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Zhibo CAO Pengfei HAN Hongming LYU
This paper introduces a computer-aided low-power design method for tapered buffers that address given load capacitances, output transition times, and source impedances. Cross-voltage-domain tapered buffers involving a low-voltage domain in the frontier stages and a high-voltage domain in the posterior stages are further discussed which breaks the trade-off between the energy dissipation and the driving capability in conventional designs. As an essential circuit block, a dedicated analytical model for the level-shifter is proposed. The energy-optimized tapered buffer design is verified for different source and load conditions in a 180-nm CMOS process. The single-VDD buffer model achieves an average inaccuracy of 8.65% on the transition loss compared with Spice simulation results. Cross-voltage tapered buffers can be optimized to further remarkably reduce the energy consumption. The study finds wide applications in energy-efficient switching-mode analog applications.
Toshinori SATO Tongxin YANG Tomoaki UKEZONO
Approximate computing is a promising paradigm to realize fast, small, and low power characteristics, which are essential for modern applications, such as Internet of Things (IoT) devices. This paper proposes the Carry-Predicting Adder (CPredA), an approximate adder that is scalable relative to accuracy and power consumption. The proposed CPredA improves the accuracy of a previously studied adder by performing carry prediction. Detailed simulations reveal that, compared to the existing approximate adder, accuracy is improved by approximately 50% with comparable energy efficiency. Two application-level evaluations demonstrate that the proposed approximate adder is sufficiently accurate for practical use.
Hiroshi NAKAMURA Weihan WANG Yuya OHTA Kimiyoshi USAMI Hideharu AMANO Masaaki KONDO Mitaro NAMIKI
Power consumption has recently emerged as a first class design constraint in system LSI designs. Specially, leakage power has occupied a large part of the total power consumption. Therefore, reduction of leakage power is indispensable for efficient design of high-performance system LSIs. Since 2006, we have carried out a research project called “Innovative Power Control for Ultra Low-Power and High-Performance System LSIs”, supported by Japan Science and Technology Agency as a CREST research program. One of the major objectives of this project is reducing the leakage power consumption of system LSIs by innovative power control through tight cooperation and co-optimization of circuit technology, architecture, and system software designs. In this project, we focused on power gating as a circuit technique for reducing leakage power. Temporal granularity is one of the most important issue in power gating. Thus, we have developed a series of Geysers as proof-of-concept CPUs which provide several mechanisms of fine-grained run-time power gating. In this paper, we describe their concept and design, and explain why co-optimization of different design layers are important. Then, three kinds of power gating implementations and their evaluation are presented from the view point of power saving and temporal granularity.
Won-Sup CHUNG Hyeong-Woo CHA Sang-Hee SON
A new bipolar linear transconductor for low-voltage low-power signal processing is proposed. The proposed circuit has larger input linear range and smaller power dissipation when compared with the conventional bipolar linear transconductor. The experimental results show that the transconductor with a transconductance of 50 µS has a linearity error of less than 0.02% over an input voltage range of 2.1 V at supply voltages of 3 V. The power dissipation of the transconductor is 3.15 mW.
This paper presents a multiple-voltage high-level synthesis approach for low power DSP applications using algorithmic transformation techniques. Our approach is motivated by maximization of task mobilities in that the increase of mobilities may raise the possibility of assigning tasks to low-voltage components. The mobility means the ability to schedule the starting time of a task. It is defined as the distance between its as-late-as-possible (ALAP) schedule time and its as-soon-as-possible (ASAP) schedule time. To earn task mobilities, we use loop shrinking, retiming and unfolding techniques. The loop shrinking can first reduce the iteration period bound (IPB) and, then, the others are employed for shortening the iteration period (IP) as much as possible. The minimization of IP results in high task mobilities. Finally, we can assign tasks with high mobilities to low-voltage components and, thus, minimize energy under resource and latency constraints. With considering the overhead of level conversion, our approach can achieve significant power reduction. In the case of the third-order IIR filter, the proposed approach can save up to 40.2% of power consumption.
Sung-Hyun YANG Younggap YOU Kyoung-Rok CHO
A dual-modulus (divide-by-128/129) prescaler has been designed based on 0.25-µm CMOS technology employing new D-flip-flops. The new D-flip-flops are free from glitch problems due to internal charge sharing. Transistor merging technique has been employed to reduce the number of transistors and to secure reliable high-speed operation. At the 2.5-V supply voltage, the prescaler using the proposed dynamic D-flip-flops can operate up to the frequency of 2.95-GHz, and consumes about 10% and about 27% less power than Yuan/Svensson's and Huang's circuits, respectively.