527 research outputs found
Quantum-dot Cellular Automata: Review Paper
Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) is one of the most important discoveries that will be the successful alternative for CMOS technology in the near future. An important feature of this technique, which has attracted the attention of many researchers, is that it is characterized by its low energy consumption, high speed and small size compared with CMOS. Inverter and majority gate are the basic building blocks for QCA circuits where it can design the most logical circuit using these gates with help of QCA wire. Due to the lack of availability of review papers, this paper will be a destination for many people who are interested in the QCA field and to know how it works and why it had taken lots of attention recentl
Fault and Defect Tolerant Computer Architectures: Reliable Computing With Unreliable Devices
This research addresses design of a reliable computer from unreliable device technologies. A system architecture is developed for a fault and defect tolerant (FDT) computer. Trade-offs between different techniques are studied and yield and hardware cost models are developed. Fault and defect tolerant designs are created for the processor and the cache memory. Simulation results for the content-addressable memory (CAM)-based cache show 90% yield with device failure probabilities of 3 x 10(-6), three orders of magnitude better than non fault tolerant caches of the same size. The entire processor achieves 70% yield with device failure probabilities exceeding 10(-6). The required hardware redundancy is approximately 15 times that of a non-fault tolerant design. While larger than current FT designs, this architecture allows the use of devices much more likely to fail than silicon CMOS. As part of model development, an improved model is derived for NAND Multiplexing. The model is the first accurate model for small and medium amounts of redundancy. Previous models are extended to account for dependence between the inputs and produce more accurate results
Survey on Fault Tolerance Startgies for Advance Microelectronics Chip
In the complex advance microelectronics based system, handling units are managing gadgets of littler size, which are delicate to the transient faults. A framework should be fabricated that will perceive the presence of faults and fuses strategies to will endure these faults without troublesome the typical activity A transient fault happens in a circuit caused by the electromagnetic commotions, astronomical beams, crosstalk and power supply clamor. It is extremely hard to recognize these faults amid disconnected testing. Subsequently a region effective fault tolerant full adder for testing and fixing of transient and changeless faults happened in single and multi-net is proposed. Furthermore, the proposed design can likewise identify and fix perpetual faults. This structure acquires much lower equipment overheads with respect to the conventional equipment design. In this paper, talk about various fault tolerant methodology for CMOS and ICs
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A Novel Reconfiguration Scheme in Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata for Energy Efficient Nanocomputing
Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata (QCA) is currently being investigated as an alternative to CMOS technology. There has been extensive study on a wide range of circuits from simple logical circuits such as adders to complex circuits such as 4-bit processors. At the same time, little if any work has been done in considering the possibility of reconfiguration to reduce power in QCA devices. This work presents one of the first such efforts when considering reconfigurable QCA architectures which are expected to be both robust and power efficient. We present a new reconfiguration scheme which is highly robust and is expected to dissipate less power with respect to conventional designs. An adder design based on the reconfiguration scheme will be presented in this thesis, with a detailed power analysis and comparison with existing designs. In order to overcome the problems of routing which comes with reconfigurability, a new wire crossing mechanism is also presented as part of this thesis
New Symmetric and Planar Designs of Reversible Full-Adders/Subtractors in Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata
Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) is one of the emerging nanotechnologies,
promising alternative to CMOS technology due to faster speed, smaller size,
lower power consumption, higher scale integration and higher switching
frequency. Also, power dissipation is the main limitation of all the nano
electronics design techniques including the QCA. Researchers have proposed the
various mechanisms to limit this problem. Among them, reversible computing is
considered as the reliable solution to lower the power dissipation. On the
other hand, adders are fundamental circuits for most digital systems. In this
paper, Innovation is divided to three sections. In the first section, a method
for converting irreversible functions to a reversible one is presented. This
method has advantages such as: converting of irreversible functions to
