70 research outputs found

    Power Optimization of Combinational Quaternary Logic Circuits

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    Design of the binary logic circuits is restricted by the need of the interconnections. Interconnections increase delay, area and energy consumption in CMOS digital circuits. A possible solution could be here at by using a bigger set of signals over the same chip area. Multiple-valued logic can decrease the average power required for level transitions and reduces the number of necessary interconnections. In this paper we design various combinational circuits using quaternary logic. Various combinational circuit such as multi valued logic full adder using unique encoding technique, quaternary encoder and quaternary multiplexer. This design is target to reduce the transistor used to implement the circuit and dropping the power dissipation. Power optimization is achieved using MTCMOS technique. Simulation has been done in Tanner 13 EDA tool on BSIM3 180 nm CMOS Technology. DOI: 10.17762/ijritcc2321-8169.15026

    CAD Tool Design for NCL and MTNCL Asynchronous Circuits

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    This thesis presents an implementation of a method developed to readily convert Boolean designs into an ultra-low power asynchronous design methodology called MTNCL, which combines multi-threshold CMOS (MTCMOS) with NULL Convention Logic (NCL) systems. MTNCL provides the leakage power advantages of an all high-Vt implementation with a reasonable speed penalty compared to the all low-Vt implementation, and has negligible area overhead. The proposed tool utilizes industry-standard CAD tools. This research also presents an Automated Gate-Level Pipelining with Bit-Wise Completion (AGLPBW) method to maximize throughput of delay-insensitive full-word pipelined NCL circuits. These methods have been integrated into the Mentor Graphics and Synopsis CAD tools, using a C-program, which performs the majority of the computations, such that the method can be easily ported to other CAD tool suites. Both methods have been successfully tested on circuits, including a 4-bit × 4-bit multiplier, an unsigned Booth2 multiplier, and a 4-bit/8-operation arithmetic logic unit (ALU

    FORCED STACK SLEEP TRANSISTOR (FORTRAN): A NEW LEAKAGE CURRENT REDUCTION APPROACH IN CMOS BASED CIRCUIT DESIGNING

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    Reduction in leakage current has become a significant concern in nanotechnology-based low-power, low-voltage, and high-performance VLSI applications. This research article discusses a new low-power circuit design the approach of FORTRAN (FORced stack sleep TRANsistor), which decreases the leakage power efficiency in the CMOS-based circuit outline in VLSI domain. FORTRAN approach reduces leakage current in both active as well as standby modes of operation. Furthermore, it is not time intensive when the circuit goes from active mode to standby mode and vice-versa. To validate the proposed design approach, experiments are conducted in the Tanner EDA tool of mentor graphics bundle on projected circuit designs for the full adder, a chain of 4-inverters, and 4-bit multiplier designs utilizing 180nm, 130nm, and 90nm TSMC technology node. The outcomes obtained show the result of a 95-98% vital reduction in leakage power as well as a 15-20% reduction in dynamic power with a minor increase in delay. The result outcomes are compared for accuracy with the notable design approaches that are accessible for both active and standby modes of operation

    LEAKAGE POWER REDUCTION IN CMOS CIRCUITS USING LEAKAGE CONTROL TRANSISTOR TECHNIQUE IN NANOSCALE TECHNOLOGY

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    In CMOS circuits, as the technology scales down to nanoscale, the sub-threshold leakage current increases with the decrease in the threshold voltage. LECTOR, a technique to tackle the leakage problem in CMOS circuits, uses two additional leakage control transistors, which are self-controlled, in a path from supply to ground which provides the additional resistance thereby reducing the leakage current in the path. The main advantage as compared to other techniques which involves the sleep transistor is that LECTOR technique does not require any additional control and monitoring circuitry, thereby limits the area increase and also the power dissipation in active state. Along with this, the other advantage with LECTOR technique is that it does not affect the dynamic power which is the major limitation with the other leakage reduction techniques

    Comparison of Various Pipelined and Non-Pipelined SCl 8051 ALUs

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    This paper describes the development of an 8-bit SCL 8051 ALU with two versions: SCL 8051 ALU with nsleep and sleep signals and SCL 8051 ALU without nsleep. Both versions have combinational logic (C/L), registers, and completion components, which all utilize slept gates. Both three-stage pipelined and non-pipelined designs were examined for both versions. The four designs were compared in terms of area, speed, leakage power, average power and energy per operation. The SCL 8051 ALU without nsleep is smaller and faster, but it has greater leakage power. It also has lower average power, and less energy consumption than the SCL 8051 ALU with both nsleep and sleep signals. The pipelined SCL 8051 ALU is bigger, slower, and has larger leakage power, average power and energy consumption than the non-pipelined SCL 8051 ALU

