144 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

    New Logic Synthesis As Nanotechnology Enabler (invited paper)

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    Nanoelectronics comprises a variety of devices whose electrical properties are more complex as compared to CMOS, thus enabling new computational paradigms. The potentially large space for innovation has to be explored in the search for technologies that can support large-scale and high- performance circuit design. Within this space, we analyze a set of emerging technologies characterized by a similar computational abstraction at the design level, i.e., a binary comparator or a majority voter. We demonstrate that new logic synthesis techniques, natively supporting this abstraction, are the technology enablers. We describe models and data-structures for logic design using emerging technologies and we show results of applying new synthesis algorithms and tools. We conclude that new logic synthesis methods are required to both evaluate emerging technologies and to achieve the best results in terms of area, power and performance

    Towards Logic Functions as the Device using Spin Wave Functions Nanofabric

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    As CMOS technology scaling is fast approaching its fundamental limits, several new nano-electronic devices have been proposed as possible alternatives to MOSFETs. Research on emerging devices mainly focusses on improving the intrinsic characteristics of these single devices keeping the overall integration approach fairly conventional. However, due to high logic complexity and wiring requirements, the overall system-level power, performance and area do not scale proportional to that of individual devices. Thereby, we propose a fundamental shift in mindset, to make the devices themselves more functional than simple switches. Our goal in this thesis is to develop a new nanoscale fabric paradigm that enables realization of arbitrary logic functions (with high fan-in/fan-out) more efficiently. We leverage on non-equilibrium spin wave physical phenomenon and wave interference to realize these elementary functions called Spin Wave Functions (SPWFs). In the proposed fabric, computation is based on the principle of wave superposition. Information is encoded both in the phase and amplitude of spin waves; thereby providing an opportunity for compressed data representation. Moreover, spin wave propagation does not involve any physical movement of charge particles. This provides a fundamental advantage over conventional charge based electronics and opens new horizons for novel nano-scale architectures. We show several variants of the SPWFs based on topology, signal weights, control inputs and wave frequencies. SPWF based designs of arithmetic circuits like adders and parallel counters are presented. Our efforts towards developing new architectures using SPWFs places strong emphasis on integrated fabric-circuit exploration methodology. With different topologies and circuit styles we have explored how capabilities at individual fabric components level can affect design and vice versa. Our estimates on benefits vs. 45nm CMOS implementation show that, for a 1-bit adder, up to 40x reduction in area and 228x reduction in power is possible. For the 2-bit adder, results show that up to 33x area reduction and 222x reduction in power may be possible. Building large scale SPWF-based systems, requires mechanisms for synchronization and data streaming. In this thesis, we present data streaming approaches based on Asynchronous SPWFs (A-SPWFs). As an example, a 32-bit Carry Completion Sensing Adder (CCSA) is shown based on the A-SPWF approach with preliminary power, performance and area evaluations

    An Outlook on Design Technologies for Future Integrated Systems

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    The economic and social demand for ubiquitous and multifaceted electronic systems-in combination with the unprecedented opportunities provided by the integration of various manufacturing technologies-is paving the way to a new class of heterogeneous integrated systems, with increased performance and connectedness and providing us with gateways to the living world. This paper surveys design requirements and solutions for heterogeneous systems and addresses design technologies for realizing them

