9 research outputs found

    Design and analysis of SRAMs for energy harvesting systems

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    PhD ThesisAt present, the battery is employed as a power source for wide varieties of microelectronic systems ranging from biomedical implants and sensor net-works to portable devices. However, the battery has several limitations and incurs many challenges for the majority of these systems. For instance, the design considerations of implantable devices concern about the battery from two aspects, the toxic materials it contains and its lifetime since replacing the battery means a surgical operation. Another challenge appears in wire-less sensor networks, where hundreds or thousands of nodes are scattered around the monitored environment and the battery of each node should be maintained and replaced regularly, nonetheless, the batteries in these nodes do not all run out at the same time. Since the introduction of portable systems, the area of low power designs has witnessed extensive research, driven by the industrial needs, towards the aim of extending the lives of batteries. Coincidentally, the continuing innovations in the field of micro-generators made their outputs in the same range of several portable applications. This overlap creates a clear oppor-tunity to develop new generations of electronic systems that can be powered, or at least augmented, by energy harvesters. Such self-powered systems benefit applications where maintaining and replacing batteries are impossi-ble, inconvenient, costly, or hazardous, in addition to decreasing the adverse effects the battery has on the environment. The main goal of this research study is to investigate energy harvesting aware design techniques for computational logic in order to enable the capa- II bility of working under non-deterministic energy sources. As a case study, the research concentrates on a vital part of all computational loads, SRAM, which occupies more than 90% of the chip area according to the ITRS re-ports. Essentially, this research conducted experiments to find out the design met-ric of an SRAM that is the most vulnerable to unpredictable energy sources, which has been confirmed to be the timing. Accordingly, the study proposed a truly self-timed SRAM that is realized based on complete handshaking protocols in the 6T bit-cell regulated by a fully Speed Independent (SI) tim-ing circuitry. The study proved the functionality of the proposed design in real silicon. Finally, the project enhanced other performance metrics of the self-timed SRAM concentrating on the bit-line length and the minimum operational voltage by employing several additional design techniques.Umm Al-Qura University, the Ministry of Higher Education in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the Saudi Cultural Burea

    Power delivery mechanisms for asynchronous loads in energy harvesting systems

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    PhD ThesisFor systems depending on methods, a fundamental contradiction in the power delivery chain has existed between conventional to supply it. DC/DC conversion (e.g.) has therefore been an integral part of such systems to resolve this contradiction. be made tolerant to a much wider range of Vdd variance. This may open up opportunities for much more energy efficient methods of power delivery. performance of different power delivery mechanisms driving both asynchronous and synchronous loads directly from a harvester source bypassing bulky energy method, which employs a energy from a EH circuit depending on load and source conditions, is developed. through comprehensive comparative analysis. Based on the novel CBB power delivery method, an asynchronous controller is circuits to work with tasks. The successful asynchronous control design drives a case study that is meant to explore relations between power path and task path. To deal with different tasks with variable harvested power, systems may have a range of operation conditions and thus dynamically call for CBB or SCC type power set of capacitors to form CBB or SCC is implemented with economic system size. This work presents an unconventional way of designing a compact-size, quick- circuit overcome large voltage variation in EH systems and implement smart power management for harsh EH environment. The power delivery mechanisms (SCC, employed to help asynchronous- logic-based chip testing and micro-scale EH system demonstrations

    Asynchronous techniques for new generation variation-tolerant FPGA

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    PhD ThesisThis thesis presents a practical scenario for asynchronous logic implementation that would benefit the modern Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) technology in improving reliability. A method based on Asynchronously-Assisted Logic (AAL) blocks is proposed here in order to provide the right degree of variation tolerance, preserve as much of the traditional FPGAs structure as possible, and make use of asynchrony only when necessary or beneficial for functionality. The newly proposed AAL introduces extra underlying hard-blocks that support asynchronous interaction only when needed and at minimum overhead. This has the potential to avoid the obstacles to the progress of asynchronous designs, particularly in terms of area and power overheads. The proposed approach provides a solution that is complementary to existing variation tolerance techniques such as the late-binding technique, but improves the reliability of the system as well as reducing the design’s margin headroom when implemented on programmable logic devices (PLDs) or FPGAs. The proposed method suggests the deployment of configurable AAL blocks to reinforce only the variation-critical paths (VCPs) with the help of variation maps, rather than re-mapping and re-routing. The layout level results for this method's worst case increase in the CLB’s overall size only of 6.3%. The proposed strategy retains the structure of the global interconnect resources that occupy the lion’s share of the modern FPGA’s soft fabric, and yet permits the dual-rail iv completion-detection (DR-CD) protocol without the need to globally double the interconnect resources. Simulation results of global and interconnect voltage variations demonstrate the robustness of the method

