In modern computer memory, a sense amplifier is one of the elements which make up the circuitry on a semiconductor memory chip (integrated circuit); the term itself dates back to the era of magnetic core memory. A sense amplifier is part of the read circuitry that is used when data is read from the memory; its role is to sense the low power signals from a bitline that represents a data bit (1 or 0) stored in a memory cell, and amplify the small voltage swing to recognizable logic levels so the data can be interpreted properly by logic outside the memory. Modern sense-amplifier circuits consist of two to six (usually four) transistors, while early sense amplifiers for core memory sometimes contained as many as 13 transistors. There is one sense amplifier for each column of memory cells, so there are usually hundreds or thousands of identical sense amplifiers on a modern memory chip. As such, sense amplifiers are one of the few remaining analog circuits in a computer's memory subsystem. Sense amplifier is required during the data read and refresh operation from the memory concerned. The data in a semiconductor memory chip is stored in tiny circuits called memory cells. Sense Amplifiers are primarily applied in Volatile memory cells. The memory cells are either SRAM or DRAM cells which are laid out in rows and columns on the chip. Each line is attached to each cell in the row. The lines which run along the rows are called wordlines which are activated by putting a voltage on it. The lines which run along the columns are called bit-line and two such complementary bitlines are attached to a sense amplifier at the edge of the array. Number of sense amplifiers are of that of the "bitline' on the chip. Each cell lies at the intersection of a particular wordline and bitline, which can be used to "address" it. The data in the cells is read or written by the same bit-lines which run along the top of the rows and columns. To read a bit from a particular memory cell, the wordline along the cell's row is turned on, activating all the cells in the row.

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Concepts associés (1)
Static Random Access Memory
thumb|Une SRAM de 1999. La mémoire vive statique (ou SRAM de l'anglais Static Random Access Memory) est un type de mémoire vive utilisant des bascules pour mémoriser les données. Mais contrairement à la mémoire dynamique, elle n'a pas besoin de rafraîchir périodiquement son contenu. Comme la mémoire dynamique, elle est volatile : elle ne peut se passer d'alimentation sous peine de voir les informations effacées irrémédiablement.

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