186 research outputs found

    High-Speed and Low-Energy On-Chip Communication Circuits.

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    Continuous technology scaling sharply reduces transistor delays, while fixed-length global wire delays have increased due to less wiring pitch with higher resistance and coupling capacitance. Due to this ever growing gap, long on-chip interconnects pose well-known latency, bandwidth, and energy challenges to high-performance VLSI systems. Repeaters effectively mitigate wire RC effects but do little to improve their energy costs. Moreover, the increased complexity and high level of integration requires higher wire densities, worsening crosstalk noise and power consumption of conventionally repeated interconnects. Such increasing concerns in global on-chip wires motivate circuits to improve wire performance and energy while reducing the number of repeaters. This work presents circuit techniques and investigation for high-performance and energy-efficient on-chip communication in the aspects of encoding, data compression, self-timed current injection, signal pre-emphasis, low-swing signaling, and technology mapping. The improved bus designs also consider the constraints of robust operation and performance/energy gains across process corners and design space. Measurement results from 5mm links on 65nm and 90nm prototype chips validate 2.5-3X improvement in energy-delay product.Ph.D.Electrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75800/1/jseo_1.pd

    Design Techniques for On-Chip Global Signaling Over Lossy Transmission Lines.

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    This thesis describes techniques for global high-speed signaling over long (~10mm) lossy chip-serial transmission lines. With the increase in clock frequencies to multi-GHz rates, it has become impossible to move data across a die in a single clock cycle using conventional parallel bus-based communication. There are also reliability problems due to timing errors, skew, and jitter in fully synchronous systems. Noise, coupling, and inductive effects become significant for both intermediate length and global routing. A new on-chip lossy transmission line technique is developed and new driver and receiver circuitry for on-chip serial links are described. High-speed long-range serial signaling is best done over transmission lines. However, because of the relatively high sheet resistance of metal interconnect layers, on-chip transmission lines tend to be lossy. Matched termination with resistors and the proper selection of the characteristic impedance of the transmission line structure can effectively suppress ISI. Fast digital CMOS technology allows pulsed mode data drivers to operate at multi-GHz rates. A phase-tuned receiver samples and de-serializes the received signal. Since the sampling instant is tuned to match the received signal eye, there is no requirement to match the clock and signal routing or clock and signal delays. A complete self-testing on-chip transceiver communicating over a 5.8mm on-chip transmission line is implemented in 0.13um CMOS and tested. The measured BER at 9Gbps is less than 10^-10. Interleaving is usually necessary in high serial data rate serializer and de-serializer circuits. Multi-stage LC oscillators can be used to generate low phase noise multi-phases clocks required for interleaving. Conventional coupling between oscillators introduces out of phase currents, and this out of phase current causes a lower effective quality factor for each oscillator stage. However, capacitive coupling, a new technique, introduces in phase coupling between stages. Increased coupling with a ring of capacitors decreases phase spacing error dramatically and, in addition, the phase noise of multi-stages is also decreased thanks to in-phase coupling.Ph.D.Electrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58491/1/parkjy_1.pd

    Reduced power output in skeletal muscles devoid of skMLCK: RLC phosphorylation contributes to peak performance

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    Regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation in fast twitch muscle is catalyzed by skeletal myosin light chain kinase (skMLCK), a reaction known to increase muscle force, work, and power. The purpose of this study was to explore the contribution of RLC phosphorylation on the power of mouse fast muscle during high frequency (100 Hz) concentric contractions. To determine peak power shortening ramps (1.05 to 0.90 Lo) were applied to Wildtype (WT) and skMLCK knockout (skMLCK-/-) EDL muscles at a range of shortening velocities between 0.05-0.65 of maximal shortening velocity (Vmax), before and after a conditioning stimulus (CS). As a result, mean power was increased to 1.28 ± 0.05 and 1.11 ± .05 of pre-CS values, when collapsed for shortening velocity in WT and skMLCK-/-, respectively (n = 10). In addition, fitting each data set to a second order polynomial revealed that WT mice had significantly higher peak power output (27.67 ± 1.12 W/ kg-1) than skMLCK-/- (25.97 ± 1.02 W/ kg-1), (p .05). Analysis with Urea Glycerol PAGE determined that RLC phosphate content had been elevated in WT muscles from 8 to 63 % while minimal changes were observed in skMLCK-/- muscles: 3 and 8 %, respectively. Therefore, the lack of stimulation induced increase in RLC phosphate content resulted in a ~40 % smaller enhancement of mean power in skMLCK-/-. The increase in power output in WT mice suggests that RLC phosphorylation is a major potentiating component required for achieving peak muscle performance during brief high frequency concentric contractions

