAM is a high-speed CMOS,
dynamic random-access memory using 4 chips containing
134,217,728 bits. Each chip is internally configured as a
quad-bank DRAM with a synchronous interface. Each of
the chip’s 33,554,432-bit banks is organized as 4,096 rows
by 512 columns by 16 bits.
High Frequency = 100, 125, 133MHz
Package:
• 219 Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA), 21 x 21mm
Single 3.3V ±0.3V power supply
Unbuffered
Fully synchronous; all signals registered on positive edge of
system clock cycle
Internal pipelined operation; column address can be changed
every clock cycle
Internal banks for hiding row access/precharge
Programmable Burst length 1,2,4,8 or full page
4,096 refresh cycles
Commercial, Industrial and Military Temperature Ranges
Organized as 8M x 64
• User Configurable as 2 x 8M x 32 or
4 x 8M x 16
Weight: WEDPN8M64V-XB2X - 2 grams typical
Read and write accesses to the SDRAM are burst oriented;
accesses start at a selected location and continue for
a programmed number of locations in a programmed
sequence. Accesses begin with the registration of an
ACTIVE command, which is then followed by a READ or
WRITE command. The address bits registered coincident
with the ACTIVE command are used to select the bank
and row to be accessed (BA0, BA1 select the bank; A011 select the row). The address bits registered coincident
with the READ or WRITE command are used to select the
starting column location for the burst access.
The SDRAM provides for programmable READ or WRITE
burst lengths of 1, 2, 4 or 8 locations, or the full page, with
a burst terminate option. An AUTO PRECHARGE function
may be enabled to provide a self-timed row precharge that
is initiated at the end of the burst sequence.
BENEFITS
58% SPACE SAVINGS
Reduced part count
Reduced trace lengths for lower parasitic capacitance
Laminate interposer for optimum TCE match
Suitable for hi-reliability applications
Upgradeable to 16M x 64 density (WEDPN16M64V-XB2X)
The 512Mb SDRAM uses an internal pipelined architecture
to achieve high-speed operation. This architecture is
compatible with the 2n rule of prefetch architectures, but
it also allows the column address to be changed on every
clock cycle to achieve a high-speed, fully random access.
Precharging one bank while accessing one of the other
three banks will hide the precharge cycles and provide
seamless, high-speed, random-access operation.
* This product is subject to change without notice.
Discrete Approach
ACTUAL SIZE
11.9
21
22.3
WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
21
Area
January 2005
Rev. 2
4 x 265mm2 = 1060mm 2
441mm 2
1
S
A
V
I
N
G
S
58%
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WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
FIGURE 1 – PIN CONFIGURATION
Top View
1
A
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 10
11 12
13 14
15 16
DQ0
DQ14
DQ15
VSS
VSS
A9
A10
A11
A8
VCC
VCC
DQ16
DQ17
DQ31
VSS
B
DQ1
DQ2
DQ12
DQ13
VSS
VSS
A0
A7
A6
A1
VCC
VCC
DQ18
DQ19
DQ29
DQ30
C
DQ3
DQ4
DQ10
DQ11
VCC
VCC
A2
A5
A4
A3
VSS
VSS
DQ20
DQ21
DQ27
DQ28
D
DQ6
DQ5
DQ8
DQ9
VCC
VCC
DNU
DNU
DNU
DNU
VSS
VSS
DQ22
DQ23
DQ26
DQ25
E
DQ7
DQML0
VCC
DQMH0
Vss
Vss
NC
BA0
BA1
NC
Vss
Vss
DQML1
VSS
Vss
DQ24
F
CAS0#
WE0#
VCC
CLK0
Vss
RAS1#
WE1#
VSS
DQMH1
CLK1
G
CS0#
RAS0#
VCC
CKE0
Vss
CAS1#
CS1#
VSS
Vcc
CKE1
H
VSS
VSS
VCC
VCC
VSS
VCC
VSS
Vss
VCC
VCC
J
VSS
VSS
VCC
VCC
VSS
VCC
VSS
VSS
VCC
VCC
K
Vss
CKE3
VCC
CS3#
Vss
Vcc
CKE2
VSS
RAS2#
CS2#
L
Vss
CLK3
VCC
CAS3# RAS3#
Vcc
CLK2
VSS
WE2#
CAS2#
M
DQ56
DQMH3
VCC
WE3#
DQML3
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vss
Vss
Vss
Vss
DQMH2
VSS
DQML2
DQ39
N
DQ57
DQ58
DQ55
DQ54
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vss
Vss
Vss
Vss
DQ41
DQ40
DQ37
DQ38
P
DQ60
DQ59
DQ53
DQ52
VSS
VSS
Vcc
Vcc
Vss
Vss
VCC
VCC
DQ43
DQ42
DQ36
DQ35
R
DQ62
DQ61
DQ51
DQ50
VCC
VCC
Vss
Vss
Vcc
Vcc
VSS
VSS
DQ45
DQ44
DQ34
DQ33
T
Vss
DQ63
DQ49
DQ48
VCC
VCC
Vss
Vss
Vcc
Vcc
VSS
VSS
DQ47
DQ46
DQ32
VCC
NOTE: DNU = Do Not Use; to be left unconnected for future upgrades.
