3,269 research outputs found

    The implementation and applications of multiple-valued logic

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    Multiple-Valued Logic (MVL) takes two major forms. Multiple-valued circuits can implement the logic directly by using multiple-valued signals, or the logic can be implemented indirectly with binary circuits, by using more than one binary signal to represent a single multiple-valued signal. Techniques such as carry-save addition can be viewed as indirectly implemented MVL. Both direct and indirect techniques have been shown in the past to provide advantages over conventional arithmetic and logic techniques in algorithms required widely in computing for applications such as image and signal processing. It is possible to implement basic MVL building blocks at the transistor level. However, these circuits are difficult to design due to their non binary nature. In the design stage they are more like analogue circuits than binary circuits. Current integrated circuit technologies are biased towards binary circuitry. However, in spite of this, there is potential for power and area savings from MVL circuits, especially in technologies such as BiCMOS. This thesis shows that the use of voltage mode MVL will, in general not provide bandwidth increases on circuit buses because the buses become slower as the number of signal levels increases. Current mode MVL circuits however do have potential to reduce power and area requirements of arithmetic circuitry. The design of transistor level circuits is investigated in terms of a modern production technology. A novel methodology for the design of current mode MVL circuits is developed. The methodology is based upon the novel concept of the use of non-linear current encoding of signals, providing the opportunity for the efficient design of many previously unimplemented circuits in current mode MVL. This methodology is used to design a useful set of basic MVL building blocks, and fabrication results are reported. The creation of libraries of MVL circuits is also discussed. The CORDIC algorithm for two dimensional vector rotation is examined in detail as an example for indirect MVL implementation. The algorithm is extended to a set of three dimensional vector rotators using conventional arithmetic, redundant radix four arithmetic, and Taylor's series expansions. These algorithms can be used for two dimensional vector rotations in which no scale factor corrections are needed. The new algorithms are compared in terms of basic VLSI criteria against previously reported algorithms. A pipelined version of the redundant arithmetic algorithm is floorplanned and partially laid out to give indications of wiring overheads, and layout densities. An indirectly implemented MVL algorithm such as the CORDIC algorithm described in this thesis would clearly benefit from direct implementation in MVL

    Evaluation of selected strapdown inertial instruments and pulse torque loops, volume 1

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    Design, operational and performance variations between ternary, binary and forced-binary pulse torque loops are presented. A fill-in binary loop which combines the constant power advantage of binary with the low sampling error of ternary is also discussed. The effects of different output-axis supports on the performance of a single-degree-of-freedom, floated gyroscope under a strapdown environment are illustrated. Three types of output-axis supports are discussed: pivot-dithered jewel, ball bearing and electromagnetic. A test evaluation on a Kearfott 2544 single-degree-of-freedom, strapdown gyroscope operating with a pulse torque loop, under constant rates and angular oscillatory inputs is described and the results presented. Contributions of the gyroscope's torque generator and the torque-to-balance electronics on scale factor variation with rate are illustrated for a SDF 18 IRIG Mod-B strapdown gyroscope operating with various pulse rebalance loops. Also discussed are methods of reducing this scale factor variation with rate by adjusting the tuning network which shunts the torque coil. A simplified analysis illustrating the principles of operation of the Teledyne two-degree-of-freedom, elastically-supported, tuned gyroscope and the results of a static and constant rate test evaluation of that instrument are presented

    SIRU development. Volume 1: System development

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    A complete description of the development and initial evaluation of the Strapdown Inertial Reference Unit (SIRU) system is reported. System development documents the system mechanization with the analytic formulation for fault detection and isolation processing structure; the hardware redundancy design and the individual modularity features; the computational structure and facilities; and the initial subsystem evaluation results

    State of the Art Computational Ternary Logic Currnent-Mode Circuits Based on CNTFET Technology

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    Computational operations are considered as a time-consuming and important operation in ALU. These circuits play major role in computational operation in processing unit. This paper presents new computational Ternary Current Mode Circuits including comparator, multiplexer, decoder, and exclusive OR by means of Carbon NanoTube Field Effect Transistors. The new designs rely on three major parts: 1) the input currents which are converted to voltage; 2) threshold detectors; and 3) the output current flow paths to generate the outputs. The designs have been simulated based on 32nm CNFTET using Synopsys Hspice simulator

