8 research outputs found
CAD Techniques for Robust FPGA Design Under Variability
The imperfections in the semiconductor fabrication process and uncertainty in operating environment of VLSI circuits have emerged as critical challenges for the semiconductor industry. These are generally termed as process and environment variations, which lead to uncertainty in
performance and unreliable operation of the circuits. These problems have been
further aggravated in scaled nanometer technologies due to increased process
variations and reduced operating voltage.
Several techniques have been proposed recently for designing digital VLSI circuits
under variability. However, most of them have targeted ASICs and custom designs.
The flexibility of reconfiguration and unknown end application in FPGAs
make design under variability different for FPGAs compared to
ASICs and custom designs, and the techniques proposed for ASICs and custom designs cannot be directly applied
to FPGAs. An important design consideration is to minimize the modifications in architecture and circuit
to reduce the cost of changing the existing FPGA architecture and circuit.
The focus of this work can be divided into three principal categories, which are, improving
timing yield under process variations, improving power yield under process variations and improving the voltage profile
in the FPGA power grid.
The work on timing yield improvement proposes routing architecture enhancements along with CAD techniques to
improve the timing yield of FPGA designs. The work on power yield improvement for FPGAs selects a low power dual-Vdd FPGA design
as the baseline FPGA architecture for developing power yield enhancement techniques. It proposes CAD techniques to improve the
power yield of FPGAs. A mathematical programming technique is proposed to determine the parameters
of the buffers in the interconnect such as the sizes of the transistors and threshold voltage of the transistors, all
within constraints, such that the leakage variability is minimized under delay constraints.
Two CAD techniques are investigated and proposed to improve the supply voltage profile of
the power grids in FPGAs. The first technique is a place and route technique and the second technique
is a logic clustering technique to reduce IR-drops and spatial variation of supply voltage in the power grid
Parametric Yield of VLSI Systems under Variability: Analysis and Design Solutions
Variability has become one of the vital challenges that the
designers of integrated circuits encounter. variability becomes
increasingly important. Imperfect manufacturing process manifest
itself as variations in the design parameters. These variations
and those in the operating environment of VLSI circuits result in
unexpected changes in the timing, power, and reliability of the
circuits. With scaling transistor dimensions, process and
environmental variations become significantly important in the
modern VLSI design. A smaller feature size means that the physical
characteristics of a device are more prone to these
unaccounted-for changes. To achieve a robust design, the random
and systematic fluctuations in the manufacturing process and the
variations in the environmental parameters should be analyzed and
the impact on the parametric yield should be addressed.
This thesis studies the challenges and comprises solutions for
designing robust VLSI systems in the presence of variations.
Initially, to get some insight into the system design under
variability, the parametric yield is examined for a small circuit.
Understanding the impact of variations on the yield at the circuit
level is vital to accurately estimate and optimize the yield at
the system granularity. Motivated by the observations and results,
found at the circuit level, statistical analyses are performed,
and solutions are proposed, at the system level of abstraction, to
reduce the impact of the variations and increase the parametric
yield.
At the circuit level, the impact of the supply and threshold
voltage variations on the parametric yield is discussed. Here, a
design centering methodology is proposed to maximize the
parametric yield and optimize the power-performance trade-off
under variations. In addition, the scaling trend in the yield loss
is studied. Also, some considerations for design centering in the
current and future CMOS technologies are explored.
The investigation, at the circuit level, suggests that the
operating temperature significantly affects the parametric yield.
In addition, the yield is very sensitive to the magnitude of the
variations in supply and threshold voltage. Therefore, the spatial
variations in process and environmental variations make it
necessary to analyze the yield at a higher granularity. Here,
temperature and voltage variations are mapped across the chip to
accurately estimate the yield loss at the system level.
At the system level, initially the impact of process-induced
temperature variations on the power grid design is analyzed. Also,
an efficient verification method is provided that ensures the
robustness of the power grid in the presence of variations. Then,
a statistical analysis of the timing yield is conducted, by taking
into account both the process and environmental variations. By
considering the statistical profile of the temperature and supply
voltage, the process variations are mapped to the delay variations
across a die. This ensures an accurate estimation of the timing
yield. In addition, a method is proposed to accurately estimate
the power yield considering process-induced temperature and supply
voltage variations. This helps check the robustness of the
circuits early in the design process.
Lastly, design solutions are presented to reduce the power
consumption and increase the timing yield under the variations. In
the first solution, a guideline for floorplaning optimization in
the presence of temperature variations is offered. Non-uniformity
in the thermal profiles of integrated circuits is an issue that
impacts the parametric yield and threatens chip reliability.
Therefore, the correlation between the total power consumption and
the temperature variations across a chip is examined. As a result,
floorplanning guidelines are proposed that uses the correlation to
efficiently optimize the chip's total power and takes into account
the thermal uniformity.
The second design solution provides an optimization methodology
for assigning the power supply pads across the chip for maximizing
the timing yield. A mixed-integer nonlinear programming (MINLP)
optimization problem, subject to voltage drop and current
constraint, is efficiently solved to find the optimum number and
location of the pads
Low Power Memory/Memristor Devices and Systems
This reprint focusses on achieving low-power computation using memristive devices. The topic was designed as a convenient reference point: it contains a mix of techniques starting from the fundamental manufacturing of memristive devices all the way to applications such as physically unclonable functions, and also covers perspectives on, e.g., in-memory computing, which is inextricably linked with emerging memory devices such as memristors. Finally, the reprint contains a few articles representing how other communities (from typical CMOS design to photonics) are fighting on their own fronts in the quest towards low-power computation, as a comparison with the memristor literature. We hope that readers will enjoy discovering the articles within
Dependable Embedded Systems
This Open Access book introduces readers to many new techniques for enhancing and optimizing reliability in embedded systems, which have emerged particularly within the last five years. This book introduces the most prominent reliability concerns from today’s points of view and roughly recapitulates the progress in the community so far. Unlike other books that focus on a single abstraction level such circuit level or system level alone, the focus of this book is to deal with the different reliability challenges across different levels starting from the physical level all the way to the system level (cross-layer approaches). The book aims at demonstrating how new hardware/software co-design solution can be proposed to ef-fectively mitigate reliability degradation such as transistor aging, processor variation, temperature effects, soft errors, etc. Provides readers with latest insights into novel, cross-layer methods and models with respect to dependability of embedded systems; Describes cross-layer approaches that can leverage reliability through techniques that are pro-actively designed with respect to techniques at other layers; Explains run-time adaptation and concepts/means of self-organization, in order to achieve error resiliency in complex, future many core systems