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Power Minimization in IC Design: Principles and Applications
- ACM Transactions on Design Automation of Electronic Systems
, 1996
"... Low power has emerged as a principal theme in today's electronics industry. The need for low power has caused a major paradigm shift in which power dissipation is as important as performance and area. This article presents an in-depth survey of CAD methodologies and techniques for designing low powe ..."
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Cited by 136 (22 self)
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Low power has emerged as a principal theme in today's electronics industry. The need for low power has caused a major paradigm shift in which power dissipation is as important as performance and area. This article presents an in-depth survey of CAD methodologies and techniques for designing low power digital CMOS circuits and systems and describes the many issues facing designers at architectural, logic and physical levels of design abstraction. It reviews some of the techniques and tools that have been proposed to overcome these difficulties and outlines the future challenges that must be met to design low power, high performance systems.
Performance optimization of VLSI interconnect layout
- Integration, the VLSI Journal
, 1996
"... This paper presents a comprehensive survey of existing techniques for interconnect optimization during the VLSI physical design process, with emphasis on recent studies on interconnect design and optimization for high-performance VLSI circuit design under the deep submicron fabrication technologies. ..."
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Cited by 90 (32 self)
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This paper presents a comprehensive survey of existing techniques for interconnect optimization during the VLSI physical design process, with emphasis on recent studies on interconnect design and optimization for high-performance VLSI circuit design under the deep submicron fabrication technologies. First, we present a number of interconnect delay models and driver/gate delay models of various degrees of accuracy and efficiency which are most useful to guide the circuit design and interconnect optimization process. Then, we classify the existing work on optimization of VLSI interconnect into the following three categories and discuss the results in each category in detail: (i) topology optimization for highperformance interconnects, including the algorithms for total wire length minimization, critical path length minimization, and delay minimization; (ii) device and interconnect sizing, including techniques for efficient driver, gate, and transistor sizing, optimal wire sizing, and simultaneous topology construction, buffer insertion, buffer and wire sizing; (iii) highperfbrmance clock routing, including abstract clock net topology generation and embedding, planar clock routing, buffer and wire sizing for clock nets, non-tree clock routing, and clock schedule optimization. For each method, we discuss its effectiveness, its advantages and limitations, as well as its computational efficiency. We group the related techniques according to either their optimization techniques or optimization objectives so that the reader can easily compare the quality and efficiency of different solutions.
Power vs. Delay in Gate Sizing: Conflicting Objectives?
- IN PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE/ACM INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN
, 1995
"... The problem of sizing gates for power-delay tradeoffs is of great interest to designers. In this work, the theoretical basis for gate sizing under delay and power considerations is presented, and results on a practical implementation are presented. The dynamic power as well as the short-circuit powe ..."
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Cited by 10 (0 self)
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The problem of sizing gates for power-delay tradeoffs is of great interest to designers. In this work, the theoretical basis for gate sizing under delay and power considerations is presented, and results on a practical implementation are presented. The dynamic power as well as the short-circuit power are modeled, using notions of delay and transition density, and the optimization problem is formulated using notions of convex programming. Previous approaches have not modeled the short circuit power, and our experimental results show that the incorporation of this leads to counter-intuitive results where the minimumpower circuit is not necessarily the minimum-sized circuit.
Power-Delay Optimizations in Gate Sizing
, 2000
"... The problem of power-delay tradeoffs in transistor sizing is examined using a nonlinear optimization formulation. Both the dynamic and the short-circuit power are considered, and a new modeling technique is used to calculate the short-circuit power. The notion of transition density is used, with an ..."
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Cited by 8 (0 self)
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The problem of power-delay tradeoffs in transistor sizing is examined using a nonlinear optimization formulation. Both the dynamic and the short-circuit power are considered, and a new modeling technique is used to calculate the short-circuit power. The notion of transition density is used, with an enhancement that considers the effect of gate delays on the transition density. When the short-circuit power is neglected, the minimum power circuit is identical to the minimum area circuit. However, under our more realistic models, our experimental results on several circuits show that the minimum power circuit is not necessarily the same as the minimum area circuit.
A Multiple Clocking Scheme for Low Power RTL Design
- IEEE Transactions on VLSI Systems
, 1999
"... This paper presents a resource allocation technique to design low power RTL datapaths. The basis of this technique is: a) to use a multiple clocking scheme of n nonoverlapping clocks, by dividing the frequency f of a single clock into n cycles; b) to partition the circuit into n disjoint modules and ..."