    Energy-efficient analog-to-digital conversion for ultra-wideband radio

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2007.Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-222).In energy constrained signal processing and communication systems, a focus on the analog or digital circuits in isolation cannot achieve the minimum power consumption. Furthermore, in advanced technologies with significant variation, yield is traditionally achieved only through conservative design and a sacrifice of energy efficiency. In this thesis, these limitations are addressed with both a comprehensive mixed-signal design methodology and new circuits and architectures, as presented in the context of an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for ultra-wideband (UWB) radio. UWB is an emerging technology capable of high-data-rate wireless communication and precise locationing, and it requires high-speed (>500MS/s), low-resolution ADCs. The successive approximation register (SAR) topology exhibits significantly reduced complexity compared to the traditional flash architecture. Three time-interleaved SAR ADCs have been implemented. At the mixed-signal optimum energy point, parallelism and reduced voltage supplies provide more than 3x energy savings. Custom control logic, a new capacitive DAC, and a hierarchical sampling network enable the high-speed operation. Finally, only a small amount of redundancy, with negligible power penalty, dramatically improves the yield of the highly parallel ADC in deep sub-micron CMOS.by Brian P. Ginsburg.Ph.D

    Embedding Logic and Non-volatile Devices in CMOS Digital Circuits for Improving Energy Efficiency

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    abstract: Static CMOS logic has remained the dominant design style of digital systems for more than four decades due to its robustness and near zero standby current. Static CMOS logic circuits consist of a network of combinational logic cells and clocked sequential elements, such as latches and flip-flops that are used for sequencing computations over time. The majority of the digital design techniques to reduce power, area, and leakage over the past four decades have focused almost entirely on optimizing the combinational logic. This work explores alternate architectures for the flip-flops for improving the overall circuit performance, power and area. It consists of three main sections. First, is the design of a multi-input configurable flip-flop structure with embedded logic. A conventional D-type flip-flop may be viewed as realizing an identity function, in which the output is simply the value of the input sampled at the clock edge. In contrast, the proposed multi-input flip-flop, named PNAND, can be configured to realize one of a family of Boolean functions called threshold functions. In essence, the PNAND is a circuit implementation of the well-known binary perceptron. Unlike other reconfigurable circuits, a PNAND can be configured by simply changing the assignment of signals to its inputs. Using a standard cell library of such gates, a technology mapping algorithm can be applied to transform a given netlist into one with an optimal mixture of conventional logic gates and threshold gates. This approach was used to fabricate a 32-bit Wallace Tree multiplier and a 32-bit booth multiplier in 65nm LP technology. Simulation and chip measurements show more than 30% improvement in dynamic power and more than 20% reduction in core area. The functional yield of the PNAND reduces with geometry and voltage scaling. The second part of this research investigates the use of two mechanisms to improve the robustness of the PNAND circuit architecture. One is the use of forward and reverse body biases to change the device threshold and the other is the use of RRAM devices for low voltage operation. The third part of this research focused on the design of flip-flops with non-volatile storage. Spin-transfer torque magnetic tunnel junctions (STT-MTJ) are integrated with both conventional D-flipflop and the PNAND circuits to implement non-volatile logic (NVL). These non-volatile storage enhanced flip-flops are able to save the state of system locally when a power interruption occurs. However, manufacturing variations in the STT-MTJs and in the CMOS transistors significantly reduce the yield, leading to an overly pessimistic design and consequently, higher energy consumption. A detailed analysis of the design trade-offs in the driver circuitry for performing backup and restore, and a novel method to design the energy optimal driver for a given yield is presented. Efficient designs of two nonvolatile flip-flop (NVFF) circuits are presented, in which the backup time is determined on a per-chip basis, resulting in minimizing the energy wastage and satisfying the yield constraint. To achieve a yield of 98%, the conventional approach would have to expend nearly 5X more energy than the minimum required, whereas the proposed tunable approach expends only 26% more energy than the minimum. A non-volatile threshold gate architecture NV-TLFF are designed with the same backup and restore circuitry in 65nm technology. The embedded logic in NV-TLFF compensates performance overhead of NVL. This leads to the possibility of zero-overhead non-volatile datapath circuits. An 8-bit multiply-and- accumulate (MAC) unit is designed to demonstrate the performance benefits of the proposed architecture. Based on the results of HSPICE simulations, the MAC circuit with the proposed NV-TLFF cells is shown to consume at least 20% less power and area as compared to the circuit designed with conventional DFFs, without sacrificing any performance.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    Voltage and capacitance sensing using time comparison

