256 research outputs found
Statistical analysis and design of subthreshold operation memories
This thesis presents novel methods based on a combination of well-known statistical techniques for faster estimation of memory yield and their application in the design of energy-efficient subthreshold memories. The emergence of size-constrained Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices and proliferation of the wearable market has brought forward the challenge of achieving the maximum energy efficiency per operation in these battery operated devices. Achieving this sought-after minimum energy operation is possible under sub-threshold operation of the circuit. However, reliable memory operation is currently unattainable at these ultra-low operating voltages because of the memory circuit's vanishing noise margins which shrink further in the presence of random process variations. The statistical methods, presented in this thesis, make the yield optimization of the sub-threshold memories computationally feasible by reducing the SPICE simulation overhead.
We present novel modifications to statistical sampling techniques that reduce the SPICE simulation overhead in estimating memory failure probability. These sampling scheme provides 40x reduction in finding most probable failure point and 10x reduction in estimating failure probability using the SPICE simulations compared to the existing proposals. We then provide a novel method to create surrogate models of the memory margins with better extrapolation capability than the traditional regression methods. These models, based on Gaussian process regression, encode the sensitivity of the memory margins with respect to each individual threshold variation source in a one-dimensional kernel. We find that our proposed additive kernel based models have 32% smaller out-of-sample error (that is, better extrapolation capability outside training set) than using the six-dimensional universal kernel like Radial Basis Function (RBF).
The thesis also explores the topological modifications to the SRAM bitcell to achieve faster read operation at the sub-threshold operating voltages. We present a ten-transistor SRAM bitcell that achieves 2x faster read operation than the existing ten-transistor sub-threshold SRAM bitcells, while ensuring similar noise margins. The SRAM bitcell provides 70% reduction in dynamic energy at the cost of 42% increase in the leakage energy per read operation. Finally, we investigate the energy efficiency of the eDRAM gain-cells as an alternative to the SRAM bitcells in the size-constrained IoT devices. We find that reducing their write path leakage current is the only way to reduce the read energy at Minimum Energy operation Point (MEP). Further, we study the effect of transistor up-sizing under the presence of threshold voltage variations on the mean MEP read energy by performing statistical analysis based on the ANOVA test of the full-factorial experimental design.Esta tesis presenta nuevos métodos basados en una combinación de técnicas estadísticas conocidas para la estimación rápida del rendimiento de la memoria y su aplicación en el diseño de memorias de energia eficiente de sub-umbral. La aparición de los dispositivos para el Internet de las cosas (IOT) y la proliferación del mercado portátil ha presentado el reto de lograr la máxima eficiencia energética por operación de estos dispositivos operados con baterias. La eficiencia de energía es posible si se considera la operacion por debajo del umbral de los circuitos. Sin embargo, la operación confiable de memoria es actualmente inalcanzable en estos bajos niveles de voltaje debido a márgenes de ruido de fuga del circuito de memoria, los cuales se pueden reducir aún más en presencia de variaciones randomicas de procesos. Los métodos estadísticos, que se presentan en esta tesis, hacen que la optimización del rendimiento de las memorias por debajo del umbral computacionalmente factible mediante la simulación SPICE. Presentamos nuevas modificaciones a las técnicas de muestreo estadístico que reducen la sobrecarga de simulación SPICE en la estimación de la probabilidad de fallo de memoria. Estos esquemas de muestreo proporciona una reducción de 40 veces en la búsqueda de puntos de fallo más probable, y 10 veces la reducción en la estimación de la probabilidad de fallo mediante las simulaciones SPICE en comparación con otras propuestas existentes. A continuación, se proporciona un método novedoso para crear modelos sustitutos de los márgenes de memoria con una mejor capacidad de extrapolación que los métodos tradicionales de regresión. Estos modelos, basados en el proceso de regresión Gaussiano, codifican la sensibilidad de los márgenes de memoria con respecto a cada fuente de variación de umbral individual en un núcleo de una sola dimensión. Los modelos propuestos, basados en kernel aditivos, tienen un error 32% menor que el error out-of-sample (es decir, mejor capacidad de extrapolación fuera del conjunto de entrenamiento) en comparacion con el núcleo universal de seis dimensiones como la función de base radial (RBF). La tesis también explora las modificaciones topológicas a la celda binaria SRAM para alcanzar velocidades de lectura mas rapidas dentro en el contexto de operaciones en el umbral de tensiones de funcionamiento. Presentamos una celda binaria SRAM de diez transistores