NC = Not Connected Internally.
January 2005
Rev. 2
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WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
FIGURE. 2 – FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
WE0#
RAS0#
CAS0#
WE# RAS# CAS#
A0-11
A0-11
BA0-1
•
8M x 16 •
CLK
•
U0
CKE
•
CS#
•
DQML
•
DQ0
BA0-1
CLK0
CKE0
CS0#
DQML0
DQMH0
DQMH
DQ15
DQ0
•
•
•
•
•
•
DQ15
WE1#
RAS1#
CAS1#
WE# RAS# CAS#
A0-11
DQ0
•
8M x 16 •
CLK
•
U1
CKE
•
CS#
•
•
DQML
BA0-1
CLK1
CKE1
CS1#
DQML1
DQMH1
DQMH
DQ15
DQ16
•
•
•
•
•
•
DQ31
WE2#
RAS2#
CAS2#
WE# RAS# CAS#
A0-11
DQ0
•
8M x 16 •
CLK
•
U2
CKE
•
CS#
•
•
DQML
BA0-1
CLK2
CKE2
CS2#
DQML2
DQMH2
DQMH
DQ15
DQ32
•
•
•
•
•
•
DQ47
WE3#
RAS3#
CAS3#
WE# RAS# CAS#
A0-11
DQ0
•
8M x 16 •
CLK
•
U3
CKE
•
CS#
•
•
DQML
BA0-1
CLK3
CKE3
CS3#
DQML3
DQMH3
January 2005
Rev. 2
DQMH
3
DQ15
DQ48
•
•
•
•
•
•
DQ63
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must be performed. After the AUTO REFRESH cycles
are complete, the SDRAM is ready for Mode Register
programming. Because the Mode Register will power up
in an unknown state, it should be loaded prior to applying
any operational command.
The 512Mb SDRAM is designed to operate in 3.3V, lowpower memory systems. An auto refresh mode is provided,
along with a power-saving, power-down mode.
All inputs and outputs are LVTTL compatible. SDRAMs offer
substantial advances in DRAM operating performance,
including the ability to synchronously burst data at a high
data rate with automatic column-address generation,
the ability to interleave between internal banks in order
to hide precharge time and the capability to randomly
change column addresses on each clock cycle during a
burst access.
REGISTER DEFINITION
MODE REGISTER
The Mode Register is used to define the specific mode
of operation of the SDRAM. This definition includes the
selec-tion of a burst length, a burst type, a CAS latency,
an operating mode and a write burst mode, as shown in
Figure 3. The Mode Register is programmed via the LOAD
MODE REGISTER command and will retain the stored
information until it is programmed again or the device
loses power.
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
Read and write accesses to the SDRAM are burst oriented;
accesses start at a selected location and continue for
a programmed number of locations in a programmed
sequence. Accesses begin with the registration of an
ACTIVE command which is then followed by a READ or
WRITE command. The address bits registered coincident
with the ACTIVE command are used to select the bank
and row to be accessed (BA0 and BA1 select the bank,
A0-11 select the row). The address bits (A0-8) registered
coincident with the READ or WRITE command are used to
select the starting column location for the burst access.
Mode register bits M0-M2 specify the burst length, M3
specifies the type of burst (sequential or interleaved),
M4-M6 specify the CAS latency, M7 and M8 specify the
operating mode, M9 specifies the WRITE burst mode, and
M10 and M11 are reserved for future use.
The Mode Register must be loaded when all banks are
idle, and the controller must wait the specified time before
initiating the subsequent operation. Violating either of these
requirements will result in unspecified operation.
Prior to normal operation, the SDRAM must be initialized.
The following sections provide detailed information
covering device initialization, register definition, command
descriptions and device operation.
BURST LENGTH
Read and write accesses to the SDRAM are burst oriented,
with the burst length being programmable, as shown
in Figure 3. The burst length determines the maximum
number of column locations that can be accessed for a
given READ or WRITE command. Burst lengths of 1, 2, 4
or 8 locations are available for both the sequential and the
interleaved burst types, and a full-page burst is available
for the sequential type. The full-page burst is used in
conjunction with the BURST TERMINATE command to
generate arbitrary burst lengths.
