57,531 research outputs found

    Trends and challenges in VLSI technology scaling towards 100 nm

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    Summary form only given. Moore's Law drives VLSI technology to continuous increases in transistor densities and higher clock frequencies. This tutorial will review the trends in VLSI technology scaling in the last few years and discuss the challenges facing process and circuit engineers in the 100nm generation and beyond. The first focus area is the process technology, including transistor scaling trends and research activities for the 100nm technology node and beyond. The transistor leakage and interconnect RC delays will continue to increase. The tutorial will review new circuit design techniques for emerging process technologies, including dual Vt transistors and silicon-on-insulator. It will also cover circuit and layout techniques to reduce clock distribution skew and jitter, model and reduce transistor leakage and improve the electrical performance of flip-chip packages. Finally, the tutorial will review the test challenges for the 100nm technology node due to increased clock frequency and power consumption (both active and passive) and present several potential solution

    Developing VLSI Curricula in Electrical and Computer Engineering Department

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    © ASEE 2010VLSI (Very Large Scale Integrated Circuits) technology has enabled the information technology revolution which greatly changed the life style of human society. Computers, internet, cellphones, digital cameras/camcorders and many other consumer electronic products are powered by VLSI technology. In the past decades, the VLSI industry was constantly driven by the miniaturization of transistors. As governed by Moore’s law, the number of transistors in the same chip area has been doubled every 12 to 18 months. Nowadays, a typical VLSI CPU chip can contain millions to billions of transistors. As a result, the design of VLSI system is becoming more and more complex. Various EDA tools must be used to help the design of modern VLSI chips. The semiconductor and VLSI industry remain strong needs for VLSI engineers each year. In this paper, efforts in developing systematic VLSI curricula in Electrical and Computer Engineering department have been proposed. The goal of the curricula is to prepare students to satisfy the growing demands of VLSI industry as well as the higher education/research institutions. Modern VLSI design needs a thorough understanding about VLSI in device, gate, module and system levels. We developed CPEG/EE 448D: Introduction to VLSI to give students a comprehensive introduction about digital VLSI design and analysis. In this course, various EDA tools (such as Mentor Graphics tools, Cadence PSPICE, Synopsys) are used in the course projects to help students practice the VLSI design. In addition, analog and mixed signal circuit design are becoming more and more important as MEMS (Microelectromechanical Systems) and Nano devices are integrated with VLSI into Systemon-Chip (SoC) design. We developed CPEG/EE 458: Analog VLSI to introduce the analog and mixed signal VLSI design. As portable electronics (e.g. laptops, cellphones, PDAs, digital cameras) becoming more and more popular, low power VLSI circuit design is becoming a hot field. We developed CPEG/EE 548: Low Power VLSI Circuit Design to introduce various low power techniques to reduce the power consumption of VLSI circuits. Nowadays the VLSI circuits can contain billions of transistors, the testing of such complex system becoming more and more challenging. We developed CPEG/EE 549: VLSI Testing to introduce various VLSI testing strategies for modern VLSI design. In addition to the design and testing, we also developed EE 448: Microelectronic Fabrication to introduce the fabrication processes of modern VLSI circuits. With such a series of VLSI related curricula, students have an opportunity to learn comprehensive knowledge and hands-on experience about VLSI circuit design, testing, fabrication and EDA tools. Students demonstrate tremendous interests in the VLSI field, and all the VLSI courses are generally oversubscripted by students in the early stage of enrollment. Many students are also doing the VLSI graduate research and published various papers/posters in the VLSI related journals/conferences

    Design and implementation of interface units for high speed fiber optics local area networks and broadband integrated services digital networks

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    The design and implementation of interface units for high speed Fiber Optic Local Area Networks and Broadband Integrated Services Digital Networks are discussed. During the last years, a number of network adapters that are designed to support high speed communications have emerged. This approach to the design of a high speed network interface unit was to implement package processing functions in hardware, using VLSI technology. The VLSI hardware implementation of a buffer management unit, which is required in such architectures, is described

    Advanced technologies for Mission Control Centers

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    Advance technologies for Mission Control Centers are presented in the form of the viewgraphs. The following subject areas are covered: technology needs; current technology efforts at GSFC (human-machine interface development, object oriented software development, expert systems, knowledge-based software engineering environments, and high performance VLSI telemetry systems); and test beds