que consigue aumentar en 2 veces la operación de lectura en comparacion con las celdas sub-umbral de SRAM de diez transistores existentes, garantizando al mismo tiempo los márgenes de ruido similares. La celda binaria SRAM proporciona una reducción del 70% en energía dinámica a costa del aumento del 42% en la energía de fuga por las operaciones de lectura. Por último, se investiga la eficiencia energética de las células de ganancia eDRAM como una alternativa a los bitcells SRAM en los dispositivos de tamaño limitado IOT. Encontramos que la reducción de la corriente de fuga en el path de escritura es la única manera de reducir la energía de lectura en el Punto Mínimo de Energía (MEP). Además, se estudia el efecto del transistor de dimensionamiento en virtud de la presencia de variaciones de voltaje de umbral en la media de energia de lecture MEP mediante el análisis estadístico basado en la prueba de ANOVA del diseño experimental factorial completo.Postprint (published version
Solid State Circuits Technologies
The evolution of solid-state circuit technology has a long history within a relatively short period of time. This technology has lead to the modern information society that connects us and tools, a large market, and many types of products and applications. The solid-state circuit technology continuously evolves via breakthroughs and improvements every year. This book is devoted to review and present novel approaches for some of the main issues involved in this exciting and vigorous technology. The book is composed of 22 chapters, written by authors coming from 30 different institutions located in 12 different countries throughout the Americas, Asia and Europe. Thus, reflecting the wide international contribution to the book. The broad range of subjects presented in the book offers a general overview of the main issues in modern solid-state circuit technology. Furthermore, the book offers an in depth analysis on specific subjects for specialists. We believe the book is of great scientific and educational value for many readers. I am profoundly indebted to the support provided by all of those involved in the work. First and foremost I would like to acknowledge and thank the authors who worked hard and generously agreed to share their results and knowledge. Second I would like to express my gratitude to the Intech team that invited me to edit the book and give me their full support and a fruitful experience while working together to combine this book
ULTRALOW-POWER, LOW-VOLTAGE DIGITAL CIRCUITS FOR BIOMEDICAL SENSOR NODES
Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH
Ultra-low-power SRAM design in high variability advanced CMOS
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 163-181).Embedded SRAMs are a critical component in modern digital systems, and their role is preferentially increasing. As a result, SRAMs strongly impact the overall power, performance, and area, and, in order to manage these severely constrained trade-offs, they must be specially designed for target applications. Highly energy-constrained systems (e.g. implantable biomedical devices, multimedia handsets, etc.) are an important class of applications driving ultra-low-power SRAMs. This thesis analyzes the energy of an SRAM sub-array. Since supply- and threshold-voltage have a strong effect, targets for these are established in order to optimize energy. Despite the heavy emphasis on leakage-energy, analysis of a high-density 256x256 sub-array in 45nm LP CMOS points to two necessary optimizations: (1) aggressive supply-voltage reduction (in addition to Vt elevation), and (2) performance enhancement. Important SRAM metrics, including read/write/hold-margin and read-current, are also investigated to identify trade-offs of these optimizations. Based on the need to lower supply-voltage, a 0.35V 256kb SRAM is demonstrated in 65nm LP CMOS. It uses an 8T bit-cell with peripheral circuit-assists to improve write-margin and bit-line leakage. Additionally, redundancy, to manage the increasing impact of variability in the periphery, is proposed to improve the area-offset trade-off of sense-amplifiers, demonstrating promise for highly advanced technology nodes. Based on the need to improve performance, which is limited by density constraints, a 64kb SRAM, using an offset-compensating sense-amplifier, is demonstrated in 45nm LP CMOS with high-density 0.25[mu]m2 bit-cells.(cont.) The sense-amplifier is regenerative, but non -strobed, overcoming timing uncertainties limiting performance, and it is single-ended, for compatibility with 8T cells. Compared to a conventional strobed sense-amplifier, it achieves 34% improvement in worst-case access-time and 4x improvement in the standard deviation of the access-time.by Naveen Verma.Ph.D
Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration for Dependable Systems
Moore’s law has served as goal and motivation for consumer electronics manufacturers in the last decades. The results in terms of processing power increase in the consumer electronics devices have been mainly achieved due to cost reduction and technology shrinking. However, reducing physical geometries mainly affects the electronic devices’ dependability, making them more sensitive to soft-errors like Single Event Transient (SET) of Single Event Upset (SEU) and hard (permanent) faults, e.g. due to aging effects.