INITIALIZATION
SDRAMs must be powered up and initialized in a
predefined manner. Operational procedures other than
those specified may result in undefined operation. Once
power is applied and the clock is stable (stable clock
is defined as a signal cycling within timing constraints
specified for the clock pin), the SDRAM requires a
100µs delay prior to issuing any command other than a
COMMAND INHIBIT or a NOP. Starting at some point
during this 100µs period and continuing at least through the
end of this period, COMMAND INHIBIT or NOP commands
should be applied.
Reserved states should not be used, as unknown operation
or incompatibility with future versions may result.
When a READ or WRITE command is issued, a block of
columns equal to the burst length is effectively selected.
All accesses for that burst take place within this block,
meaning that the burst will wrap within the block if a
boundary is reached. The block is uniquely selected by
A1-8 when the burst length is set to two; by A2-8 when
the burst length is set to four; and by A3-8 when the burst
Once the 100µs delay has been satisfied with at least
one COMMAND INHIBIT or NOP command having been
applied, a PRECHARGE command should be applied. All
banks must be precharged, thereby placing the device in
the all banks idle state.
Once in the idle state, two AUTO REFRESH cycles
January 2005
Rev. 2
WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
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length is set to eight. The remaining (least significant)
address bit(s) is (are) used to select the starting location
within the block. Full-page bursts wrap within the page if
the boundary is reached.
WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
either sequential or interleaved; this is referred to as the
burst type and is selected via bit M3.
The ordering of accesses within a burst is determined by
the burst length, the burst type and the starting column
address, as shown in Table 1.
BURST TYPE
Accesses within a given burst may be programmed to be
FIGURE 3 – MODE REGISTER DEFINITION
A11 A10 A9 A8
A7 A6
A5 A4 A3 A2
A1 A 0
TABLE 1 – BURST DEFINITION
Burst
Length
Address Bus
2
Mode Register (Mx)
Reserved* WB Op Mode CAS Latency
BT
Burst Length
*Should program
M11, M10 = 0, 0
to ensure compatibility
with future devices.
Burst Length
4
M2 M1M0
M3 = 0
M3 = 1
0 0 0
1
1
0 0 1
2
2
0 1 0
4
4
0 1 1
8
8
1 0 0
Reserved
Reserved
1 0 1
Reserved
Reserved
1 1 0
Reserved
Reserved
1 1 1
Full Page
Reserved
8
Burst Type
M3
January 2005
Rev. 2
Starting Column
Address
0
Sequential
1
Interleaved
M6 M5 M4
CAS Latency
0 0 0
Reserved
0 0 1
Reserved
0 1 0
2
0 1 1
3
1 0 0
Reserved
1 0 1
Reserved
1 1 0
Reserved
1 1 1
Reserved
M8
M7
M6-M0
Operating Mode
0
0
Defined
Standard Operation
-
-
-
M9
Write Burst Mode
0
Programmed Burst Length
1
Single Location Access
Full
Page
(y)
A2
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
A1
0
0
1
1
A1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
A0
0
1
A0
0
1
0
1
A0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
n = A 0-9/8/7
(location 0-y)
Order of Accesses Within a Burst
Type = Sequential
Type = Interleaved
0-1
1-0
0-1
1-0
0-1-2-3
1-2-3-0
2-3-0-1
3-0-1-2
0-1-2-3
1-0-3-2
2-3-0-1
3-2-1-0
0-1-2-3-4-5-6-7
1-2-3-4-5-6-7-0
2-3-4-5-6-7-0-1
3-4-5-6-7-0-1-2
4-5-6-7-0-1-2-3
5-6-7-0-1-2-3-4
6-7-0-1-2-3-4-5
7-0-1-2-3-4-5-6
Cn, Cn + 1, Cn + 2
Cn + 3, Cn + 4...
…Cn - 1,
Cn…
0-1-2-3-4-5-6-7
1-0-3-2-5-4-7-6
2-3-0-1-6-7-4-5
3-2-1-0-7-6-5-4
4-5-6-7-0-1-2-3
5-4-7-6-1-0-3-2
6-7-4-5-2-3-0-1
7-6-5-4-3-2-1-0
Not Supported
NOTES:
1. For full-page accesses: y = 512.
2. For a burst length of two, A1-8 select the block-of-two burst; A0 selects the starting
column within the block.
3. For a burst length of four, A2-8 select the block-of-four burst; A0-1 select the starting
column within the block.