    New Data Structures and Algorithms for Logic Synthesis and Verification

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    The strong interaction between Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools and Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology contributed substantially to the advancement of modern digital electronics. The continuous downscaling of CMOS Field Effect Transistor (FET) dimensions enabled the semiconductor industry to fabricate digital systems with higher circuit density at reduced costs. To keep pace with technology, EDA tools are challenged to handle both digital designs with growing functionality and device models of increasing complexity. Nevertheless, whereas the downscaling of CMOS technology is requiring more complex physical design models, the logic abstraction of a transistor as a switch has not changed even with the introduction of 3D FinFET technology. As a consequence, modern EDA tools are fine tuned for CMOS technology and the underlying design methodologies are based on CMOS logic primitives, i.e., negative unate logic functions. While it is clear that CMOS logic primitives will be the ultimate building blocks for digital systems in the next ten years, no evidence is provided that CMOS logic primitives are also the optimal basis for EDA software. In EDA, the efficiency of methods and tools is measured by different metrics such as (i) the result quality, for example the performance of a digital circuit, (ii) the runtime and (iii) the memory footprint on the host computer. With the aim to optimize these metrics, the accordance to a specific logic model is no longer important. Indeed, the key to the success of an EDA technique is the expressive power of the logic primitives handling and solving the problem, which determines the capability to reach better metrics. In this thesis, we investigate new logic primitives for electronic design automation tools. We improve the efficiency of logic representation, manipulation and optimization tasks by taking advantage of majority and biconditional logic primitives. We develop synthesis tools exploiting the majority and biconditional expressiveness. Our tools show strong results as compared to state-of-the-art academic and commercial synthesis tools. Indeed, we produce the best results for several public benchmarks. On top of the enhanced synthesis power, our methods are the natural and native logic abstraction for circuit design in emerging nanotechnologies, where majority and biconditional logic are the primitive gates for physical implementation. We accelerate formal methods by (i) studying properties of logic circuits and (ii) developing new frameworks for logic reasoning engines. We prove non-trivial dualities for the property checking problem in logic circuits. Our findings enable sensible speed-ups in solving circuit satisfiability. We develop an alternative Boolean satisfiability framework based on majority functions. We prove that the general problem is still intractable but we show practical restrictions that can be solved efficiently. Finally, we focus on reversible logic where we propose a new equivalence checking approach. We exploit the invertibility of computation and the functionality of reversible gates in the formulation of the problem. This enables one order of magnitude speed up, as compared to the state-of-the-art solution. We argue that new approaches to solve EDA problems are necessary, as we have reached a point of technology where keeping pace with design goals is tougher than ever

    The Logic of Random Pulses: Stochastic Computing.

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    Recent developments in the field of electronics have produced nano-scale devices whose operation can only be described in probabilistic terms. In contrast with the conventional deterministic computing that has dominated the digital world for decades, we investigate a fundamentally different technique that is probabilistic by nature, namely, stochastic computing (SC). In SC, numbers are represented by bit-streams of 0's and 1's, in which the probability of seeing a 1 denotes the value of the number. The main benefit of SC is that complicated arithmetic computation can be performed by simple logic circuits. For example, a single (logic) AND gate performs multiplication. The dissertation begins with a comprehensive survey of SC and its applications. We highlight its main challenges, which include long computation time and low accuracy, as well as the lack of general design methods. We then address some of the more important challenges. We introduce a new SC design method, called STRAUSS, that generates efficient SC circuits for arbitrary target functions. We then address the problems arising from correlation among stochastic numbers (SNs). In particular, we show that, contrary to general belief, correlation can sometimes serve as a resource in SC design. We also show that unlike conventional circuits, SC circuits can tolerate high error rates and are hence useful in some new applications that involve nondeterministic behavior in the underlying circuitry. Finally, we show how SC's properties can be exploited in the design of an efficient vision chip that is suitable for retinal implants. In particular, we show that SC circuits can directly operate on signals with neural encoding, which eliminates the need for data conversion.PhDComputer Science and EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/113561/1/alaghi_1.pd

