2,214 research outputs found

    Variant X-Tree Clock Distribution Network and Its Performance Evaluations

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    Limits on Fundamental Limits to Computation

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    An indispensable part of our lives, computing has also become essential to industries and governments. Steady improvements in computer hardware have been supported by periodic doubling of transistor densities in integrated circuits over the last fifty years. Such Moore scaling now requires increasingly heroic efforts, stimulating research in alternative hardware and stirring controversy. To help evaluate emerging technologies and enrich our understanding of integrated-circuit scaling, we review fundamental limits to computation: in manufacturing, energy, physical space, design and verification effort, and algorithms. To outline what is achievable in principle and in practice, we recall how some limits were circumvented, compare loose and tight limits. We also point out that engineering difficulties encountered by emerging technologies may indicate yet-unknown limits.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl

    Early analysis of VLSI systems with packaging considerations

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    There is an explosive growth in the size of the VLSI (Very Large Scale Integration) systems today. Microelectronic system designers are packing millions of transistors in a single IC chip. Packaging techniques like Multi-chip module (MCM) and flip-chip bonding offer faster interconnects and IC\u27s capable of accommodating a larger number of inputs and outputs. The complexity of today\u27s designs and the availability of advanced packaging techniques call for an early analysis of the system based on estimation of system parameters to select from a wide choice of circuit partitioning, architecture alternatives and packaging options which give the best cost/performance. A procedure for the early analysis of VLSI systems under packaging considerations has been developed and implemented in this dissertation work. The early analysis tool was used to evaluate the inter-relationship between partitioning and packaging and to determine the best system design considering cost, size and delays. The functional unit level description of a 750,000-transistor MicroSparc processor was studied using an exhaustive search technique. The early analysis performed on the MicroSparc design suggested that the three chip multi-chip design using flip-chip IC\u27s interconnected on a MCM-D substrate is the most cost effective. An early bond pitch analysis performed using the tool concluded that a 250-micron bond pitch is the best choice for the multi-chip MicroSparc designs. The tool was also used to perform an early cache analysis which showed that the use of separate memory and logic processes made it feasible to design the MicroSparc design with larger cache sizes than the use of a combined logic and memory process. The designs based on the separate processes gave equivalent or better performance than the design candidates with smaller cache sizes. Future extensions of the procedure are also outlined here

    Custom Integrated Circuits

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    Contains reprots on two research projects.U.S. Air Force (Contract F49620-81-C-0054)U.S. Air Force (Contract F49620-80-C-0073

    A Comprehensive Workflow for General-Purpose Neural Modeling with Highly Configurable Neuromorphic Hardware Systems

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    In this paper we present a methodological framework that meets novel requirements emerging from upcoming types of accelerated and highly configurable neuromorphic hardware systems. We describe in detail a device with 45 million programmable and dynamic synapses that is currently under development, and we sketch the conceptual challenges that arise from taking this platform into operation. More specifically, we aim at the establishment of this neuromorphic system as a flexible and neuroscientifically valuable modeling tool that can be used by non-hardware-experts. We consider various functional aspects to be crucial for this purpose, and we introduce a consistent workflow with detailed descriptions of all involved modules that implement the suggested steps: The integration of the hardware interface into the simulator-independent model description language PyNN; a fully automated translation between the PyNN domain and appropriate hardware configurations; an executable specification of the future neuromorphic system that can be seamlessly integrated into this biology-to-hardware mapping process as a test bench for all software layers and possible hardware design modifications; an evaluation scheme that deploys models from a dedicated benchmark library, compares the results generated by virtual or prototype hardware devices with reference software simulations and analyzes the differences. The integration of these components into one hardware-software workflow provides an ecosystem for ongoing preparative studies that support the hardware design process and represents the basis for the maturity of the model-to-hardware mapping software. The functionality and flexibility of the latter is proven with a variety of experimental results
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