4. For a burst length of eight, A3-8 select the block-of-eight burst; A0-2 select the
starting column within the block.
5. For a full-page burst, the full row is selected and A0-8 select the starting column.
6. Whenever a boundary of the block is reached within a given sequence above, the
following access wraps within the block.
7. For a burst length of one, A0-8 select the unique column to be accessed, and Mode
Register bit M3 is ignored.
All other states reserved
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WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
FIGURE 4 – CAS LATENCY
T0
T1
T2
T3
NOP
NOP
CLK
COMMAND
READ
tLZ
t OH
DOUT
I/O
t AC
DON’T CARE
UNDEFINED
CAS Latency = 2
T0
T1
T2
T3
T4
NOP
NOP
NOP
CLK
COMMAND
READ
tLZ
t OH
DOUT
I/O
t AC
CAS Latency = 3
CAS LATENCY
burst length applies to both READ and WRITE bursts.
The CAS latency is the delay, in clock cycles, between
the registration of a READ command and the availability
of the first piece of output data. The latency can be set to
two or three clocks.
Test modes and reserved states should not be used
because unknown operation or incompatibility with future
versions may result.
WRITE BURST MODE
If a READ command is registered at clock edge n, and
the latency is m clocks, the data will be available by clock
edge n+m. The I/Os will start driving as a result of the clock
edge one cycle earlier (n + m - 1), and provided that the
relevant access times are met, the data will be valid by
clock edge n + m. For example, assuming that the clock
cycle time is such that all relevant access times are met,
if a READ command is registered at T0 and the latency
is programmed to two clocks, the I/Os will start driving
after T1 and the data will be valid by T2. Table 2 below
indicates the operating frequencies at which each CAS
latency setting can be used.
When M9 = 0, the burst length programmed via M0-M2
applies to both READ and WRITE bursts; when M9 = 1,
the programmed burst length applies to READ bursts, but
write accesses are single-location (nonburst) accesses.
TABLE 2 – CAS LATENCY
ALLOWABLE OPERATING
FREQUENCY (MHz)
SPEED
CAS
LATENCY = 2
CAS
LATENCY = 3
Reserved states should not be used as unknown operation
or incompatibility with future versions may result.
-100
≤ 75
≤ 100
-125
≤ 100
≤ 125
OPERATING MODE
-133
≤ 100
≤ 133
The normal operating mode is selected by setting M7and M8
to zero; the other combinations of values for M7 and M8 are
reserved for future use and/or test modes. The programmed
January 2005
Rev. 2
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WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
TRUTH TABLE – COMMANDS AND DQM OPERATION (NOTE 1)
NAME (FUNCTION)
COMMAND INHIBIT (NOP)
NO OPERATION (NOP)
ACTIVE (Select bank and activate row) (3)
READ (Select bank and column, and start READ burst) (4)
WRITE (Select bank and column, and start WRITE burst) (4)
BURST TERMINATE
PRECHARGE (Deactivate row in bank or banks) (5)
AUTO REFRESH or SELF REFRESH (Enter self refresh mode) (6, 7)
LOAD MODE REGISTER (2)
Write Enable/Output Enable (8)
Write Inhibit/Output High-Z (8)
CS#
H
L
L
L
L
L
L
L
L
–
–
NOTES:
1. CKE is HIGH for all commands shown except SELF REFRESH.
2. A0-11 define the op-code written to the Mode Register.
3. A0-11 provide row address, and BA0, BA1 determine which bank is made active.
4. A0-8 provide column address; A10 HIGH enables the auto precharge feature
(nonpersistent), while A10 LOW disables the auto precharge feature; BA0, BA1
determine which bank is being read from or written to.
5. A10 LOW: BA0, BA1 determine the bank being precharged. A10 HIGH: All banks
precharged and BA0, BA1 are “Don’t Care.”
6.
7.
8.
CAS#
X
H
H
L
L
H
H
L
L
–
–
WE#
X
H
H
H
L
L
L
H
L
–
–
DQM
X
X
X
L/H 8
L/H 8
X
X
X
X
L
H
ADDR
X
X
Bank/Row
Bank/Col
Bank/Col
X
Code
X
Op-Code
–
–
I/Os
X
X
X
X
Valid
Active
X
X
X
Active
High-Z
This command is AUTO REFRESH if CKE is HIGH; SELF REFRESH if CKE is
LOW.
Internal refresh counter controls row addressing; all inputs and I/Os are “Don’t
Care” except for CKE.
Activates or deactivates the I/Os during WRITEs (zero-clock delay) and READs
(two-clock delay).
