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Mutual-Information Optimized Quantization for LDPC Decoding of Accurately Modeled Flash Data

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 Added by Jiadong Wang
 Publication date 2012
and research's language is English




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High-capacity NAND flash memories use multi-level cells (MLCs) to store multiple bits per cell and achieve high storage densities. Higher densities cause increased raw bit error rates (BERs), which demand powerful error correcting codes. Low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes are a well-known class of capacity-approaching codes in AWGN channels. However, LDPC codes traditionally use soft information while the flash read channel provides only hard information. Low resolution soft information may be obtained by performing multiple reads per cell with distinct word-line voltages. We select the values of these word-line voltages to maximize the mutual information between the input and output of the equivalent multiple-read channel under any specified noise model. Our results show that maximum mutual-information (MMI) quantization provides better soft information for LDPC decoding given the quantization level than the constant-pdf-ratio quantization approach. We also show that adjusting the LDPC code degree distribution for the quantized setting provides a significant performance improvement.



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This paper investigates the application of low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes to Flash memories. Multiple cell reads with distinct word-line voltages provide limited-precision soft information for the LDPC decoder. The values of the word-line voltages (also called reference voltages) are optimized by maximizing the mutual information (MI) between the input and output of the multiple-read channel. Constraining the maximum mutual-information (MMI) quantization to enforce a constant-ratio constraint provides a significant simplification with no noticeable loss in performance. Our simulation results suggest that for a well-designed LDPC code, the quantization that maximizes the mutual information will also minimize the frame error rate. However, care must be taken to design the code to perform well in the quantized channel. An LDPC code designed for a full-precision Gaussian channel may perform poorly in the quantized setting. Our LDPC code designs provide an example where quantization increases the importance of absorbing sets thus changing how the LDPC code should be optimized. Simulation results show that small increases in precision enable the LDPC code to significantly outperform a BCH code with comparable rate and block length (but without the benefit of the soft information) over a range of frame error rates.
Multiple reads of the same Flash memory cell with distinct word-line voltages provide enhanced precision for LDPC decoding. In this paper, the word-line voltages are optimized by maximizing the mutual information (MI) of the quantized channel. The enhanced precision from a few additional reads allows FER performance to approach that of full-precision soft information and enables an LDPC code to significantly outperform a BCH code. A constant-ratio constraint provides a significant simplification in the optimization with no noticeable loss in performance. For a well-designed LDPC code, the quantization that maximizes the mutual information also minimizes the frame error rate in our simulations. However, for an example LDPC code with a high error floor caused by small absorbing sets, the MMI quantization does not provide the lowest frame error rate. The best quantization in this case introduces more erasures than would be optimal for the channel MI in order to mitigate the absorbing sets of the poorly designed code. The paper also identifies a trade-off in LDPC code design when decoding is performed with multiple precision levels; the best code at one level of precision will typically not be the best code at a different level of precision.
Neural Normalized MinSum (N-NMS) decoding delivers better frame error rate (FER) performance on linear block codes than conventional normalized MinSum (NMS) by assigning dynamic multiplicative weights to each check-to-variable message in each iteration. Previous N-NMS efforts have primarily investigated short-length block codes (N < 1000), because the number of N-NMS parameters to be trained is proportional to the number of edges in the parity check matrix and the number of iterations, which imposes am impractical memory requirement when Pytorch or Tensorflow is used for training. This paper provides efficient approaches to training parameters of N-NMS that support N-NMS for longer block lengths. Specifically, this paper introduces a family of neural 2-dimensional normalized (N-2D-NMS) decoders with with various reduced parameter sets and shows how performance varies with the parameter set selected. The N-2D-NMS decoders share weights with respect to check node and/or variable node degree. Simulation results justify this approach, showing that the trained weights of N-NMS have a strong correlation to the check node degree, variable node degree, and iteration number. Further simulation results on the (3096,1032) protograph-based raptor-like (PBRL) code show that N-2D-NMS decoder can achieve the same FER as N-NMS with significantly fewer parameters required. The N-2D-NMS decoder for a (16200,7200) DVBS-2 standard LDPC code shows a lower error floor than belief propagation. Finally, a hybrid decoding structure combining a feedforward structure with a recurrent structure is proposed in this paper. The hybrid structure shows similar decoding performance to full feedforward structure, but requires significantly fewer parameters.
85 - Eshed Ram , Yuval Cassuto 2018
This paper presents a theoretical study of a new type of LDPC codes motivated by practical storage applications. LDPCL codes (suffix L represents locality) are LDPC codes that can be decoded either as usual over the full code block, or locally when a smaller sub-block is accessed (to reduce latency). LDPCL codes are designed to maximize the error-correction performance vs. rate in the usual (global) mode, while at the same time providing a certain performance in the local mode. We develop a theoretical framework for the design of LDPCL codes. Our results include a design tool to construct an LDPC code with two data-protection levels: local and global. We derive theoretical results supporting this tool and we show how to achieve capacity with it. A trade-off between the gap to capacity and the number of full-block accesses is studied, and a finite-length analysis of ML decoding is performed to exemplify a trade-off between the locality capability and the full-block error-correcting capability.
Layered decoding is well appreciated in Low-Density Parity-Check (LDPC) decoder implementation since it can achieve effectively high decoding throughput with low computation complexity. This work, for the first time, addresses low complexity column-layered decoding schemes and VLSI architectures for multi-Gb/s applications. At first, the Min-Sum algorithm is incorporated into the column-layered decoding. Then algorithmic transformations and judicious approximations are explored to minimize the overall computation complexity. Compared to the original column-layered decoding, the new approach can reduce the computation complexity in check node processing for high-rate LDPC codes by up to 90% while maintaining the fast convergence speed of layered decoding. Furthermore, a relaxed pipelining scheme is presented to enable very high clock speed for VLSI implementation. Equipped with these new techniques, an efficient decoder architecture for quasi-cyclic LDPC codes is developed and implemented with 0.13um CMOS technology. It is shown that a decoding throughput of nearly 4 Gb/s at maximum of 10 iterations can be achieved for a (4096, 3584) LDPC code. Hence, this work has facilitated practical applications of column-layered decoding and particularly made it very attractive in high-speed, high-rate LDPC decoder implementation.
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