Accordingly, safety critical systems often rely on the adoption of old technology nodes, even if they introduce longer design time w.r.t. consumer electronics. In fact, functional safety requirements are increasingly pushing industry in developing innovative methodologies to design high-dependable systems with the required diagnostic coverage. On the other hand commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) devices adoption began to be considered for safety-related systems due to real-time requirements, the need for the implementation of computationally hungry algorithms and lower design costs. In this field FPGA market share is constantly increased, thanks to their flexibility and low non-recurrent engineering costs, making them suitable for a set of safety critical applications with low production volumes.
The works presented in this thesis tries to face new dependability issues in modern reconfigurable systems, exploiting their special features to take proper counteractions with low impacton performances, namely Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration
Reliability in the face of variability in nanometer embedded memories
In this thesis, we have investigated the impact of parametric variations on the behaviour of one performance-critical processor structure - embedded memories. As variations manifest as a spread in power and performance, as a first step, we propose a novel modeling methodology that helps evaluate the impact of circuit-level optimizations on architecture-level design choices. Choices made at the design-stage ensure conflicting requirements from higher-levels are decoupled. We then complement such design-time optimizations with a runtime mechanism that takes advantage of adaptive body-biasing to lower power whilst improving performance in the presence of variability. Our proposal uses a novel fully-digital variation tracking hardware using embedded DRAM (eDRAM) cells to monitor run-time changes in cache latency and leakage. A special fine-grain body-bias generator uses the measurements to generate an optimal body-bias that is needed to meet the required yield targets. A novel variation-tolerant and soft-error hardened eDRAM cell is also proposed as an alternate candidate for replacing existing SRAM-based designs in latency critical memory structures. In the ultra low-power domain where reliable operation is limited by the minimum voltage of operation (Vddmin), we analyse the impact of failures on cache functional margin and functional yield. Towards this end, we have developed a fully automated tool (INFORMER) capable of estimating memory-wide metrics such as power, performance and yield accurately and rapidly. Using the developed tool, we then evaluate the #effectiveness of a new class of hybrid techniques in improving cache yield through failure prevention and correction. Having a holistic perspective of memory-wide metrics helps us arrive at design-choices optimized simultaneously for multiple metrics needed for maintaining lifetime requirements
Algorithm/Architecture Co-Design for Low-Power Neuromorphic Computing
The development of computing systems based on the conventional von Neumann architecture has slowed down in the past decade as complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology scaling becomes more and more difficult. To satisfy the ever-increasing demands in computing power, neuromorphic computing has emerged as an attractive alternative. This dissertation focuses on developing learning algorithm, hardware architecture, circuit components, and design methodologies for low-power neuromorphic computing that can be employed in various energy-constrained applications.
A top-down approach is adopted in this research. Starting from the algorithm-architecture co-design, a hardware-friendly learning algorithm is developed for spiking neural networks (SNNs). The possibility of estimating gradients from spike timings is explored. The learning algorithm is developed for the ease of hardware implementation, as well as the compatibility with many well-established learning techniques developed for classic artificial neural networks (ANNs). An SNN hardware equipped with the proposed on-chip learning algorithm is implemented in CMOS technology. In this design, two unique features of SNNs, the event-driven computation and the inferring with a progressive precision, are leveraged to reduce the energy consumption. In addition to low-power SNN hardware, accelerators for ANNs are also presented to accelerate the adaptive dynamic programing algorithm. An efficient and flexible single-instruction-multiple-data architecture is proposed to exploit the inherent data-level parallelism in the inference and learning of ANNs. In addition, the accelerator is augmented with a virtual update technique, which helps improve the throughput and energy efficiency remarkably. Lastly, two techniques in the architecture-circuit level are introduced to mitigate the degraded reliability of the memory system in a neuromorphic hardware owing to the aggressively-scaled supply voltage and integration density. The first method uses on-chip feedback to compensate for the process variation and the second technique improves the throughput and energy efficiency of a conventional error-correction method.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144149/1/zhengn_1.pd
Low-Power and Error-Resilient VLSI Circuits and Systems.
Efficient low-power operation is critically important for the success of the next-generation signal processing applications. Device and supply voltage have been continuously scaled to meet a more constrained power envelope, but scaling has created resiliency challenges, including increasing timing faults and soft errors. Our research aims at designing low-power and robust circuits and systems for signal processing by drawing circuit, architecture, and algorithm approaches.