    Analog-Digital System Modeling for Electromagnetic Susceptibility Prediction

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    The thesis is focused on the noise susceptibility of communication networks. These analog-mixed signal systems operate in an electrically noisy environment, in presence of multiple equipments connected by means of long wiring. Every module communicates using a transceiver as an interface between the local digital signaling and the data transmission through the network. Hence, the performance of the IC transceiver when affected by disturbances is one of the main factors that guarantees the EM immunity of the whole equipment. The susceptibility to RF and transient disturbances is addressed at component level on a CAN transceiver as a test case, highlighting the IC features critical for noise immunity. A novel procedure is proposed for the IC modeling for mixed-signal immunity simulations of communication networks. The procedure is based on a gray-box approach, modeling IC ports with a physical circuit and the internal links with a behavioural block. The parameters are estimated from time and frequency domain measurements, allowing accurate and efficient reproduction of non-linear device switching behaviours. The effectiveness of the modeling process is verified by applying the proposed technique to a CAN transceiver, involved in a real immunity test on a data communication link. The obtained model is successfully implemented in a commercial solver to predict both the functional signals and the RF noise immunity at component level. The noise immunity at system level is then evaluated on a complete communication network, analyzing the results of several tests on a realistic CAN bus. After developing models for wires and injection probes, a noise immunity test in avionic environment is carried out in a simulation environment, observing good overall accuracy and efficiency

    Nonlinearity and noise modeling of operational transconductance amplifiers for continuous time analog filters

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    A general framework for performance optimization of continuous-time OTA-C (Operational Transconductance Amplifier-Capacitor) filters is proposed. Efficient procedures for evaluating nonlinear distortion and noise valid for any filter of arbitrary order are developed based on the matrix description of a general OTA-C filter model . Since these procedures use OTA macromodels, they can be used to obtain the results significantly faster than transistor-level simulation. In the case of transient analysis, the speed-up may be as much as three orders of magnitude without almost no loss of accuracy. This makes it possible to carry out direct numerical optimization of OTA-C filters with respect to important characteristics such as noise performance, THD, IM3, DR or SNR. On the other hand, the general OTA-C filter model allows us to apply matrix transforms that manipulate (rescale) filter element values and/or change topology without changing its transfer function. The above features are a basis to build automated optimization procedures for OTA-C filters. In particular, a systematic optimization procedure using equivalence transformations is proposed. The research also proposes suitable software implementations of the optimization process. The first part of the research proposes a general performance optimization procedure and to verify the process two application type examples are mentioned. An application example of the proposed approach to optimal block sequencing and gain distribution of 8th order cascade Butterworth filter (for two variants of OTA topologies) is given. Secondly the modeling tool is used to select the best suitable topology for a 5th order Bessel Low Pass Filter. Theoretical results are verified by comparing to transistor-level simulation withCADENCE. For the purpose of verification, the filters have also been fabricated in standard 0.5mm CMOS process. The second part of the research proposes a new linearization technique to improve the linearity of an OTA using an Active Error Feedforward technique. Most present day applications require very high linear circuits combined with low noise and low power consumption. An OTA based biquad filter has also been fabricated in 0.35mm CMOS process. The measurement results for the filter and the stand alone OTA have been discussed. The research focuses on these issues
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