10,037 research outputs found
Synthesis of speed independent circuits based on decomposition
Journal ArticleThis paper presents a decomposition method for speedindependent circuit design that is capable of significantly reducing the cost of synthesis. In particular, this method synthesizes each output individually. It begins by contracting the STG to include only transitions on the output of interest and its trigger signals. Next, the reachable state space for this contracted STG is analyzed to determine a minimal number of additional signals which must be reintroduced into the STG to obtain CSC. The circuit for this output is then synthesized from this STG. Results show that the quality of the circuit implementation is nearly as good as the one found from the full reachable state space, but it can be applied to find circuits for which full state space methods cannot be successfully applied. The proposed method has been implemented as a part of our tool nutas (Nii-Utah Timed Asynchronous circuit Synthesis system), and its very first version is available at http://research.nii.ac.jp/~yoneda. Key Words: Decomposition, synthesis, STGs, abstraction, speed-independent circuits
Area/latency optimized early output asynchronous full adders and relative-timed ripple carry adders
This article presents two area/latency optimized gate level asynchronous full
adder designs which correspond to early output logic. The proposed full adders
are constructed using the delay-insensitive dual-rail code and adhere to the
four-phase return-to-zero handshaking. For an asynchronous ripple carry adder
(RCA) constructed using the proposed early output full adders, the
relative-timing assumption becomes necessary and the inherent advantages of the
relative-timed RCA are: (1) computation with valid inputs, i.e., forward
latency is data-dependent, and (2) computation with spacer inputs involves a
bare minimum constant reverse latency of just one full adder delay, thus
resulting in the optimal cycle time. With respect to different 32-bit RCA
implementations, and in comparison with the optimized strong-indication,
weak-indication, and early output full adder designs, one of the proposed early
output full adders achieves respective reductions in latency by 67.8, 12.3 and
6.1 %, while the other proposed early output full adder achieves corresponding
reductions in area by 32.6, 24.6 and 6.9 %, with practically no power penalty.
Further, the proposed early output full adders based asynchronous RCAs enable
minimum reductions in cycle time by 83.4, 15, and 8.8 % when considering
carry-propagation over the entire RCA width of 32-bits, and maximum reductions
in cycle time by 97.5, 27.4, and 22.4 % for the consideration of a typical
carry chain length of 4 full adder stages, when compared to the least of the
cycle time estimates of various strong-indication, weak-indication, and early
output asynchronous RCAs of similar size. All the asynchronous full adders and
RCAs were realized using standard cells in a semi-custom design fashion based
on a 32/28 nm CMOS process technology
Asynchronous techniques for system-on-chip design
SoC design will require asynchronous techniques as the large parameter variations across the chip will make it impossible to control delays in clock networks and other global signals efficiently. Initially, SoCs will be globally asynchronous and locally synchronous (GALS). But the complexity of the numerous asynchronous/synchronous interfaces required in a GALS will eventually lead to entirely asynchronous solutions. This paper introduces the main design principles, methods, and building blocks for asynchronous VLSI systems, with an emphasis on communication and synchronization. Asynchronous circuits with the only delay assumption of isochronic forks are called quasi-delay-insensitive (QDI). QDI is used in the paper as the basis for asynchronous logic. The paper discusses asynchronous handshake protocols for communication and the notion of validity/neutrality tests, and completion tree. Basic building blocks for sequencing, storage, function evaluation, and buses are described, and two alternative methods for the implementation of an arbitrary computation are explained. Issues of arbitration, and synchronization play an important role in complex distributed systems and especially in GALS. The two main asynchronous/synchronous interfaces needed in GALS-one based on synchronizer, the other on stoppable clock-are described and analyzed
Asynchronous Early Output Dual-Bit Full Adders Based on Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Delay-Insensitive Data Encoding
This paper presents the designs of asynchronous early output dual-bit full
adders without and with redundant logic (implicit) corresponding to homogeneous
and heterogeneous delay-insensitive data encoding. For homogeneous
delay-insensitive data encoding only dual-rail i.e. 1-of-2 code is used, and
for heterogeneous delay-insensitive data encoding 1-of-2 and 1-of-4 codes are
used. The 4-phase return-to-zero protocol is used for handshaking. To
demonstrate the merits of the proposed dual-bit full adder designs, 32-bit
ripple carry adders (RCAs) are constructed comprising dual-bit full adders. The
proposed dual-bit full adders based 32-bit RCAs incorporating redundant logic
feature reduced latency and area compared to their non-redundant counterparts
with no accompanying power penalty. In comparison with the weakly indicating
32-bit RCA constructed using homogeneously encoded dual-bit full adders