LOAD MODE REGISTER command can only be issued
when all banks are idle, and a subsequent executable
command cannot be issued until tMRD is met.
COMMANDS
The Truth Table provides a quick reference of available
commands. This is followed by a written description of
each command. Three additional Truth Tables appear
following the Operation section; these tables provide
current state/next state information.
ACTIVE
The ACTIVE command is used to open (or activate) a row in
a particular bank for a subsequent access. The value on the
BA0, BA1 inputs selects the bank, and the address provided
on inputs A0-11 selects the row. This row remains active
(or open) for accesses until a PRECHARGE command is
issued to that bank. A PRECHARGE command must be
issued before opening a different row in the same bank.
COMMAND INHIBIT
The COMMAND INHIBIT function prevents new commands
from being executed by the SDRAM, regardless of whether
the CLK signal is enabled. The SDRAM is effectively
deselected. Operations already in progress are not
affected.
READ
The READ command is used to initiate a burst read
access to an active row. The value on the BA0, BA1 inputs
selects the bank, and the address provided on inputs A0-8
selects the starting column location. The value on input A10
determines whether or not AUTO PRECHARGE is used. If
AUTO PRECHARGE is selected, the row being accessed
will be precharged at the end of the READ burst; if AUTO
PRECHARGE is not selected, the row will remain open
for subsequent accesses. Read data appears on the I/Os
subject to the logic level on the DQM inputs two clocks
earlier. If a given DQM signal was registered HIGH, the
NO OPERATION (NOP)
The NO OPERATION (NOP) command is used to perform
a NOP to an SDRAM which is selected (CS# is LOW). This
prevents unwanted commands from being registered during
idle or wait states. Operations already in progress are not
affected.
LOAD MODE REGISTER
The Mode Register is loaded via inputs A0-11. See Mode
Register heading in the Register Definition section. The
January 2005
Rev. 2
RAS#
X
H
L
H
H
H
L
L
L
–
–
7
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corresponding I/Os will be High-Z two clocks later; if the
DQM signal was registered LOW, the I/Os will provide
valid data.
WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
AUTO PRECHARGE ensures that the precharge is initiated
at the earliest valid stage within a burst. The user must
not issue another command to the same bank until the
precharge time (tRP) is completed. This is determined as
if an explicit PRECHARGE command was issued at the
earliest possible time.
WRITE
The WRITE command is used to initiate a burst write
access to an active row. The value on the BA0, BA1 inputs
selects the bank, and the address provided on inputs A0-8
selects the starting column location. The value on input A10
determines whether or not AUTO PRECHARGE is used. If
AUTO PRECHARGE is selected, the row being accessed
will be precharged at the end of the WRITE burst; if AUTO
PRECHARGE is not selected, the row will remain open for
subsequent accesses. Input data appearing on the I/Os is
written to the memory array subject to the DQM input logic
level appearing coincident with the data. If a given DQM
signal is registered LOW, the corresponding data will be
written to memory; if the DQM signal is registered HIGH,
the corresponding data inputs will be ignored, and a WRITE
will not be executed to that byte/column location.
BURST TERMINATE
The BURST TERMINATE command is used to truncate
either fixed-length or full-page bursts. The most recently
registered READ or WRITE command prior to the BURST
TERMINATE command will be truncated.
AUTO REFRESH
AUTO REFRESH is used during normal operation of
the SDRAM and is analagous to CAS#-BEFORE-RAS#
(CBR) REFRESH in conventional DRAMs. This command
is nonpersistent, so it must be issued each time a refresh
is required. All active banks must be PRECHARGED
prior to issuing an AUTO REFRESH command. The
AUTO REFRESH command should not be issued until
the minimum tRP has been met after the PRECHARGE
command as shown in the operation section.
PRECHARGE
The PRECHARGE command is used to deactivate the
open row in a particular bank or the open row in all banks.
The bank(s) will be available for a subsequent row access
a specified time (tRP) after the PRECHARGE command is
issued. Input A10 determines whether one or all banks are
to be precharged, and in the case where only one bank
is to be precharged, inputs BA0, BA1 select the bank.
Otherwise BA0, BA1 are treated as “Don’t Care.” Once a
bank has been precharged, it is in the idle state and must
be activated prior to any READ or WRITE commands being
issued to that bank.
The addressing is generated by the internal refresh
controller. This makes the address bits “Don’t Care” during
an AUTO REFRESH command. Each 128Mb SDRAM
requires 4,096 AUTO REFRESH cycles every refresh
period (tREF). Providing a distributed AUTO REFRESH
command will meet the refresh requirement and ensure
that each row is refreshed. Alternatively, 4,096 AUTO
REFRESH commands can be issued in a burst at the
minimum cycle rate (tRC), once every refresh period
(tREF).