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Cited by 6 (0 self)
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This paper presents a resource allocation technique to design low power RTL datapaths. The basis of this technique is: a) to use a multiple clocking scheme of n nonoverlapping clocks, by dividing the frequency f of a single clock into n cycles; b) to partition the circuit into n disjoint modules and assign each module to a distinct clock; and c) to operate each module only during its corresponding duty cycle, thus clocking each module by a frequency f=n to reduce power. However, the overall effective frequency of the circuit remains f , i.e. the single clock frequency. Further power reduction is also obtained by tradeoffs between voltage, power and delay across multiple clock partitions. Power savings up to 50% of the proposed multiple clocking scheme in comparison to single gated clock designs are reported. Keywords--- Low Power Design, Multiple Clock, NonOverlapping Clocks, Partitioning, Resource Allocation, Scheduling Information, Voltage-Power-Delay Tradeoffs. I. Introduction A ...
Modeling and Optimization of VLSI Interconnects
, 1999
"... As very large scale integrated (VLSI) circuits move into the era of deepsubmicron (DSM) technology and gigahertz frequency, the system performance has increasingly become dominated by the interconnect delay. This dissertation presents five related research topics on interconnect layout optimizati ..."
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Cited by 4 (0 self)
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As very large scale integrated (VLSI) circuits move into the era of deepsubmicron (DSM) technology and gigahertz frequency, the system performance has increasingly become dominated by the interconnect delay. This dissertation presents five related research topics on interconnect layout optimization, and interconnect extraction and modeling: the multi-source wire sizing (MSWS) problem, the simultaneous transistor and interconnect sizing (STIS) problem, the global interconnect sizing and spacing (GISS) problem, the interconnect capacitance extraction problem, and the interconnect inductance extraction problems. Given a routing tree with multiple sources, the MSWS problem determines the optimal widths of the wire segments such that the delay is minimized. We reveal several interesting properties for the optimal MSWS solution, of which the most important is the bundled refinement property. Based on this property, we propose a polynomial time algorithm, which uses iterative bundled refinement operations to compute lower and upper bounds of an optimal solution. Since the algorithm often achieves identical lower and upper bounds in experiments, the optimal solution is obtained simply by the bound computation. Furthermore, this algorithm can be used for single-source wire sizing problem and runs 100x xxi faster than previous methods. It has replaced previous single-source wire sizing methods in practice.
Power Optimization in VLSI Layout: A Survey
- Journal of VLSI Signal Processing Systems for Signal, Image, and Video Technology
, 1997
"... This paper presents a survey of layout techniques for designing low power digital CMOS circuits. It describes the many issues facing designers at the physical level of design abstraction and reviews some of the techniques and tools that have been proposed to overcome these difficulties. ..."
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Cited by 2 (0 self)
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This paper presents a survey of layout techniques for designing low power digital CMOS circuits. It describes the many issues facing designers at the physical level of design abstraction and reviews some of the techniques and tools that have been proposed to overcome these difficulties.
Soft error-aware power optimization using gate sizing
- in Integrated Circuit and System Design. Power and Timing Modeling, Optimization and Simulation
, 2007
"... Abstract. Power consumption has emerged as the premier and most constraining aspect in modern microprocessor and application specific designs. Gate sizing has been shown to be one of the most effective methods for power (and area) reduction in CMOS digital circuits. Recently, as the feature size of ..."
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Cited by 1 (1 self)
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Abstract. Power consumption has emerged as the premier and most constraining aspect in modern microprocessor and application specific designs. Gate sizing has been shown to be one of the most effective methods for power (and area) reduction in CMOS digital circuits. Recently, as the feature size of logic gates (and transistors) is becoming smaller and smaller, the effect of soft error rates caused by single event upsets (SEU) is becoming exponentially greater. As a consequence of technology feature size reduction, the SEU rate for typical microprocessor logic at the sea level will go from one in hundred years to one every minute. Unfortunately, the gate sizing requirements of power reduction and resiliency against SEU can be contradictory. 1) We consider the effects of gate sizing on SEU and incorporate the relationship between power reduction and SEU resiliency to develop a new method for power optimization under SEU constraints. 2) Although a non-linear programming approach is a more obvious solution, we propose a convex programming formulation that can be solved efficiently. 3) Many of the optimal existing techniques for gate sizing deal with an exponential number of paths in the circuit, we prove that it is sufficient to consider a linear number of constraints. As an important preprocessing step we apply statistical modeling and validation techniques to quantify the impact of fault masking on the SEU rate. We evaluate the effectiveness of our methodology on ISCAS benchmarks and show that error rates can be reduced by a factor of 100 % to 200 % while, on average, the power saving is simultaneously decreased by less than 7 % to 12 % respectively, compared to the optimal power saving with no error rate constraints. 1