To gain an insight into the system faults due to supply voltage reduction, we researched the two primary effects that determine the minimum supply voltage (VMIN) in Intel’s tri-gate CMOS technology, namely process variations and gate-dielectric soft breakdown. We determined that voltage scaling increases the timing window that sequential circuits are vulnerable. Thus, we proposed a new hold-time violation metric to define hold-time VMIN, which has been adopted as a new design standard.
Device scaling increases soft errors which affect circuit reliability. Through extensive soft error characterization using two 65nm CMOS test chips, we studied the soft error mechanisms and its dependence on supply voltage and clock frequency. This study laid the foundation of the first 65nm DSP chip design for a NASA spaceflight project. To mitigate such random errors, we proposed a new confidence-driven architecture that effectively enhances the error resiliency of deeply scaled CMOS and post-CMOS circuits.
Designing low-power resilient systems can effectively leverage application-specific algorithmic approaches. To explore design opportunities in the algorithmic domain, we demonstrate an application-specific detection and decoding processor for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) wireless communication. To enhance the receive error rate for a robust wireless communication, we designed a joint detection and decoding technique by enclosing detection and decoding in an iterative loop to enhance both interference cancellation and error reduction. A proof-of-concept chip design was fabricated for the next-generation 4x4 256QAM MIMO systems. Through algorithm-architecture optimizations and low-power circuit techniques, our design achieves significant improvements in throughput, energy efficiency and error rate, paving the way for future developments in this area.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110323/1/uchchen_1.pd
Exploiting Natural On-chip Redundancy for Energy Efficient Memory and Computing
Power density is currently the primary design constraint across most computing segments and the main performance limiting factor. For years, industry has kept power density constant, while increasing frequency, lowering transistors supply (Vdd) and threshold (Vth) voltages. However, Vth scaling has stopped because leakage current is exponentially related to it. Transistor count and integration density keep doubling every process generation (Moore’s Law), but the power budget caps the amount of hardware that can be active at the same time, leading to dark silicon. With each new generation, there are more resources available, but we cannot fully exploit their performance potential. In the last years, different research trends have explored how to cope with dark silicon and unlock the energy efficiency of the chips, including Near-Threshold voltage Computing (NTC) and approximate computing. NTC aggressively lowers Vdd to values near Vth. This allows a substantial reduction in power, as dynamic power scales quadratically with supply voltage. The resultant power reduction could be used to activate more chip resources and potentially achieve performance improvements. Unfortunately, Vdd scaling is limited by the tight functionality margins of on-chip SRAM transistors. When scaling Vdd down to values near-threshold, manufacture-induced parameter variations affect the functionality of SRAM cells, which eventually become not reliable. A large amount of emerging applications, on the other hand, features an intrinsic error-resilience property, tolerating a certain amount of noise. In this context, approximate computing takes advantage of this observation and exploits the gap between the level of accuracy required by the application and the level of accuracy given by the computation, providing that reducing the accuracy translates into an energy gain. However, deciding which instructions and data and which techniques are best suited for approximation still poses a major challenge. This dissertation contributes in these two directions. First, it proposes a new approach to mitigate the impact of SRAM failures due to parameter variation for effective operation at ultra-low voltages. We identify two levels of natural on-chip redundancy: cache level and content level. The first arises because of the replication of blocks in multi-level cache hierarchies. We exploit this redundancy with a cache management policy that allocates blocks to entries taking into account the nature of the cache entry and the use pattern of the block. This policy obtains performance improvements between 2% and 34%, with respect to block disabling, a technique with similar complexity, incurring no additional storage overhead. The latter (content level redundancy) arises because of the redundancy of data in real world applications. We exploit this redundancy compressing cache blocks to fit them in partially functional cache entries. At the cost of a slight overhead increase, we can obtain performance within 2% of that obtained when the cache is built with fault-free cells, even if more than 90% of the cache entries have at least a faulty cell. Then, we analyze how the intrinsic noise tolerance of emerging applications can be exploited to design an approximate Instruction Set Architecture (ISA). Exploiting the ISA redundancy, we explore a set of techniques to approximate the execution of instructions across a set of emerging applications, pointing out the potential of reducing the complexity of the ISA, and the trade-offs of the approach. In a proof-of-concept implementation, the ISA is shrunk in two dimensions: Breadth (i.e., simplifying instructions) and Depth (i.e., dropping instructions). This proof-of-concept shows that energy can be reduced on average 20.6% at around 14.9% accuracy loss
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