High-Speed and Low-Energy On-Chip Communication Circuits.

Abstract

Continuous technology scaling sharply reduces transistor delays, while fixed-length global wire delays have increased due to less wiring pitch with higher resistance and coupling capacitance. Due to this ever growing gap, long on-chip interconnects pose well-known latency, bandwidth, and energy challenges to high-performance VLSI systems. Repeaters effectively mitigate wire RC effects but do little to improve their energy costs. Moreover, the increased complexity and high level of integration requires higher wire densities, worsening crosstalk noise and power consumption of conventionally repeated interconnects. Such increasing concerns in global on-chip wires motivate circuits to improve wire performance and energy while reducing the number of repeaters. This work presents circuit techniques and investigation for high-performance and energy-efficient on-chip communication in the aspects of encoding, data compression, self-timed current injection, signal pre-emphasis, low-swing signaling, and technology mapping. The improved bus designs also consider the constraints of robust operation and performance/energy gains across process corners and design space. Measurement results from 5mm links on 65nm and 90nm prototype chips validate 2.5-3X improvement in energy-delay product.Ph.D.Electrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75800/1/jseo_1.pd

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