1,722 research outputs found

    Single-Event Upset Analysis and Protection in High Speed Circuits

    Get PDF
    The effect of single-event transients (SETs) (at a combinational node of a design) on the system reliability is becoming a big concern for ICs manufactured using advanced technologies. An SET at a node of combinational part may cause a transient pulse at the input of a flip-flop and consequently is latched in the flip-flop and generates a soft-error. When an SET conjoined with a transition at a node along a critical path of the combinational part of a design, a transient delay fault may occur at the input of a flip-flop. On the other hand, increasing pipeline depth and using low power techniques such as multi-level power supply, and multi-threshold transistor convert almost all paths in a circuit to critical ones. Thus, studying the behavior of the SET in these kinds of circuits needs special attention. This paper studies the dynamic behavior of a circuit with massive critical paths in the presence of an SET. We also propose a novel flip-flop architecture to mitigate the effects of such SETs in combinational circuits. Furthermore, the proposed architecture can tolerant a single event upset (SEU) caused by particle strike on the internal nodes of a flip-flo

    Experimental analysis of computer system dependability

    Get PDF
    This paper reviews an area which has evolved over the past 15 years: experimental analysis of computer system dependability. Methodologies and advances are discussed for three basic approaches used in the area: simulated fault injection, physical fault injection, and measurement-based analysis. The three approaches are suited, respectively, to dependability evaluation in the three phases of a system's life: design phase, prototype phase, and operational phase. Before the discussion of these phases, several statistical techniques used in the area are introduced. For each phase, a classification of research methods or study topics is outlined, followed by discussion of these methods or topics as well as representative studies. The statistical techniques introduced include the estimation of parameters and confidence intervals, probability distribution characterization, and several multivariate analysis methods. Importance sampling, a statistical technique used to accelerate Monte Carlo simulation, is also introduced. The discussion of simulated fault injection covers electrical-level, logic-level, and function-level fault injection methods as well as representative simulation environments such as FOCUS and DEPEND. The discussion of physical fault injection covers hardware, software, and radiation fault injection methods as well as several software and hybrid tools including FIAT, FERARI, HYBRID, and FINE. The discussion of measurement-based analysis covers measurement and data processing techniques, basic error characterization, dependency analysis, Markov reward modeling, software-dependability, and fault diagnosis. The discussion involves several important issues studies in the area, including fault models, fast simulation techniques, workload/failure dependency, correlated failures, and software fault tolerance

    Robust Working Memory in an Asynchronously Spiking Neural Network Realized with Neuromorphic VLSI

    Get PDF
    We demonstrate bistable attractor dynamics in a spiking neural network implemented with neuromorphic VLSI hardware. The on-chip network consists of three interacting populations (two excitatory, one inhibitory) of leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF) neurons. One excitatory population is distinguished by strong synaptic self-excitation, which sustains meta-stable states of “high” and “low”-firing activity. Depending on the overall excitability, transitions to the “high” state may be evoked by external stimulation, or may occur spontaneously due to random activity fluctuations. In the former case, the “high” state retains a “working memory” of a stimulus until well after its release. In the latter case, “high” states remain stable for seconds, three orders of magnitude longer than the largest time-scale implemented in the circuitry. Evoked and spontaneous transitions form a continuum and may exhibit a wide range of latencies, depending on the strength of external stimulation and of recurrent synaptic excitation. In addition, we investigated “corrupted” “high” states comprising neurons of both excitatory populations. Within a “basin of attraction,” the network dynamics “corrects” such states and re-establishes the prototypical “high” state. We conclude that, with effective theoretical guidance, full-fledged attractor dynamics can be realized with comparatively small populations of neuromorphic hardware neurons

    Digital Design Techniques for Dependable High Performance Computing

    Get PDF
    As today’s process technologies continuously scale down, circuits become increasingly more vulnerable to radiation-induced soft errors in nanoscale VLSI technologies. The reduction of node capacitance and supply voltages coupled with increasingly denser chips are raising soft error rates and making them an important design issue. This research work is focused on the development of design techniques for high-reliability modern VLSI technologies, focusing mainly on Radiation-induced Single Event Transient. In this work, we evaluate the complete life-cycle of the SET pulse from the generation to the mitigation. A new simulation tool, Rad-Ray, has been developed to simulate and model the passage of heavy ion into the silicon matter of modern Integrated Circuit and predict the transient voltage pulse taking into account the physical description of the design. An analysis and mitigation tool has been developed to evaluate the propagation of the predicted SET pulses within the circuit and apply a selective mitigation technique to the sensitive nodes of the circuit. The analysis and mitigation tools have been applied to many industrial projects as well as the EUCLID space mission project, including more than ten modules. The obtained results demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed tools

    A Radiation-Hardened CMOS Full-Adder Based on Layout Selective Transistor Duplication

    Get PDF
    Single event transients (SETs) have become increasingly problematic for modern CMOS circuits due to the continuous scaling of feature sizes and higher operating frequencies. Especially when involving safety-critical or radiation-exposed applications, the circuits must be designed using hardening techniques. In this brief, we present a new radiation-hardened-by-design full-adder cell on 45-nm technology. The proposed design is hardened against transient errors by selective duplication of sensitive transistors based on a comprehensive radiationsensitivity analysis. Experimental results show a 62% reduction in the SET sensitivity of the proposed design with respect to the unhardened one. Moreover, the proposed hardening technique leads to improvement in performance and power overhead and zero area overhead with respect to the state-of-the-art techniques applied to the unhardened full-adder cell

    In-Circuit Mitigation Approach of Single Event Transients for 45nm Flip-Flops

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, radiation-induced Single Event Transients are a leading cause of critical errors in CMOS nanometric integrated circuits. In this work, we propose a workflow for analyzing and mitigating nanometric CMOS integrated circuits to radiation-induced transient errors. The analysis phase starts with the developed Rad-Ray tool for mimicking the passage of the radiation particles through the silicon matter of the cells to identify the features of the generated transient pulses. The tool is integrated with an electrical simulator to evaluate the dynamic behavior of the transient pulses inserted and propagated in the circuit. A tunable mitigation solution is proposed by inserting the filtering block before the storage element, tuned based on the duration and amplitude of the expected transient pulse, identified in the analysis phase. Experimental results are achieved by applying the proposed approach on the 45 nm Flip-Flop component available in the FreePDK design kit, comparing the Dynamic Error Rate for the original Flip-Flop and the mitigated one which shows a reduction of sensitivity up to 56% with respect of the original version, with negligible degradation of performances

    Intelligent fuzzy controller for event-driven real time systems

    Get PDF
    Most of the known linguistic models are essentially static, that is, time is not a parameter in describing the behavior of the object's model. In this paper we show a model for synchronous finite state machines based on fuzzy logic. Such finite state machines can be used to build both event-driven, time-varying, rule-based systems and the control unit section of a fuzzy logic computer. The architecture of a pipelined intelligent fuzzy controller is presented, and the linguistic model is represented by an overall fuzzy relation stored in a single rule memory. A VLSI integrated circuit implementation of the fuzzy controller is suggested. At a clock rate of 30 MHz, the controller can perform 3 MFLIPS on multi-dimensional fuzzy data
    corecore