AUTO PRECHARGE
SELF REFRESH*
AUTO PRECHARGE is a feature which performs the same
individual-bank PRECHARGE function described above,
without requiring an explicit command. This is accomplished
by using A10 to enable AUTO PRECHARGE in conjunction
with a specific READ or WRITE command. A precharge of
the bank/row that is addressed with the READ or WRITE
command is automatically performed upon completion of
the READ or WRITE burst, except in the full-page burst
mode, where AUTO PRECHARGE does not apply. AUTO
PRECHARGE is nonpersistent in that it is either enabled or
disabled for each individual READ or WRITE command.
The SELF REFRESH command can be used to retain data
in the SDRAM, even if the rest of the system is powered
down. When in the self refresh mode, the SDRAM retains
data without external clocking. The SELF REFRESH
command is initiated like an AUTO REFRESH command
except CKE is disabled (LOW). Once the SELF REFRESH
command is registered, all the inputs to the SDRAM
become “Don’t Care,” with the exception of CKE, which
must remain LOW.
January 2005
Rev. 2
Once self refresh mode is engaged, the SDRAM provides
its own internal clocking, causing it to perform its own AUTO
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REFRESH cycles. The SDRAM must remain in self refresh
mode for a minimum period equal to tRAS and may remain
in self refresh mode for an indefinite period beyond that.
The procedure for exiting self refresh requires a sequence
of commands. First, CLK must be stable (stable clock
is defined as a signal cycling within timing constraints
specified for the clock pin) prior to CKE going back
HIGH. Once CKE is HIGH, the SDRAM must have NOP
commands issued (a minimum of two clocks) for tXSR,
because time is required for the completion of any internal
refresh in progress.
Upon exiting the self refresh mode, AUTO REFRESH
commands must be issued as both SELF REFRESH and
AUTO REFRESH utilize the row refresh counter.
*Self Refresh available in commercial and industrial temperatures only.
January 2005
Rev. 2
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ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Parameter
Voltage on VCC, VDDQSupply relative to VSS
Voltage on NC or I/O pins relative to VSS
Operating Temperature TA (Mil)
Operating Temperature TA (Ind)
Storage Temperature, Plastic
-1 to 4.6
-1 to 4.6
-55 to +125
-40 to +85
-55 to +125
CAPACITANCE (NOTE 2)
Unit
V
V
°C
°C
°C
Parameter
Input Capacitance: CLK
Addresses, BA0-1 Input Capacitance
Input Capacitance: All other input-only pins
Input/Output Capacitance: I/Os
NOTE:
Stress greater than those listed under "Absolute Maximum Ratings" may cause
permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only and functional
operation of the device at these or any other conditions greater than those
indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to
absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect reliability.
Symbol
CI1
CA
CI2
CIO
Max
6
20
6
9
Unit
pF
pF
pF
pF
BGA THERMAL RESISTANCE
Description
Symbol
Max
Unit
Notes
θJA
17.0
°C/W
1
Junction to Ball
θJB
11.8
°C/W
1
Junction to Case (Top)
θJC
8.5
°C/W
1
Junction to Ambient (No Airflow)
NOTE: Refer to BGA Thermal Resistance Correlation application note at
www.wedc.com in the application notes section for modeling conditions.
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND OPERATING CONDITIONS (NOTES 1, 6)
VCC = +3.3V ±0.3V; -55°C ≤ TA ≤ +125°C
Parameter/Condition
Symbol
Min
Max
Supply Voltage
VCC
3
3.6
Units
V
Input High Voltage: Logic 1; All inputs (21)
VIH
2
VCC + 0.3
V
Input Low Voltage: Logic 0; All inputs (21)
VIL
-0.3
0.8
V
µA
Input Leakage Current: Any input 0V VIN VCC (All other pins not under test = 0V)
II
-5
5
Input Leakage Address Current: Any input 0V VIN VCC (All other pins not under test = 0V)
II
-20
20
µA
Output Leakage Current: I/Os are disabled; 0V VOUT VCC
IOZ
-5
5
µA
Output Levels:
Output High Voltage (IOUT = -4mA)
Output Low Voltage (IOUT = 4mA)
VOH
2.4
–
V
VOL
–
0.4
V
Symbol
Max
Units
Operating Current: Active Mode;
Burst = 2; Read or Write; tRC = tRC (min); CAS latency = 3 (3, 18, 19)
ICC1
600
mA
Standby Current: Active Mode; CKE = HIGH; CS# = HIGH;
All banks active after tRCD met; No accesses in progress (3, 12, 19)
ICC3
200
mA
Operating Current: Burst Mode; Continuous burst;
Read or Write; All banks active; CAS latency = 3 (3, 18, 19)
ICC4
600
mA
Self Refresh Current: CKE ≤ 0.2V (Commercial and Industrial temperatures only)
ICC7
8
mA
IDD SPECIFICATIONS AND CONDITIONS (NOTES 1,6,11,13)
VCC = +3.3V ±0.3V; -55°C ≤ TA ≤ +125°C
Parameter/Condition
January 2005
Rev. 2
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ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND RECOMMENDED AC OPERATING CHARACTERISTICS
(NOTES 5, 6, 8, 9, 11)
-100
Parameter
Symbol
Access time from CLK (pos.