    Memcapacitive Devices in Logic and Crossbar Applications

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    Over the last decade, memristive devices have been widely adopted in computing for various conventional and unconventional applications. While the integration density, memory property, and nonlinear characteristics have many benefits, reducing the energy consumption is limited by the resistive nature of the devices. Memcapacitors would address that limitation while still having all the benefits of memristors. Recent work has shown that with adjusted parameters during the fabrication process, a metal-oxide device can indeed exhibit a memcapacitive behavior. We introduce novel memcapacitive logic gates and memcapacitive crossbar classifiers as a proof of concept that such applications can outperform memristor-based architectures. The results illustrate that, compared to memristive logic gates, our memcapacitive gates consume about 7x less power. The memcapacitive crossbar classifier achieves similar classification performance but reduces the power consumption by a factor of about 1,500x for the MNIST dataset and a factor of about 1,000x for the CIFAR-10 dataset compared to a memristive crossbar. Our simulation results demonstrate that memcapacitive devices have great potential for both Boolean logic and analog low-power applications

    Ultra-Low Power Ternary CMOS Platform for Physical Synthesis of Multi-Valued Logic and Memory Applications

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringMotivation of this work is to provide feasible, scalable, and designable multi-valued logic (MVL) device platform for physical synthesis of MVL circuits. Especially, ternary device and its general logic functions are focused, owing to most efficiently reduced circuit complexity per radix (R) increase. By designing the OFF-state constant current, not only the standby power (PS) issue of additional intermediate state is overcome, but also continuous supply voltage (VDD) scaling and dynamic power (PD) scaling are possible owing to single-step I-V characteristics. By applying a novel ternary device concept to CMOS technology with OFF-state current mechanism of band-to-band tunneling (BTBT) currents (IBTBT) and subthreshold diffusion current (Isub), the logic changes from binary to ternary are confirmed using mixed-mode device simulation. I experimentally demonstrate ternary CMOS (T-CMOS) and verified its low-power standard ternary inverter (STI) operation by designing channel profiles in conventional binary CMOS. The realized complementary ternary n/pMOS (T-n/pMOS) have fully gate bias (VG)-independent and symmetrical IBTBT of ~10 pA/???m based on proven ion-implantation process, which produces stable and designable intermediate state (VOM) at exactly VDD/2. To present T-CMOS design frameworks in terms of static noise margin (SNM) enhancement and ultra-low power operation, I develop the compact model of T-CMOS and verify the physical model parameters with experimental data. Through the feasible design of Isub with abrupt channel profile based on low thermal budget process, STI has a SNM of 283 mV (80 % of ideal SNM) at VDD= 1V operation and intermediate state stability of ??VOM < ?? 0.1V, even considering the random-dopant fluctuation (RDF) of 32 nm and 22 nm technology. Continuous VDD scaling below 0.5V (SNM= 40% at VDD = 0.3V) enables STI operation with ultra-low PD and PS based on exponentially reduced IBTBT currents. As MVL and memory (MVM) applications, minimum(MIN)/maximum(MAX) gates, analog-to-digital converter (ADC) circuit, and 5-state latch are studied with T-CMOS compact model. Especially ADC circuits revolutionary decreases number of device and circuit interconnection with 9.6% area of binary system.ope

    Advanced 3-V semiconductor technology assessment

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    Components required for extensions of currently planned space communications systems are discussed for large antennas, crosslink systems, single sideband systems, Aerostat systems, and digital signal processing. Systems using advanced modulation concepts and new concepts in communications satellites are included. The current status and trends in materials technology are examined with emphasis on bulk growth of semi-insulating GaAs and InP, epitaxial growth, and ion implantation. Microwave solid state discrete active devices, multigigabit rate GaAs digital integrated circuits, microwave integrated circuits, and the exploratory development of GaInAs devices, heterojunction devices, and quasi-ballistic devices is considered. Competing technologies such as RF power generation, filter structures, and microwave circuit fabrication are discussed. The fundamental limits of semiconductor devices and problems in implementation are explored
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