720 research outputs found

    Circuit designs for low-power and SEU-hardened systems

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    The desire to have smaller and faster portable devices is one of the primary motivations for technology scaling. Though advancements in device physics are moving at a very good pace, they might not be aggressive enough for now-a-day technology scaling trends. As a result, the MOS devices used for present day integrated circuits are pushed to the limit in terms of performance, power consumption and robustness, which are the most critical criteria for almost all applications. Secondly, technology advancements have led to design of complex chips with increasing chip densities and higher operating speeds. The design of such high performance complex chips (microprocessors, digital signal processors, etc) has massively increased the power dissipation and, as a result, the operating temperatures of these integrated circuits. In addition, due to the aggressive technology scaling the heat withstanding capabilities of the circuits is reducing, thereby increasing the cost of packaging and heat sink units. This led to the increase in prominence for smarter and more robust low-power circuit and system designs. Apart from power consumption, another criterion affected by technology scaling is robustness of the design, particularly for critical applications (security, medical, finance, etc). Thus, the need for error free or error immune designs. Until recently, radiation effects were a major concern in space applications only. With technology scaling reaching nanometer level, terrestrial radiation has become a growing concern. As a result Single Event Upsets (SEUs) have become a major challenge to robust designs. Single event upset is a temporary change in the state of a device due to a particle strike (usually from the radiation belts or from cosmic rays) which may manifest as an error at the output. This thesis proposes a novel method for adaptive digital designs to efficiently work with the lowest possible power consumption. This new technique improves options in performance, robustness and power. The thesis also proposes a new dual data rate flipflop, which reduces the necessary clock speed by half, drastically reducing the power consumption. This new dual data rate flip-flop design culminates in a proposed unique radiation hardened dual data rate flip-flop, Firebird\u27. Firebird offers a valuable addition to the future circuit designs, especially with the increasing importance of the Single Event Upsets (SEUs) and power dissipation with technology scaling.\u2

    On board processor system study Final report

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    Development and characteristics of onboard processor syste

    INVESTIGATING THE EFFECTS OF SINGLE-EVENT UPSETS IN STATIC AND DYNAMIC REGISTERS

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    Radiation-induced single-event upsets (SEUs) pose a serious threat to the reliability of registers. The existing SEU analyses for static CMOS registers focus on the circuit-level impact and may underestimate the pertinent SEU information provided through node analysis. This thesis proposes SEU node analysis to evaluate the sensitivity of static registers and apply the obtained node information to improve the robustness of the register through selective node hardening (SNH) technique. Unlike previous hardening techniques such as the Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) and the Dual Interlocked Cell (DICE) latch, the SNH method does not introduce larger area overhead. Moreover, this thesis also explores the impact of SEUs in dynamic flip-flops, which are appealing for the design of high-performance microprocessors. Previous work either uses the approaches for static flip-flops to evaluate SEU effects in dynamic flip-flops or overlook the SEU injected during the precharge phase. In this thesis, possible SEU sensitive nodes in dynamic flip-flops are re-examined and their window of vulnerability (WOV) is extended. Simulation results for SEU analysis in non-hardened dynamic flip-flops reveal that the last 55.3 % of the precharge time and a 100% evaluation time are affected by SEUs

    Fully Automated Radiation Hardened by Design Circuit Construction

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    abstract: A fully automated logic design methodology for radiation hardened by design (RHBD) high speed logic using fine grained triple modular redundancy (TMR) is presented. The hardening techniques used in the cell library are described and evaluated, with a focus on both layout techniques that mitigate total ionizing dose (TID) and latchup issues and flip-flop designs that mitigate single event transient (SET) and single event upset (SEU) issues. The base TMR self-correcting master-slave flip-flop is described and compared to more traditional hardening techniques. Additional refinements are presented, including testability features that disable the self-correction to allow detection of manufacturing defects. The circuit approach is validated for hardness using both heavy ion and proton broad beam testing. For synthesis and auto place and route, the methodology and circuits leverage commercial logic design automation tools. These tools are glued together with custom CAD tools designed to enable easy conversion of standard single redundant hardware description language (HDL) files into hardened TMR circuitry. The flow allows hardening of any synthesizable logic at clock frequencies comparable to unhardened designs and supports standard low-power techniques, e.g. clock gating and supply voltage scaling.Dissertation/ThesisPh.D. Electrical Engineering 201

