ENHANCEMENT OF MARKOV RANDOM FIELD MECHANISM TO ACHIEVE FAULT-TOLERANCE IN NANOSCALE CIRCUIT DESIGN

Abstract

As the MOSFET dimensions scale down towards nanoscale level, the reliability of circuits based on these devices decreases. Hence, designing reliable systems using these nano-devices is becoming challenging. Therefore, a mechanism has to be devised that can make the nanoscale systems perform reliably using unreliable circuit components. The solution is fault-tolerant circuit design. Markov Random Field (MRF) is an effective approach that achieves fault-tolerance in integrated circuit design. The previous research on this technique suffers from limitations at the design, simulation and implementation levels. As improvements, the MRF fault-tolerance rules have been validated for a practical circuit example. The simulation framework is extended from thermal to a combination of thermal and random telegraph signal (RTS) noise sources to provide a more rigorous noise environment for the simulation of circuits build on nanoscale technologies. Moreover, an architecture-level improvement has been proposed in the design of previous MRF gates. The redesigned MRF is termed as Improved-MRF. The CMOS, MRF and Improved-MRF designs were simulated under application of highly noisy inputs. On the basis of simulations conducted for several test circuits, it is found that Improved-MRF circuits are 400 whereas MRF circuits are only 10 times more noise-tolerant than the CMOS alternatives. The number of transistors, on the other hand increased from a factor of 9 to 15 from MRF to Improved-MRF respectively (as compared to the CMOS). Therefore, in order to provide a trade-off between reliability and the area overhead required for obtaining a fault-tolerant circuit, a novel parameter called as ‘Reliable Area Index’ (RAI) is introduced in this research work. The value of RAI exceeds around 1.3 and 40 times for MRF and Improved-MRF respectively as compared to CMOS design which makes Improved- MRF to be still 30 times more efficient circuit design than MRF in terms of maintaining a suitable trade-off between reliability and area-consumption of the circuit

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