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Tomoyuki TANAKA Christopher L. AYALA Nobuyuki YOSHIKAWA
Extremely energy-efficient logic devices are required for future low-power high-performance computing systems. Superconductor electronic technology has a number of energy-efficient logic families. Among them is the adiabatic quantum-flux-parametron (AQFP) logic family, which adiabatically switches the quantum-flux-parametron (QFP) circuit when it is excited by an AC power-clock. When compared to state-of-the-art CMOS technology, AQFP logic circuits have the advantage of relatively fast clock rates (5 GHz to 10 GHz) and 5 - 6 orders of magnitude reduction in energy before cooling overhead. We have been developing extremely energy-efficient computing processor components using the AQFP. The adder is the most basic computational unit and is important in the development of a processor. In this work, we designed and measured a 16-bit parallel prefix carry look-ahead Kogge-Stone adder (KSA). We fabricated the circuit using the AIST 10 kA/cm2 High-speed STandard Process (HSTP). Due to a malfunction in the measurement system, we were not able to confirm the complete operation of the circuit at the low frequency of 100 kHz in liquid He, but we confirmed that the outputs that we did observe are correct for two types of tests: (1) critical tests and (2) 110 random input tests in total. The operation margin of the circuit is wide, and we did not observe any calculation errors during measurement.
Substrate noise coupling has been seriously concerned in the design of advanced analog and radio frequency (RF) integrated circuits (ICs). This paper reviews recent advancements in the modeling, analysis, and evaluation of substrate noise coupling at IC chip level. Noise generation from digital circuits and propagation to the area of analog circuits are clearly visualized both by full-chip simulation as well as by on-chip measurements, for silicon test vehicles. The impacts of substrate noise coupling are also in-depth discussed at device, circuit, as well as system levels. Overall understanding of substrate noise coupling will then provide the basics for highly reliable design of analog and RF ICs.
Yuji OSAKI Tetsuya HIROSE Kei MATSUMOTO Nobutaka KUROKI Masahiro NUMA
A delay-compensation circuit for low-power subthreshold digital circuits is proposed. Delay in digital circuits operating in the subthreshold region of MOSFETs changes exponentially with process and temperature variations. Threshold-voltage monitoring and supply-voltage scaling techniques are adopted to mitigate such variations. The variation in the delay can be significantly reduced by monitoring the threshold voltage of a MOSFET in each LSI chip and exploiting the voltage as the supply voltage for subthreshold digital circuits. The supply voltage generated by the threshold voltage monitoring circuit can be regarded as the minimum supply voltage to meet the delay constraint. Monte Carlo SPICE simulations demonstrated that a delay-time variation can be improved from having a log-normal to having a normal distribution. A prototype in a 0.35-µm standard CMOS process showed that the exponential delay variation with temperature of the ring-oscillator frequency in the range from 0.321 to 212 kHz can remain by using compensation in the range from 5.26 to 19.2 kHz.
Yusuke TSUGITA Ken UENO Tetsuya HIROSE Tetsuya ASAI Yoshihito AMEMIYA
An on-chip process, supply voltage, and temperature (PVT) compensation technique for low-voltage CMOS digital circuits was proposed. Because the degradation of circuit performance originates from the variation of the saturation current in transistors, we developed a compensation circuit consisting of a reference current that is independent of PVT variations. The circuit is operated so that the saturation current in digital circuits is equal to the reference current. The operations of the circuit were confirmed by SPICE simulation with a set of 0.35-µm standard CMOS parameters. Monte Carlo simulations showed that the proposed technique effectively improves circuit performance by 71%. The circuit is useful for on-chip compensation to mitigate the degradation of circuit performance with PVT variation in low-voltage digital circuits.
Tadayoshi ENOMOTO Nobuaki KOBAYASHI
A square-root (SR) algorithm, an SR architecture and a leakage current reduction circuit were developed to reduce dynamic power (PAT) and leakage power (PST), while maintaining the speed of a CMOS SR circuit. Using these techniques, a 90-nm CMOS LSI was fabricated. The PAT of the new SR circuit at a clock frequency (fc) of 490 MHz and a supply voltage (VDD) of 0.75 V was 104.1 µW, i.e., 21.6% that (482.3 µW) of a conventional SR circuit. The PST of the new SR circuit was markedly reduced to 19.51 nW, which was only 1.69% that (1,153 nW) of the conventional SR circuit.
This paper presents the history of superconductor digital circuits starting from several years after the discovery of the Josephson junction in 1962. The first two decades were mainly devoted to developing voltage-state logic, which is similar to semiconductor logic. Research on circuits employing the manipulation of single magnetic flux quanta resulted in a form called RSFQ in the mid-1980s; this is the basis of superconductor logic systems of today. The more difficult problem of random access memory is reviewed. We analyze the present status of the field and outline the work that lies ahead to realize a successful superconductor digital technology.