edge)
CL = 3
tAC
CL = 2
tAC
Min
-125
Max
Min
7
-133
Max
Min
6
7
6
Max
Unit
5.5
ns
5.5
ns
Address hold time
tAH
1
1
0.8
ns
Address setup time
tAS
2
2
1.5
ns
CLK high-level width
tCH
3
3
2.5
ns
ns
CLK low-level width
Clock cycle time (22)
tCL
3
3
2.5
CL = 3
tCK
10
8
7.5
ns
CL = 2
tCK
13
10
10
ns
tCKH
1
1
0.8
ns
ns
CKE hold time
CKE setup time
tCKS
2
2
1.5
CS#, RAS#, CAS#, WE#, DQM hold time
tCMH
1
1
0.8
ns
CS#, RAS#, CAS#, WE#, DQM setup time
tCMS
2
2
1.5
ns
Data-in hold time
tDH
1
1
0.8
ns
tDS
2
Data-in setup time
Data-out high-impedance
time
2
1.5
ns
CL = 3 (10)
tHZ
7
6
5.5
ns
CL = 2 (10)
tHZ
7
6
6
ns
Data-out low-impedance time
tLZ
1
1
1
ns
ns
Data-out hold time (load)
tOH
3
3
3
Data-out hold time (no load) (26)
tOHN
1.8
1.8
1.8
ACTIVE to PRECHARGE command
tRAS
50
ACTIVE to ACTIVE command period
tRC
70
ACTIVE to READ or WRITE delay
tRCD
20
Refresh period (8,192 rows) – Commercial,
Industrial
tREF
120,000
45
120,000
68
ns
64
ms
16
ms
Refresh period (8,192 rows) – Military
tREF
AUTO REFRESH period
tRFC
70
70
70
ns
PRECHARGE command period
tRP
20
20
20
ns
ACTIVE bank A to ACTIVE bank B command
tRRD
20
20
20
ns
Transition time (7)
WRITE recovery time
tT
(23)
(24)
Exit SELF REFRESH to ACTIVE command
January 2005
Rev. 2
tWR
tXSR
0.3
1.2
16
ns
ns
20
64
16
ns
120,000
68
20
64
50
0.3
1.2
0.3
1.2
ns
1 CLK + 7ns
1 CLK + 7ns
1 CLK + 7.5ns
—
15
15
15
ns
80
80
80
ns
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AC FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERISTICS (NOTES 5,6,7,8,9,11)
Parameter/Condition
Symbol
-100
-125
-133
Units
READ/WRITE command to READ/WRITE command (17)
tCCD
1
1
1
tCK
CKE to clock disable or power-down entry mode (14)
tCKED
1
1
1
tCK
CKE to clock enable or power-down exit setup mode (14)
tPED
1
1
1
tCK
DQM to input data delay (17)
tDQD
0
0
0
tCK
DQM to data mask during WRITEs (17)
tDQM
0
0
0
tCK
DQM to data high-impedance during READs (17)
tDQZ
2
2
2
tCK
WRITE command to input data delay (17)
tDWD
0
0
0
tCK
Data-in to ACTIVE command (15)
tDAL
4
5
5
tCK
Data-in to PRECHARGE command (16)
tDPL
2
2
2
tCK
Last data-in to burst STOP command (17)
tBDL
1
1
1
tCK
Last data-in to new READ/WRITE command (17)
tCDL
1
1
1
tCK
Last data-in to PRECHARGE command (16)
tRDL
2
2
2
tCK
LOAD MODE REGISTER command to ACTIVE or REFRESH command (25)
Data-out to high-impedance from PRECHARGE command (17)
tMRD
2
2
2
tCK
CL = 3
tROH
3
3
3
tCK
CL = 2
tROH
2
—
—
tCK
NOTES:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
14. Timing actually specified by tCKS; clock(s) specified as a reference only at minimum
cycle rate.