    Analog VLSI-Based Modeling of the Primate Oculomotor System

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    One way to understand a neurobiological system is by building a simulacrum that replicates its behavior in real time using similar constraints. Analog very large-scale integrated (VLSI) electronic circuit technology provides such an enabling technology. We here describe a neuromorphic system that is part of a long-term effort to understand the primate oculomotor system. It requires both fast sensory processing and fast motor control to interact with the world. A one-dimensional hardware model of the primate eye has been built that simulates the physical dynamics of the biological system. It is driven by two different analog VLSI chips, one mimicking cortical visual processing for target selection and tracking and another modeling brain stem circuits that drive the eye muscles. Our oculomotor plant demonstrates both smooth pursuit movements, driven by a retinal velocity error signal, and saccadic eye movements, controlled by retinal position error, and can reproduce several behavioral, stimulation, lesion, and adaptation experiments performed on primates

    Implementing neural architectures using analog VLSI circuits

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    Analog very large-scale integrated (VLSI) technology can be used not only to study and simulate biological systems, but also to emulate them in designing artificial sensory systems. A methodology for building these systems in CMOS VLSI technology has been developed using analog micropower circuit elements that can be hierarchically combined. Using this methodology, experimental VLSI chips of visual and motor subsystems have been designed and fabricated. These chips exhibit behavior similar to that of biological systems, and perform computations useful for artificial sensory systems

    Accurate a priori signal integrity estimation using a multilevel dynamic interconnect model for deep submicron VLSI design.

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    A multilevel dynamic interconnect model was derived for accurate a priori signal integrity estimates. Cross-talk and delay estimations over interconnects in deep submicron technology were analyzed systematically using this model. Good accuracy and excellent time-efficiency were found compared with electromagnetic simulations. We aim to build a dynamic interconnect library with this model to facilitate the interconnect issues for future VLSI design

    QoS oriented MapReduce Optimization for Hadoop Based BigData Application

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    International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) is an open access online peer reviewed international journal that publishes research and review articles in the fields of Computer Science, Neural Networks, Electrical Engineering, Software Engineering, Information Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Plastic Engineering, Food Technology, Textile Engineering, Nano Technology & science, Power Electronics, Electronics & Communication Engineering, Computational mathematics, Image processing, Civil Engineering, Structural Engineering, Environmental Engineering, VLSI Testing & Low Power VLSI Design etc

    From Microelectronics to Nanoelectronics: Introducing Nanotechnology to VLSI Curricula

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    © 2011 by ASEEIn the past decades, VLSI industries constantly shrank the size of transistors, so that more and more transistors can be built into the same chip area to make VLSI more and more powerful in its functions. As the typical feature size of CMOS VLSI is shrunk into deep submicron domain, nanotechnology is the next step in order to maintain Moore’s law for several more decades. Nanotechnology not only further improves the resolution in traditional photolithography process, but also introduces many brand-new fabrication strategies, such as bottom-up molecular self-assembly. Nanotechnology is also enabling many novel devices and circuit architectures which are totally different from current microelectronics circuits, such as quantum computing, nanowire crossbar circuits, spin electronics, etc. Nanotechnology is bringing another technology revolution to traditional CMOS VLSI technology. In order to train students to meet the quickly-increasing industry demand for nextgeneration nanoelectronics engineers, we are making efforts to introduce nanotechnology into our VLSI curricula. We have developed a series of VLSI curricula which include CPE/EE 448D - Introduction to VLSI, EE 548 - Low Power VLSI Circuit Design, EE 458 - Analog VLSI Circuit Design, EE 549 - VLSI Testing, etc. Furthermore, we developed a series of micro and nanotechnology related courses, such as EE 451 - Nanotechnology, EE 448 - Microelectronic Fabrication, EE 446 – MEMS (Microelectromechanical Systems). We introduce nanotechnology into our VLSI curricula, and teach the students about various devices, fabrication processes, circuit architectures, design and simulation skills for future nanotechnology-based nanoelectronic circuits. Some examples are nanowire crossbar circuit architecture, carbon-nanotube based nanotransistor, single-electron transistor, spintronics, quantum computing, bioelectronic circuits, etc. Students show intense interest in these exciting topics. Some students also choose nanoelectronics as the topic for their master project/thesis, and perform successful research in the field. The program has attracted many graduate students into the field of nanoelectronics
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