    Design and Analysis of an Asynchronous Microcontroller

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    This dissertation presents the design of the most complex MTNCL circuit to date. A fully functional MTNCL MSP430 microcontroller is designed and benchmarked against an open source synchronous MSP430. The designs are compared in terms of area, active energy, and leakage energy. Techniques to reduce MTNCL pipeline activity and improve MTNCL register file area and power consumption are introduced. The results show the MTNCL design to have superior leakage power characteristics. The area and active energy comparisons highlight the need for better MTNCL logic synthesis techniques

    Asynchronous Data Processing Platforms for Energy Efficiency, Performance, and Scalability

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    The global technology revolution is changing the integrated circuit industry from the one driven by performance to the one driven by energy, scalability and more-balanced design goals. Without clock-related issues, asynchronous circuits enable further design tradeoffs and in operation adaptive adjustments for energy efficiency. This dissertation work presents the design methodology of the asynchronous circuit using NULL Convention Logic (NCL) and multi-threshold CMOS techniques for energy efficiency and throughput optimization in digital signal processing circuits. Parallel homogeneous and heterogeneous platforms implementing adaptive dynamic voltage scaling (DVS) based on the observation of system fullness and workload prediction are developed for balanced control of the performance and energy efficiency. Datapath control logic with NULL Cycle Reduction (NCR) and arbitration network are incorporated in the heterogeneous platform for large scale cascading. The platforms have been integrated with the data processing units using the IBM 130 nm 8RF process and fabricated using the MITLL 90 nm FDSOI process. Simulation and physical testing results show the energy efficiency advantage of asynchronous designs and the effective of the adaptive DVS mechanism in balancing the energy and performance in both platforms

    Ultra-Low Power and Radiation Hardened Asynchronous Circuit Design

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    This dissertation proposes an ultra-low power design methodology called bit-wise MTNCL for bit-wise pipelined asynchronous circuits, which combines multi-threshold CMOS (MTCMOS) with bit-wise pipelined NULL Convention Logic (NCL) systems. It provides the leakage power advantages of an all high-Vt implementation with a reasonable speed penalty compared to the all low-Vt implementation, and has negligible area overhead. It was enhanced to handle indeterminate standby states. The original MTNCL concept was enhanced significantly by sleeping Registers and Completion Logic as well as Combinational circuits to reduce area, leakage power, and energy per operation. This dissertation also develops an architecture that allows NCL circuits to recover from a Single Event Upset (SEU) or Single Event Latchup (SEL) fault without any data loss. Finally, an accurate throughput derivation formula for pipelined NCL circuits was developed, which can be used for static timing analysis

    NP domino logic gates for Ultra Low Voltage and High Speed applications

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    In this thesis we present different configurations of digital circuits exploiting Ultra Low Voltage (ULV) NP domino logic style. The proposed logic style is utilized with the help of Floating gate transistors. The proposed NP domino logic gates are aimed to perform high speed operations in Ultra Low Voltage applications. The presented circuits may operate near the sub-threshold regime where the supply voltage is near the threshold voltage of the transistors. In terms of frequency, speed, robustness, Power Delay Product (PDP) and Energy Delay Product (EDP), the proposed ULV NP domino logic gates may offer significant improvement compared to the conventional CMOS logic gates. Different implementations of NOT, NAND and NOR gates are presented using both conventional and Pass Transistor Logic styles. Further, NAND and NOR gates are used to employ different configurations of Carry gates which is a speed limited factor in many arithmetic operations. These ULV NP domino Carry gates are simulated at different supply voltages in the range of 100mV to 400mV, and the performance results are presented with respect to delay, power, PDP and EDP. The proposed ULV NP domino Carry gates are cascaded together to perform addition in a 32-bit chain. The circuits are operated with respect to worst case scenario where the carry signal propagates through the whole chain. Multi-threshold (MTCMOS) and Variable-threshold (VTCMOS) techniques are employed in the ULV domino 32-bit carry chain in order to reduce the power consumption, meanwhile offering superb speed performance. Although the 32-bit carry chain offers a great advantage of speed improvement in the worst case scenario, the chain also introduces the drawback of enormous power consumption in the idle mode. The work in this thesis has resulted in three papers. Two of these papers represent various configurations of 1-bit ULV NP domino Carry gates, while the third paper examines the performance of one of the proposed ULV NP domino Carry gates in a 32-bit chain. The simulation results presented in this thesis are obtained using a 90nm TSMC CMOS process
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