containing redundant logic, the early output 32-bit RCA comprising the proposed
homogeneously encoded dual-bit full adders with redundant logic reports
corresponding reductions in latency and area by 22.2% and 15.1% with no
associated power penalty. On the other hand, the early output 32-bit RCA
constructed using the proposed heterogeneously encoded dual-bit full adder
which incorporates redundant logic reports respective decreases in latency and
area than the weakly indicating 32-bit RCA that consists of heterogeneously
encoded dual-bit full adders with redundant logic by 21.5% and 21.3% with nil
power overhead. The simulation results obtained are based on a 32/28nm CMOS
process technology
Low Power Processor Architectures and Contemporary Techniques for Power Optimization â A Review
The technological evolution has increased the number of transistors for a given die area significantly and increased the switching speed from few MHz to GHz range. Such inversely proportional decline in size and boost in performance consequently demands shrinking of supply voltage and effective power dissipation in chips with millions of transistors. This has triggered substantial amount of research in power reduction techniques into almost every aspect of the chip and particularly the processor cores contained in the chip. This paper presents an overview of techniques for achieving the power efficiency mainly at the processor core level but also visits related domains such as buses and memories. There are various processor parameters and features such as supply voltage, clock frequency, cache and pipelining which can be optimized to reduce the power consumption of the processor. This paper discusses various ways in which these parameters can be optimized. Also, emerging power efficient processor architectures are overviewed and research activities are discussed which should help reader identify how these factors in a processor contribute to power consumption. Some of these concepts have been already established whereas others are still active research areas. Š 2009 ACADEMY PUBLISHER
Waveform Transition Graphs: a designer-friendly formalism for asynchronous behaviours
The paper proposes a new formal model for describing asynchronous behaviours involving the interplay of causality, concurrency and choice. The model is called Waveform Transition Graphs. Its main aim is simplifying the learning process for industrial engineers in accessing powerful synthesis tools provided for Signal Transition Graphs by sacrificing some of the expressive power of the latter. This formalism is developed based on feedback from engineers of Dialog Semiconductor.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Latency Optimized Asynchronous Early Output Ripple Carry Adder based on Delay-Insensitive Dual-Rail Data Encoding
Asynchronous circuits employing delay-insensitive codes for data
representation i.e. encoding and following a 4-phase return-to-zero protocol
for handshaking are generally robust. Depending upon whether a single
delay-insensitive code or multiple delay-insensitive code(s) are used for data
encoding, the encoding scheme is called homogeneous or heterogeneous
delay-insensitive data encoding. This article proposes a new latency optimized
early output asynchronous ripple carry adder (RCA) that utilizes single-bit
asynchronous full adders (SAFAs) and dual-bit asynchronous full adders (DAFAs)
which incorporate redundant logic and are based on the delay-insensitive
dual-rail code i.e. homogeneous data encoding, and follow a 4-phase
return-to-zero handshaking. Amongst various RCA, carry lookahead adder (CLA),
and carry select adder (CSLA) designs, which are based on homogeneous or
heterogeneous delay-insensitive data encodings which correspond to the
weak-indication or the early output timing model, the proposed early output
asynchronous RCA that incorporates SAFAs and DAFAs with redundant logic is
found to result in reduced latency for a dual-operand addition operation. In
particular, for a 32-bit asynchronous RCA, utilizing 15 stages of DAFAs and 2
stages of SAFAs leads to reduced latency. The theoretical worst-case latencies
of the different asynchronous adders were calculated by taking into account the
typical gate delays of a 32/28nm CMOS digital cell library, and a comparison is
made with their practical worst-case latencies estimated. The theoretical and
practical worst-case latencies show a close correlation....Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1704.0761
What is the cost of delay insensitivity?
Deep submicron technology calls for new design techniques, in which wire and gate delays are accounted to have equal or nearly equal effect on circuit behaviour. Asynchronous speed-independent (SI) circuits, whose behaviour is only robust to gate delay variations, may be too optimistic. On the other hand, building circuits totally delay-insensitive (DI), for both gates and wires, is impractical. The paper presents an approach for automated synthesis of globally DI and locally SI circuits. It is based on order relaxation, a simple graphical transformation of a circuit's behavioural specification, for which the Signal Transition Graph, an interpreted Petri net, is used. The method is successfully tested on a set of benchmarks and a realistic design example. It proves effective showing average cost of DI interfacing at about 40% for area and 20% for speed.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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