61,084 research outputs found

    Low energy digital circuit design using sub-threshold operation

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, February 2006.Includes bibliographical references (p. 189-202).Scaling of process technologies to deep sub-micron dimensions has made power management a significant concern for circuit designers. For emerging low power applications such as distributed micro-sensor networks or medical applications, low energy operation is the primary concern instead of speed, with the eventual goal of harvesting energy from the environment. Sub-threshold operation offers a promising solution for ultra-low-energy applications because it often achieves the minimum energy per operation. While initial explorations into sub-threshold circuits demonstrate its promise, sub-threshold circuit design remains in its infancy. This thesis makes several contributions that make sub-threshold design more accessible to circuit designers. First, a model for energy consumption in sub-threshold provides an analytical solution for the optimum VDD to minimize energy. Fitting this model to a generic circuit allows easy estimation of the impact of processing and environmental parameters on the minimum energy point. Second, analysis of device sizing for sub-threshold circuits shows the trade-offs between sizing for minimum energy and for minimum voltage operation.(cont.) A programmable FIR filter test chip fabricated in 0.18pum bulk CMOS provides measurements to confirm the model and the sizing analysis. Third, a low-overhead method for integrating sub-threshold operation with high performance applications extends dynamic voltage scaling across orders of magnitude of frequency and provides energy scalability down to the minimum energy point. A 90nm bulk CMOS test chip confirms the range of operation for ultra-dynamic voltage scaling. Finally, sub-threshold operation is extended to memories. Analysis of traditional SRAM bitcells and architectures leads to development of a new bitcell for robust sub-threshold SRAM operation. The sub-threshold SRAM is analyzed experimentally in a 65nm bulk CMOS test chip.by Benton H. Calhoun.Ph.D

    Power Analysis of Sub-threshold Logics for Security Applications

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    Requirements of ultra-low power for many portable devices have drawn increased attention to digital sub-threshold logic design. Major reductions in power consumption and frequency of operation degradation due to the exponential decrease of the drain current in the sub-threshold region has made this logic an excellent choice, particularly for ultra-low power applications where performance is not the primary concern. Examples include RFID, wireless sensor networks and biomedical implantable devices. Along with energy consumption, security is another compelling requirement for these applications. Power analysis attacks, such as Correlation Power Analysis (CPA), are a powerful type of side channel attacks that are capable of performing a non-invasive attack with minimum equipment. As such, they present a serious threat to devices with secret information inside. This research analyzes sub-threshold logics from a previously unexplored perspective, side channel information leakage. Various transistor level and RTL circuits are implemented in the sub-threshold region as well as in the strong inversion region (normally the standard region of operation) using a 65 nm process. Measures, such as Difference of Mean Energies (DME), Normalized Energy Deviation (NED) and Normalized Standard Deviation (NSD) are employed to evaluate the implemented architectures. A CPA attack is also performed on more complex designs and the obtained correlation coefficients are used to compare sub-threshold and strong inversion logics. This research demonstrates that sub-threshold does not only increase the security against side channel attacks, but can also decrease the amount of leaked information. This research also shows that a circuit operating at sub-threshold consumes considerably less energy than the same circuit operating in strong inversion and the level of its instantaneous power consumption is significantly lower. Therefore, the noise power required to cover the secret information decreases and the attack may be dramatically more difficult due to major increase in the number of required power traces and run time. Thus, this research is important for identifying sub-threshold as a future viable technology for secure embedded applications

    Variation Resilient Adaptive Controller for Subthreshold Circuits

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    Subthreshold logic is showing good promise as a viable ultra-low-power circuit design technique for power-limited applications. For this design technique to gain widespread adoption, one of the most pressing concerns is how to improve the robustness of subthreshold logic to process and temperature variations. We propose a variation resilient adaptive controller for subthreshold circuits with the following novel features: new sensor based on time-to-digital converter for capturing the variations accurately as digital signatures, and an all-digital DC-DC converter incorporating the sensor capable of generating an operating operating Vdd from 0V to 1.2V with a resolution of 18.75mV, suitable for subthreshold circuit operation. The benefits of the proposed controller is reflected with energy improvement of up to 55% compared to when no controller is employed. The detailed implementation and validation of the proposed controller is discussed

    Improving practical sensitivity of energy optimized wake-up receivers: proof of concept in 65nm CMOS

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    We present a high performance low-power digital base-band architecture, specially designed for an energy optimized duty-cycled wake-up receiver scheme. Based on a careful wake-up beacon design, a structured wake-up beacon detection technique leads to an architecture that compensates for the implementation loss of a low-power wake-up receiver front-end at low energy and area costs. Design parameters are selected by energy optimization and the architecture is easily scalable to support various network sizes. Fabricated in 65nm CMOS, the digital base-band consumes 0.9uW (V_DD=0.37V) in sub-threshold operation at 250kbps, with appropriate 97% wake-up beacon detection and 0.04% false alarm probabilities. The circuit is fully functional at a minimum V_DD of 0.23V at f_max=5kHz and 0.018uW power consumption. Based on these results we show that our digital base-band can be used as a companion to compensate for front-end implementation losses resulting from the limited wake-up receiver power budget at a negligible cost. This implies an improvement of the practical sensitivity of the wake-up receiver, compared to what is traditionally reported.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Sensors Journa
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