75 research outputs found

    Logic synthesis and testing techniques for switching nano-crossbar arrays

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    Beyond CMOS, new technologies are emerging to extend electronic systems with features unavailable to silicon-based devices. Emerging technologies provide new logic and interconnection structures for computation, storage and communication that may require new design paradigms, and therefore trigger the development of a new generation of design automation tools. In the last decade, several emerging technologies have been proposed and the time has come for studying new ad-hoc techniques and tools for logic synthesis, physical design and testing. The main goal of this project is developing a complete synthesis and optimization methodology for switching nano-crossbar arrays that leads to the design and construction of an emerging nanocomputer. New models for diode, FET, and four-terminal switch based nanoarrays are developed. The proposed methodology implements logic, arithmetic, and memory elements by considering performance parameters such as area, delay, power dissipation, and reliability. With combination of logic, arithmetic, and memory elements a synchronous state machine (SSM), representation of a computer, is realized. The proposed methodology targets variety of emerging technologies including nanowire/nanotube crossbar arrays, magnetic switch-based structures, and crossbar memories. The results of this project will be a foundation of nano-crossbar based circuit design techniques and greatly contribute to the construction of emerging computers beyond CMOS. The topic of this project can be considered under the research area of â\u80\u9cEmerging Computing Modelsâ\u80\u9d or â\u80\u9cComputational Nanoelectronicsâ\u80\u9d, more specifically the design, modeling, and simulation of new nanoscale switches beyond CMOS

    A survey of fault-tolerance algorithms for reconfigurable nano-crossbar arrays

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    ACM Comput. Surv. Volume 50, issue 6 (November 2017)Nano-crossbar arrays have emerged as a promising and viable technology to improve computing performance of electronic circuits beyond the limits of current CMOS. Arrays offer both structural efficiency with reconfiguration and prospective capability of integration with different technologies. However, certain problems need to be addressed, and the most important one is the prevailing occurrence of faults. Considering fault rate projections as high as 20% that is much higher than those of CMOS, it is fair to expect sophisticated fault-tolerance methods. The focus of this survey article is the assessment and evaluation of these methods and related algorithms applied in logic mapping and configuration processes. As a start, we concisely explain reconfigurable nano-crossbar arrays with their fault characteristics and models. Following that, we demonstrate configuration techniques of the arrays in the presence of permanent faults and elaborate on two main fault-tolerance methodologies, namely defect-unaware and defect-aware approaches, with a short review on advantages and disadvantages. For both methodologies, we present detailed experimental results of related algorithms regarding their strengths and weaknesses with a comprehensive yield, success rate and runtime analysis. Next, we overview fault-tolerance approaches for transient faults. As a conclusion, we overview the proposed algorithms with future directions and upcoming challenges.This work is supported by the EU-H2020-RISE project NANOxCOMP no 691178 and the TUBITAK-Career project no 113E760

    Advances in Nanowire-Based Computing Architectures

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    ITERATIVE HEURISTICS FOR CMOL HYBRID CMOS/NANODEVICES CELLS MAPPING

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    Fault and Defect Tolerant Computer Architectures: Reliable Computing With Unreliable Devices

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    This research addresses design of a reliable computer from unreliable device technologies. A system architecture is developed for a fault and defect tolerant (FDT) computer. Trade-offs between different techniques are studied and yield and hardware cost models are developed. Fault and defect tolerant designs are created for the processor and the cache memory. Simulation results for the content-addressable memory (CAM)-based cache show 90% yield with device failure probabilities of 3 x 10(-6), three orders of magnitude better than non fault tolerant caches of the same size. The entire processor achieves 70% yield with device failure probabilities exceeding 10(-6). The required hardware redundancy is approximately 15 times that of a non-fault tolerant design. While larger than current FT designs, this architecture allows the use of devices much more likely to fail than silicon CMOS. As part of model development, an improved model is derived for NAND Multiplexing. The model is the first accurate model for small and medium amounts of redundancy. Previous models are extended to account for dependence between the inputs and produce more accurate results

    Using Fine Grain Approaches for highly reliable Design of FPGA-based Systems in Space

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    Nowadays using SRAM based FPGAs in space missions is increasingly considered due to their flexibility and reprogrammability. A challenge is the devices sensitivity to radiation effects that increased with modern architectures due to smaller CMOS structures. This work proposes fault tolerance methodologies, that are based on a fine grain view to modern reconfigurable architectures. The focus is on SEU mitigation challenges in SRAM based FPGAs which can result in crucial situations
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