    Redundant Skewed Clocking of Pulse-Clocked Latches for Low Power Soft-Error Mitigation

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    abstract: An integrated methodology combining redundant clock tree synthesis and pulse clocked latches mitigates both single event upsets (SEU) and single event transients (SET) with reduced power consumption. This methodology helps to change the hardness of the design on the fly. This approach, with minimal additional overhead circuitry, has the ability to work in three different modes of operation depending on the speed, hardness and power consumption required by design. This was designed on 90nm low-standby power (LSP) process and utilized commercial CAD tools for testing. Spatial separation of critical nodes in the physical design of this approach mitigates multi-node charge collection (MNCC) upsets. An advanced encryption system implemented with the proposed design, compared to a previous design with non-redundant clock trees and local delay generation. The proposed approach reduces energy per operation up to 18% over an improved version of the prior approach, with negligible area impact. It can save up to 2/3rd of the power consumption and reach maximum possible frequency, when used in non-redundant mode of operation.Dissertation/ThesisMasters Thesis Electrical Engineering 201

    A low power and soft error resilience guard-gated Quartro-based flip-flop in 45 nm CMOS technology

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    Abstract Conventional flip‐flops are more vulnerable to particle strikes in a radiation environment. To overcome this disadvantage, in the literature, many radiation‐hardened flip‐flops (FFs) based on techniques like triple modular redundancy, dual interlocked cell, Quatro and guard‐gated Quatro cell, and so on, are discussed. The flip‐flop realized using radiation hardened by design Quatro cell is named as the improved version of Quatro flip‐flop (IVQFF). Single event upset (SEU) at inverter stages of master/slave and at output are the two drawbacks of IVQFF. This study proposes a guard‐gated Quatro FF (GQFF) using guard‐gated Quatro cell and Muller C‐element. To overcome the SEU at inverter stages of IVQFF, in GQFF, the inverter stages are realized in a parallel fashion. A dual‐input Muller C‐element is connected to the GQFF output stage to mask the SEU and thus maintain the correct output. The proposed GQFF tolerates both single node upset (SNU) and double node upset (DNU). It also achieves low power. To prove the efficacy, GQFF and the existing FFs are implemented in 45 nm Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology. From the simulation results, it may be noted that the GQFF is 100% immune to SNUs and 50% immune to DNUs

    Single event upset hardened CMOS combinational logic and clock buffer design

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    A radiation strike on semiconductor device may lead to charge collection, which may manifest as a wrong logic level causing failure. Soft errors or Single Event Upsets (SEU) caused by radiation strikes are one of the main failure modes in a VLSI circuit. Previous work predicts that soft error rate may dominate the failure rate in VLSI circuit compared to all other failure modes put together. The issue of single event upsets (SEU) need to be addressed such that the failure rate of the chips dues to SEU is in the acceptable range. Memory circuits are designed to be error free with the help of error correction codes. Technology scaling is driving up the SEU rate of combinational logic and it is predicted that the soft error rate (SER) of combinational logic may dominate the SER of unpro-tected memory by the year 2011. Hence a robust combinational logic methodology must be designed for SEU hardening. Recent studies have also shown that clock distribution network is becoming increasingly vulnerable to radiation strike due to reduced capaci-tance at the clock leaf node. A strike on clock leaf node may propagate to many flip-flops increasing the system SER considerably. In this thesis we propose a novel method to improve the SER of the circuit by filtering single event upsets in the combinational logic and clock distribution network. Our ap-proach results in minimal circuit overhead and also requires minimal effort by the de-signer to implement the proposed method. In this thesis we focus on preventing the propagation of SEU rather than eliminating the SEU on each sensitive gate
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