15. Timing actually specified by tWR plus tRP; clock(s) specified as a reference only at
minimum cycle rate.
16. Timing actually specified by tWR.
17. Required clocks are specified by JEDEC functionality and are not dependent on
any timing parameter.
18. The ICC current will decrease as the CAS latency is reduced. This is due to the fact
that the maximum cycle rate is slower as the CAS latency is reduced.
19. Address transitions average one transition every two clocks.
20. CLK must be toggled a minimum of two times during this period.
21. VIH overshoot: VIH (MAX) = VCC + 2V for a pulse width 3ns, and the pulse width
cannot be greater than one third of the cycle rate. VIL undershoot: VIL (MIN) = -2V
for a pulse width 3ns.
22. The clock frequency must remain constant (stable clock is defined as a signal
cycling within timing constraints specified for the clock pin) during access or
precharge states (READ, WRITE, including tWR, and PRECHARGE commands).
CKE may be used to reduce the data rate.
23. Auto precharge mode only. The precharge timing budget (tRP) begins 7.5ns/7ns
after the first clock delay, after the last WRITE is executed.
24. Precharge mode only.
25. JEDEC and PC100 specify three clocks.
26. Parameter guaranteed by design.
27. Self refresh available in commercial and industrial temperatures only.
All voltages referenced to VSS.
This parameter is not tested but guaranteed by design. f = 1 MHz, TA = 25°C.
IDD is dependent on output loading and cycle rates. Specified values are obtained
with minimum cycle time and the outputs open.
Enables on-chip refresh and address counters.
The minimum specifications are used only to indicate cycle time at which proper
operation over the full temperature range is ensured.
An initial pause of 100µs is required after power-up, followed by two AUTO
REFRESH commands, before proper device operation is ensured. (VCC must
be powered up simultaneously.) The two AUTO REFRESH command wake-ups
should be repeated any time the tREF refresh requirement is exceeded.
AC characteristics assume tT = 1ns.
In addition to meeting the transition rate specification, the clock and CKE must
transit between VIH and VIL (or between VIL and VIH) in a monotonic manner.
Outputs measured at 1.5V with equivalent load:
50Ω
Q
1.5V
10. tHZ defines the time at which the output achieves the open circuit condition; it is not
a reference to VOH or VOL. The last valid data element will meet tOH before going
High-Z.
11. AC timing and IDD tests have VIL = 0V and VIH = 3V, with timing referenced to 1.5V
crossover point.
12. Other input signals are allowed to transition no more than once every two clocks
and are otherwise at valid VIH or VIL levels.
13. ICC specifications are tested after the device is properly initialized.
January 2005
Rev. 2
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WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
PACKAGE ‘B2’: 219 PLASTIC BALL GRID ARRAY (PBGA), 21mm x 21mm
Bottom View
21.1 (0.831) SQ. MAX
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
T
R
P
N
M
L
K
J
H
G
F
E
D
C
B
A
19.05 (0.750)
NOM
1.27 (0.050)
NOM
219 x
0.61
(0.024)
NOM
∅ 0.762 (0.030) NOM
2.03 (0.080)
MAX
19.05 (0.750) NOM
ALL LINEAR DIMENSIONS ARE MILLIMETERS AND PARENTHETICALLY IN INCHES
January 2005
Rev. 2
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WEDPN8M64V-XB2X
ORDERING INFORMATION
WED P N
8M 64
V - XXX B2 X
DEVICE GRADE:
M = Military
I = Industrial
C = Commercial
-55°C to +125°C
-40°C to +85°C
0°C to +70°C
PACKAGE:
B2 = 219 Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA), 21mm x 21mm
FREQUENCY (MHz)
100 = 100MHz
125 = 125MHz
133 = 133MHz
3.3V Power Supply
CONFIGURATION, 8M x 64
SDRAM
PLASTIC
WHITE ELECTRONIC DESIGNS CORP.
January 2005
Rev. 2
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Document Title
8M x 64 Synchronous DRAM
Revision History
Rev # History
Release Date Status
Rev 0
Initial Release
April 2004
Preliminary
Changes (Pg. 1, 15)
September 2004
Final
January 2005
Final
Rev 1
1.1 Change status to Final
Rev 2
Changes (Pg. 1, 9, 15)
2.1 Update capacitance table values
2.2 Change max storage temperature to +125°C
2.3 Change ICC7 to 8mA
2.4 Update 133MHz specifications
January 2005
Rev. 2
15
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