167 research outputs found
Design of Analog-to-Digital Converters with Embedded Mixing for Ultra-Low-Power Radio Receivers
In the field of radio receivers, down-conversion methods usually rely on one (or more)
explicit mixing stage(s) before the analog-to-digital converter (ADC). These stages not
only contribute to the overall power consumption but also have an impact on area and can
compromise the receiver’s performance in terms of noise and linearity. On the other hand,
most ADCs require some sort of reference signal in order to properly digitize an analog
input signal. The implementation of this reference signal usually relies on bandgap
circuits and reference buffers to generate a constant, stable, dc signal. Disregarding this
conventional approach, the work developed in this thesis aims to explore the viability
behind the usage of a variable reference signal. Moreover, it demonstrates that not only
can an input signal be properly digitized, but also shifted up and down in frequency,
effectively embedding the mixing operation in an ADC. As a result, ADCs in receiver
chains can perform double-duty as both a quantizer and a mixing stage. The lesser known
charge-sharing (CS) topology, within the successive approximation register (SAR) ADCs,
is used for a practical implementation, due to its feature of “pre-charging” the reference
signal prior to the conversion. Simulation results from an 8-bit CS-SAR ADC designed in
a 0.13 μm CMOS technology validate the proposed technique
Fully Automated Radiation Hardened by Design Circuit Construction
abstract: A fully automated logic design methodology for radiation hardened by design (RHBD) high speed logic using fine grained triple modular redundancy (TMR) is presented. The hardening techniques used in the cell library are described and evaluated, with a focus on both layout techniques that mitigate total ionizing dose (TID) and latchup issues and flip-flop designs that mitigate single event transient (SET) and single event upset (SEU) issues. The base TMR self-correcting master-slave flip-flop is described and compared to more traditional hardening techniques. Additional refinements are presented, including testability features that disable the self-correction to allow detection of manufacturing defects. The circuit approach is validated for hardness using both heavy ion and proton broad beam testing. For synthesis and auto place and route, the methodology and circuits leverage commercial logic design automation tools. These tools are glued together with custom CAD tools designed to enable easy conversion of standard single redundant hardware description language (HDL) files into hardened TMR circuitry. The flow allows hardening of any synthesizable logic at clock frequencies comparable to unhardened designs and supports standard low-power techniques, e.g. clock gating and supply voltage scaling.Dissertation/ThesisPh.D. Electrical Engineering 201
The Fifth NASA Symposium on VLSI Design
The fifth annual NASA Symposium on VLSI Design had 13 sessions including Radiation Effects, Architectures, Mixed Signal, Design Techniques, Fault Testing, Synthesis, Signal Processing, and other Featured Presentations. The symposium provides insights into developments in VLSI and digital systems which can be used to increase data systems performance. The presentations share insights into next generation advances that will serve as a basis for future VLSI design
An Ultra-Low-Power 75mV 64-Bit Current-Mode Majority-Function Adder
Ultra-low-power circuits are becoming more desirable due to growing portable device markets and they are also becoming more interesting and applicable today in biomedical, pharmacy and sensor networking applications because of the nano-metric scaling and CMOS reliability improvements. In this thesis, three main achievements are presented in ultra-low-power adders. First, a new majority function algorithm for carry and the sum generation is presented. Then with this algorithm and implied new architecture, we achieved a circuit with 75mV supply voltage operation. Last but not least, a 64 bit current-mode majority-function adder based on the new architecture and algorithm is successfully tested at 75mV supply voltage. The circuit consumed 4.5nW or 3.8pJ in one of the worst conditions
Asynchronous design of a multi-dimensional logarithmic number system processor for digital hearing instruments.