    SIGNAL PROCESSING TECHNIQUES AND APPLICATIONS

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    As the technologies scaling down, more transistors can be fabricated into the same area, which enables the integration of many components into the same substrate, referred to as system-on-chip (SoC). The components on SoC are connected by on-chip global interconnects. It has been shown in the recent International Technology Roadmap of Semiconductors (ITRS) that when scaling down, gate delay decreases, but global interconnect delay increases due to crosstalk. The interconnect delay has become a bottleneck of the overall system performance. Many techniques have been proposed to address crosstalk, such as shielding, buffer insertion, and crosstalk avoidance codes (CACs). The CAC is a promising technique due to its good crosstalk reduction, less power consumption and lower area. In this dissertation, I will present analytical delay models for on-chip interconnects with improved accuracy. This enables us to have a more accurate control of delays for transition patterns and lead to a more efficient CAC, whose worst-case delay is 30-40% smaller than the best of previously proposed CACs. As the clock frequency approaches multi-gigahertz, the parasitic inductance of on-chip interconnects has become significant and its detrimental effects, including increased delay, voltage overshoots and undershoots, and increased crosstalk noise, cannot be ignored. We introduce new CACs to address both capacitive and inductive couplings simultaneously.Quantum computers are more powerful in solving some NP problems than the classical computers. However, quantum computers suffer greatly from unwanted interactions with environment. Quantum error correction codes (QECCs) are needed to protect quantum information against noise and decoherence. Given their good error-correcting performance, it is desirable to adapt existing iterative decoding algorithms of LDPC codes to obtain LDPC-based QECCs. Several QECCs based on nonbinary LDPC codes have been proposed with a much better error-correcting performance than existing quantum codes over a qubit channel. In this dissertation, I will present stabilizer codes based on nonbinary QC-LDPC codes for qubit channels. The results will confirm the observation that QECCs based on nonbinary LDPC codes appear to achieve better performance than QECCs based on binary LDPC codes.As the technologies scaling down further to nanoscale, CMOS devices suffer greatly from the quantum mechanical effects. Some emerging nano devices, such as resonant tunneling diodes (RTDs), quantum cellular automata (QCA), and single electron transistors (SETs), have no such issues and are promising candidates to replace the traditional CMOS devices. Threshold gate, which can implement complex Boolean functions within a single gate, can be easily realized with these devices. Several applications dealing with real-valued signals have already been realized using nanotechnology based threshold gates. Unfortunately, the applications using finite fields, such as error correcting coding and cryptography, have not been realized using nanotechnology. The main obstacle is that they require a great number of exclusive-ORs (XORs), which cannot be realized in a single threshold gate. Besides, the fan-in of a threshold gate in RTD nanotechnology needs to be bounded for both reliability and performance purpose. In this dissertation, I will present a majority-class threshold architecture of XORs with bounded fan-in, and compare it with a Boolean-class architecture. I will show an application of the proposed XORs for the finite field multiplications. The analysis results will show that the majority class outperforms the Boolean class architectures in terms of hardware complexity and latency. I will also introduce a sort-and-search algorithm, which can be used for implementations of any symmetric functions. Since XOR is a special symmetric function, it can be implemented via the sort-and-search algorithm. To leverage the power of multi-input threshold functions, I generalize the previously proposed sort-and-search algorithm from a fan-in of two to arbitrary fan-ins, and propose an architecture of multi-input XORs with bounded fan-ins

    Intelligent OFDM telecommunication system. Part 1. Model of system

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    In this paper, we aim to investigate the superiority and practicability of many- parameter transforms (MPTs) from the physical layer security (PHY-LS) perspective. We propose novel Intelligent OFDM-telecommunication systems based on MPT. The new systems use Inverse MPT (IMPT) for modulation at the transmitter and Direct MPT (DMPT) for demodulation at the receiver. The purpose of employing the MPT is to improve: 1) the PHY- LS of wireless transmissions against to the wide-band anti-jamming and anti-eavesdropping communication; 2) the bit error rate (BER) performance with respect to the conventional OFDM-TCS; 3) the peak to average power ratio (PAPR). Each MPT depends on finite set of independent parameters (angles), which could be changed independently of one another. When parameters are changed, MPT is also changed taking form of a set known (and unknown) orthogonal (or unitary) transforms. For this reason, the concrete values of parameters are specific “key” for entry into OFDM-TCS. Vector of parameters belong to multi-dimension torus space. Scanning of this space for find out the “key” (the concrete values of parameters) is hard problem. MPT has the form of the product of the sparse Jacobi rotation matrixes and it describes a fast algorithm for MPT. The main advantage of using MPT in OFDM TCS is that it is a very flexible anti-eavesdropping and anti-jamming Intelligent OFDM TCS. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work that utilizes the MPT theory to facilitate the PHY-LS through parameterization of unitary transforms.This work was supported by the RFBR grant 17-07-00886 and by the Ural State Forest Engineering’s Center of Excellence in «Quantum and Classical Information Technologies for Remote Sensing Systems
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