reversible one directly and as optimal. So, in this method, sub-optimal methods
of using of conventional reversible blocks such as Toffoli and Fredkin are not
used, having of minimum number of garbage outputs and so on. Then, Using the
method, two new symmetric and planar designs of reversible full-adders are
presented. In the second section, a new symmetric, planar and fault tolerant
five-input majority gate is proposed. Based on the designed gate, a reversible
full-adder are presented. Also, for this gate, a fault-tolerant analysis is
proposed. And in the third section, three new 8-bit reversible
full-adder/subtractors are designed based on full-adders/subtractors proposed
in the second section. The results are indicative of the outperformance of the
proposed designs in comparison to the best available ones in terms of area,
complexity, delay, reversible/irreversible layout, and also in logic level in
terms of garbage outputs, control inputs, number of majority and NOT gates
New Symmetric and Planar Designs of Reversible Full-Adders/Subtractors in Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata
Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) is one of the emerging nanotechnologies,
promising alternative to CMOS technology due to faster speed, smaller size,
lower power consumption, higher scale integration and higher switching
frequency. Also, power dissipation is the main limitation of all the nano
electronics design techniques including the QCA. Researchers have proposed the
various mechanisms to limit this problem. Among them, reversible computing is
considered as the reliable solution to lower the power dissipation. On the
other hand, adders are fundamental circuits for most digital systems. In this
paper, Innovation is divided to three sections. In the first section, a method
for converting irreversible functions to a reversible one is presented. This
method has advantages such as: converting of irreversible functions to
reversible one directly and as optimal. So, in this method, sub-optimal methods
of using of conventional reversible blocks such as Toffoli and Fredkin are not
used, having of minimum number of garbage outputs and so on. Then, Using the
method, two new symmetric and planar designs of reversible full-adders are
presented. In the second section, a new symmetric, planar and fault tolerant
five-input majority gate is proposed. Based on the designed gate, a reversible
full-adder are presented. Also, for this gate, a fault-tolerant analysis is
proposed. And in the third section, three new 8-bit reversible
full-adder/subtractors are designed based on full-adders/subtractors proposed
in the second section. The results are indicative of the outperformance of the
proposed designs in comparison to the best available ones in terms of area,
complexity, delay, reversible/irreversible layout, and also in logic level in
terms of garbage outputs, control inputs, number of majority and NOT gates
Advanced Information Processing Methods and Their Applications
This Special Issue has collected and presented breakthrough research on information processing methods and their applications. Particular attention is paid to the study of the mathematical foundations of information processing methods, quantum computing, artificial intelligence, digital image processing, and the use of information technologies in medicine
Multiple bit error correcting architectures over finite fields
This thesis proposes techniques to mitigate multiple bit errors in GF arithmetic circuits. As GF arithmetic circuits such as multipliers constitute the complex and important functional unit of a crypto-processor, making them fault tolerant will improve the reliability of circuits that are employed in safety applications and the errors may cause catastrophe if not mitigated.
Firstly, a thorough literature review has been carried out. The merits of efficient schemes are carefully analyzed to study the space for improvement in error correction, area and power consumption.
Proposed error correction schemes include bit parallel ones using optimized BCH codes that are useful in applications where power and area are not prime concerns. The scheme is also extended to dynamically correcting scheme to reduce decoder delay. Other method that suits low power and area applications such as RFIDs and smart cards using cross parity codes is also proposed. The experimental evaluation shows that the proposed techniques can mitigate single and multiple bit errors with wider
error coverage compared to existing methods with lesser area and power consumption. The proposed scheme is used to mask the errors appearing at the output of the circuit irrespective of their cause.
This thesis also investigates the error mitigation schemes in emerging technologies (QCA, CNTFET) to compare area, power and delay with existing CMOS equivalent. Though the proposed novel multiple error correcting techniques can not ensure 100% error mitigation, inclusion of these techniques
to actual design can improve the reliability of the circuits or increase the difficulty in hacking crypto-devices. Proposed schemes can also be extended to non GF digital circuits
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