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    PhD ThesisWith the rapid advancement of electronic and mechanical system miniaturisation, new application types such as portable systems, internet of things (IoT) and wireless sensor networks (WSNs) have become promising areas of growth for industry. In these areas, the limits on battery life have opened opportunities for energy harvesting to become a commonplace choice as the system power source, which brings its own problems. One of these problems is that energy harvesting is in general a much more variable energy source than batteries and mains power supply, because of the unpredictable and intermittent nature of the external energy environment [1]. This implies that both energy harvesters and the loads they support require significantly more control, tuning and management than if the energy was supplied by traditional means. On the other hand, sensing is also an important aspect for such systems as many of these systems are sensors used to monitor physical parameters in the environment. Another reason is that the control, tuning and management of energy harvesting requires the support of energy/power sensing. It is therefore inevitable that sensing methods need to be developed targeting an environment where energy supply is volatile. However, sensing under a variable energy supply faces numerous problems. One such problem is the energy consumption of the sensing itself. In this regard, the capacitive sensor is widely used for sensing a physical parameter, such as pressure, position, and humidity, as it is suitable for low-power applications with limited energy budgets [2–4]. Another problem faced by sensing under energy supply variability is the difficulty of maintaining stable voltage and/or current references. This thesis is motivated by these issues. In this thesis, a new sensing method is developed based on time domain techniques, which will be shown to be 1) suitable for capacitive sensing of environmental physical parameters, 2) suitable for sensing voltage, from which power and energy information can be derived, supporting energy harvesting management uses, and 3) robust to voltage and power volatility, making sensors derived from this method useful for miniaturised and energy autonomous systems. At the centre of this work is a novel reference-free voltage level-crossing sensor, realised through time comparison techniques. By working in the time domain, it avoids the need for voltage or current references. Two more sophisticated sensors are then developed around this level-crossing sensing engine. The first is a voltage monitor which is capable of sensing the crossing of multiple predefined voltage boundaries within a range, targeting energy harvesting system management uses. The second is a capacitance-to-digital converter which senses and converts the value of a target capacitance to digital value. This could be used to support the monitoring of physical vi parameters in the environment including pressure, temperature, moisture, etc. as these might be made to directly affect the values of capacitances. This thesis describes detailed design theory and reasoning, implementation, and validation of the presented sensors. Circuits are implemented in very-large-scale integration and investigated in the Cadence Analog Design Environment. In addition to analogue simulations, experiments were also conducted on a fabricated chip. Data collected from these simulation and physical experiments show that the time-domain method developed in this work has quantitative and qualitative advantages over existing designs

    Low-Power Reconfigurable Sensing Circuitry for the Internet-of-Things Paradigm

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    With ubiquitous wireless communication via Wi-Fi and nascent 5th Generation mobile communications, more devices -- both smart and traditionally dumb -- will be interconnected than ever before. This burgeoning trend is referred to as the Internet-of-Things. These new sensing opportunities place a larger burden on the underlying circuitry that must operate on finite battery power and/or within energy-constrained environments. New developments of low-power reconfigurable analog sensing platforms like field-programmable analog arrays (FPAAs) present an attractive sensing solution by processing data in the analog domain while staying flexible in design. This work addresses some of the contemporary challenges of low-power wireless sensing via traditional application-specific sensing and with FPAAs. A large emphasis is placed on furthering the development of FPAAs by making them more accessible to designers without a strong integrated-circuit background -- much like FPGAs have done for digital designers

    Improving the Robustness of Self-timed SRAM to Variable Vdds

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