Yow-Tyng NIEH Shih-Hsu HUANG Sheng-Yu HSU
Although much research effort has been devoted to the minimization of total power consumption caused by the clock tree, no attention has been paid to the minimization of the peak current caused by it. In this paper, we propose an opposite-phase clock scheme to reduce the peak current incurred by the clock tree. Our basic idea is to balance the charging and discharging activities. According to the output operation, the clock buffers that transit simultaneously are divided into two groups: half of the clock buffers transit at the same phase of the clock source, while the other half transit at the opposite phase of the clock source. As a consequence, the opposite-phase clock scheme significantly reduces the peak current caused by the clock tree. Experimental data show that our approach can be applied at different design stages in the existing design flow.
C. R. BOLOGNESI Martin W. DVORAK Simon P. WATKINS
We study the advantages and limitations of InP/GaAsSb/InP DHBTs for high-speed digital circuit applications. We show that the high-current performance limitation in these devices is electrostatic in nature. Comparison of the location of collector current blocking in various collector designs suggests a smoother, more gradual onset of blocking effects in type-II collectors. A comparison of collector current blocking effects between InP/GaAsSb--based and various designs of InP/GaInAs--based DHBTs provides support for our analysis.
Lizhen ZHENG Xiaofan MENG Stephen WHITELEY Theodore Van DUZER
We present the design of dual rail Data Driven Self Timed (DDST) DEMUX and MUX circuits for 50 GHz operation. The chosen current density is 6.5 kA/cm2 and simulations show good margins for speeds exceeding 50 GHz. Our previously reported dual-rail on-chip test system is also scaled up for 50 GHz operation.
Kei EGUCHI Takahiro INOUE Akio TSUNEDA
In this letter, a digital circuit realizing a Rossler model is proposed. The proposed circuit features exact reproducibility of chaos signals which is desired in chaos-based communication systems. By employing an FPGA implementation, the proposed circuit can achieve high-speed and low-cost realization. The chaotic behavior of the quasi-chaos of the proposed circuit is analyzed by numerical simulations. To confirm the validity of the FPGA implementation, the proposed circuit is designed by using an FPGA CAD tool, Verilog-HDL. This circuit design showed that the proposed circuit can be implemented onto a single FPGA and can realize real-time chaos generation.
Kei EGUCHI Takahiro INOUE Akio TSUNEDA
In this paper, an FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array)-implementable digital chaos circuit with nonlinear mapping function learning ablility is proposed. The features of this circuit are user-programmability of the mapping functions by on-chip supervised learning, robustness of chaos signal generation based on digital processing, and high-speed and low-cost thanks to its FPGA implementation. The circuit design and analysis are presented in detail. The learning dynamics of the circuit and the quantitization effect to the quasi-chaos generation are analyzed by numerical simulations. The proposed circuit is designed by using an FPGA CAD tool, Verilog-HDL. This confirmed that the one-dimensional chaos circuit block (except for SRAM's) is implementable on a single FPGA chip and can generate quasi-chaos signals in real time.
Kei EGUCHI Takahiro INOUE Akio TSUNEDA
An econominal implementation of a chaos circuit onto the hardware is an important subject. In this letter, a two-dimensional digital chaos circuit realizing a Henon map is designed. Concerning the attractor and the bifurcation diagram of the proposed circuit, numerical simulations are performed to confirm the validity of the circuit algorithm. Furthermore, the proposed digital chaos circuit is designed by Verilog-HDL (Hardware Description Language). The proposed digital chaos circuit can be implemented into the form of the FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array).
Yuu WATANABE Yasuhiro NAKASHA Kenji IMANISHI Masahiko TAKIKAWA
We report the first monolithic integration of InGaAs/InAlAs resonant tunneling diode (RTD) and high electron mobility transistor (HEMT) epitaxially grown on an InP substrate. The transconductance for a 1-µm gate HEMT was 430 mS/mm and the peak-to-valley current ratio of the RTD was 5.1. Using the integrated structure, we demonstrate basic digital circuits to show low power characteristics of an RTD-load inverter and a static RAM cell circuit, consisting of a single transistor with two RTDs on the transistor. The memory cell circuit exhibits bistability, based on the RTD's negative differential resistance (NDR), at supply voltages from 0.6 to 1.1 V. The static power consumption was 7.3 µW/gate for the inverter and 3.0 µW for memory cell.
This paper discusses a CMOS differential-difference amplifier circuit suitable for low voltage operation. A new multiple weighted input transconductor circuit structure is suggested to be use in DDA implementation. The proposed DDA can be employed in several analog/digital systems to improve their parameters. Selected examples of the proposed transconductor/DDA applications are also discussed.
Masami NAKAJIMA Michitaka KAMEYAMA
To realize next-generation high performance ULSI processors, it is a very important issue to reduce the critical delay path which is determined by a cascade chain of basic gates. To design highly parallel digital operation circuits such as an adder and a multiplier, it is difficult to find the optimal code assignment in the non-linear digital system. On the other hand, the use of the linear concept in the digital system seems to be very attractive because analytical methods can be utilized. To meet the requirement, we propose a new design method of highly parallel linear digital circuits for unary operations using the concept of a cycle and a tree. In the linear digital circuit design, the analytical method can be developed using a representation matrix, so that the search procedure for optimal locally computable circuits becomes very simple. The evaluations demonstrate the usefulness of the circuit design algorithm.