This thesis presents an asynchronous Multi-Dimensional Logarithmic Number System (MDLNS) processor that exhibits very low power dissipation. The target application is for a hearing instrument DSP. The MDLNS is a newly developed number system that has the advantage of reducing hardware complexity compared to the classical Logarithmic Number System (LNS). A synchronous implementation of a 2-digit 2DLNS filterbank, using the MDLNS to construct a FIR filterbank, has successfully proved that this novel number representation can benefit this digital hearing instrument application in the requirement of small size and low power. In this thesis we demonstrate that the combination of using the MDLNS, along with an asynchronous design methodology, produces impressive power savings compared to the previous synchronous design. A 4-phase bundled-data full-handshaking protocol is applied to the asynchronous control design. We adopt the Differential Cascade Voltage Switch Logic (DCVSL) circuit family for the design of the computation cells in this asynchronous MDLNS processor. Besides the asynchronous design methodology, we also use finite ring calculations to reduce adder bit-width to provide improvements compared to the previous MDLNS filterbank architecture. Spectre power simulation results from simulations of this asynchronous MDLNS processor demonstrate that over 70 percent power savings have been achieved compared to the synchronous design. This full-custom asynchronous MDLNS processor has been submitted for fabrication in the TSMC 0.18mum CMOS technology. A further contribution in this thesis is the development of a novel synchronizing method of design for testability (DfT), which is offered as a possible solution for asynchronous DfT methods.Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Paper copy at Leddy Library: Theses & Major Papers - Basement, West Bldg. / Call Number: Thesis2004 .W85. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-01, page: 0288. Advisers: G. A. Jullien; W. C. Miller. Thesis (M.A.Sc.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 2004
Side-channel attacks and countermeasures in the design of secure IC's devices for cryptographic applications
Abstract--- A lot of devices which are daily used have to guarantee the retention of sensible data. Sensible data are ciphered by a secure key by which only the key holder can get the data. For this reason, to protect the cipher key against possible attacks becomes a main issue. The research activities in hardware cryptography are involved in finding new countermeasures against various attack scenarios and, in the same time, in studying new attack methodologies. During the PhD, three different logic families to counteract Power Analysis were presented and a novel class of attacks was studied. Moreover, two different activities related to Random Numbers Generators have been addressed
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Methods to improve the reliability and resiliency of near/sub-threshold digital circuits
Energy consumption is one of the primary bottlenecks to both large and small scale modern compute platforms. Reducing the operating voltage of digital circuits to voltages where the supply voltage is near or below the threshold of the transistors has recently gained attention as a method to reduce the energy required for computations by as much as 6 times. However, when operating at near/sub-threshold voltages (where the supply voltage is near or below the threshold of the transistors), imperfections in transistor manufacturing, changes in temperature, and other difficult-to-predict factors cause wide variations in the timing of Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) circuits due to an increased sensitivity at lower voltages. These increased variations result in poor aggregate performance and cause increased rates of error occurrence in computation.
This work introduces several new methods to improve the reliability of near/sub-threshold circuits. The first is a design automation technique that is used to aid in low-voltage digital standard cell synthesis. Second, two circuit-level techniques are also introduced that aim to improve the reliability and resiliency of digital circuits by means of completion/error detection. These techniques are shown to improve speed and lower energy consumption at low overheads compared to previous methods. Most importantly, these circuit-level methods are specifically designed to operate at low voltages and can themselves tolerate variations and operation in harsh environments. Finally, a test-chip prototype designed in 65nm-CMOS demonstrates the practicality and feasibility of a proposed current sensing error detector
The 1992 4th NASA SERC Symposium on VLSI Design
Papers from the fourth annual NASA Symposium on VLSI Design, co-sponsored by the IEEE, are presented. Each year this symposium is organized by the NASA Space Engineering Research Center (SERC) at the University of Idaho and is held in conjunction with a quarterly meeting of the NASA Data System Technology Working Group (DSTWG). One task of the DSTWG is to develop new electronic technologies that will meet next generation electronic data system needs. The symposium provides insights into developments in VLSI and digital systems which can be used to increase data systems performance. The NASA SERC is proud to offer, at its fourth symposium on VLSI design, presentations by an outstanding set of individuals from national laboratories, the electronics industry, and universities. These speakers share insights into next generation advances that will serve as a basis for future VLSI design
Realization and Formal Analysis of Asynchronous Pulse Communication Circuits
This work presents an approach to constructing asynchronous pulsed communication circuits. These circuits use small delay elements to introduce a gate level sense of time, removing the need for either a clock or handshaking signal to be part of a high-speed communication link. This construction method allows the creation of links with better than normal jitter tolerance, allowing for simple circuit architectures that can easily be made robust to radiation induced soft error. A 5Gbps radiation-hardened link, targeted at use in detector modules at the LHC, will be presented. This application presents a special challenge due to both very high radiation levels (1+MGy life time dose) and the demand for minimum resource (area, power, cable cost) use. The presented link, realized in 130nm technology, is unique in that it has low power (~50mW end to end) and very low area 0.12mm^2 including electrostatic discharge protection, and I/O amplifiers. Due to its asynchronous construction and the gate design style, the link has essentially zero power dissipation when idle, and enters and exits its idle state with no delay. In addition to the construction of the link, this presentation covers the design and analysis methodology that can be used to create other asynchronous communication circuits. The methodology achieves higher performance than conventional static technology but needs only a reasonable design effort using tools and strategies that are only mildly extended versions of those familiar to digital static designers. It is used to construct the serializer, deserializer, and self-test circuitry for the presented link. In this case, a 5Gbps SER/DES and a 2GHz parallel pseudo-random number generator are implemented in 130nm CMOS technology using a gate design style that does not dissipate static power
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