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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

Implementation of an industrial process control interface for the LSC11 system using Lattice ECP2M FPGA

Murali Baskar Rao, Parthasarathy January 2012 (has links)
Reconfigurable devices are the mainstream in today’s system on chip solutions. Reconfigurable devices have the advantages of reduced cost over their equivalent custom design, quick time to market and the ability to reconfigure the design at will and ease. One such reconfigurable device is an FPGA. In this industrial thesis, the design and implementation of a control process interface using ECP2M FPGA and PCIe communication is accomplished. This control process interface is designed and implemented for a 3-D plotter system called LSC11. In this thesis, the FPGA unit implemented drives the plotter device based on specific timing requirements charted by the customer. The FPGA unit is interfaced to a Host CPU in this thesis (through PCIe communication) for controlling the LSC11 system using a custom software. All the peripherals required for the LSC11 system such as the ADC, DAC, Quadrature decoder and the PWM unit are also implemented as part of this thesis. This thesis also implements an efficient methodology to send all the inputs of the LSC11 system to the Host CPU without the necessity for issuing any cyclic read commands on the Host CPU. The RTL design is synthesised in FPGA and the system is verified for correctness and accuracy. The LSC11 system design consumed 79% of the total FPGA resources and the maximum clock frequency achieved was 130 Mhz. This thesis has been carried out at Abaxor Engineering GmbH, Germany. It is demonstrated in this thesis how FPGA aids in quick designing and implementation of system on chip solutions with PCIe communication.
182

Guarded Evaluation: An Algorithm for Dynamic Power Reduction in FPGAs

Ravishankar, Chirag January 2012 (has links)
Guarded evaluation is a power reduction technique that involves identifying sub-circuits (within a larger circuit) whose inputs can be held constant (guarded) at specific times during circuit operation, thereby reducing switching activity and lowering dynamic power. The concept is rooted in the property that under certain conditions, some signals within digital designs are not "observable" at design outputs, making the circuitry that generates such signals a candidate for guarding. Guarded evaluation has been demonstrated successfully for custom ASICs; in this work, we apply the technique to FPGAs. In ASICs, guarded evaluation entails adding additional hardware to the design, increasing silicon area and cost. Here, we apply the technique in a way that imposes minimal area overhead by leveraging existing unused circuitry within the FPGA. The LUT functionality is modified to incorporate the guards and reduce toggle rates. The primary challenge in guarded evaluation is in determining the specific conditions under which a sub-circuit's inputs can be held constant without impacting the larger circuit's functional correctness. We propose a simple solution to this problem based on discovering gating inputs using "non-inverting paths" and trimming inputs using "partial non-inverting paths" in the circuit's AND-Inverter graph representation. Experimental results show that guarded evaluation can reduce switching activity by as much as 32% for FPGAs with 6-LUT architectures and 25% for 4-LUT architectures, on average, and can reduce power consumption in the FPGA interconnect by 29% for 6-LUTs and 27% for 4-LUTs. A clustered architecture with four LUTs to a cluster and ten LUTs to a cluster produced the best power reduction results. We implement guarded evaluation at various stages of the FPGA CAD flow and analyze the reductions. We implement the algorithm as post technology mapping, post packing and post placement optimizations. Guarded Evaluation as a post technology mapping algorithm inserted the most number of guards and hence achieved the highest activity and interconnect reduction. However, guarding signals come with a cost of increased fanout and stress on routing resources. Packing and placement provides the algorithm with additional information of the circuit which is leveraged to insert high quality guards with minimal impact on routing. Experimental results show that post-packing and post-placement methods have comparable reductions to post-mapping with considerably lesser impact on the critical path delay and routability of the circuit.
183

MITE Architectures for Reconfigurable Analog Arrays

Abramson, David 02 December 2004 (has links)
With the introduction of the floating-gate transistor into reconfigurable architectures, great advances have been made in the field. Recently, Hall et. al. have proposed the first truly large-scale field programmable analog array (FPAA). As an outgrowth of this work, a new class of FPAAs based on translinear elements has begun to be developed. The use of translinear elements, multiple input translinear elements (MITEs) specifically, allows for extreme versatility in the functions implemented by the system while keeping the computational elements of the FPAA regular. In addition, synthesis procedures have been developed for translinear elements. This facilitates the implementation of large-scale systems on the FPAA because the circuit design can be extracted using the synthesis procedures based on equations entered by the user. Two architectures are proposed for the new FPAA. The first architecture uses fine grain reconfigurability, every gate capacitor and the drain of each MITE can be connected arbitrarily, in order to create reconfigurable MITE networks. Circuits including a squaring circuit, a square root circuit, a translinear loop, a vector magnitude circuit, and a 1st-order log-domain filter were implemented using this architecture and results are presented. In addition, examples are shown to illustrate the compilation of the circuits onto the FPAA. The second proposed architecture uses a mix of fine and medium granularity in order to simplify the implementation of larger systems. Examples are given and again the compilation of the circuits onto the FPAA is shown.
184

Sim2spice, a tool for compiling simulink designs on FPAA and applications to neuromorphic circuits

Petre, Csaba 18 November 2009 (has links)
Analog circuit technology is of vital importance in today's world of electronic design. Increasing prevalence of mobile electronics necessitates the search for solutions which offer high performance given tight constraints on power and chip area. Field programmable arrays utilizing floating-gate technology are one possible solution to analog design. It offers the advantages of analog processing with the additional advantage of reconfigurability, giving the designer the ability to test new analog designs without costly and time-consuming fabrication and test cycles. In this work, a new interface for FPAA's is demonstrated called Sim2spice, with which users can design signal processing systems in Matlab Simulink and compile them to SPICE circuit netlists. These netlists can be further compiled with a tool called GRASPER to a switch list for programming on an FPAA chip. Example library elements are shown, along with some compiled systems such as filters and vector-matrix multipliers. One particularly compelling application of reconfigurable analog design is the field of neuromorphic circuits, which aims to reproduce the basic functional characteristics of biological neurons and synapses in analog integrated circuit technology. Simulink libraries have been built to allow designers to build neuromorphic systems on several FPAAs that have been developed expressly for the purpose of building neurons and connecting them in networks with synapses. Several possible dynamically learning synapses have also been explored.
185

FPGA-based hardware accelerator design for performance improvement of a system-on-a-chip application

Vyas, Dhaval N. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 55-56).
186

FPGA implementation of low density parity check codes decoder

Vijayakumar, Suresh. Mikler, Armin, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of North Texas, August, 2009. / Title from title page display. Includes bibliographical references.
187

Design and implementation of a multithreaded softcore processor with tightly coupled hardware real-time operating system

Wijesinghe, Terance Prabhasara. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2008. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains ix, 107 p. : ill. (some col.). Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 101-107).
188

CAD algorithms for field programmable logic devices /

Lee, Kok Kiong, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-144). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
189

Charge-based analog circuits for reconfigurable smart sensory systems

Peng, Sheng-Yu. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D)--Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009. / Committee Chair: Hasler, Paul; Committee Member: Anderson, David; Committee Member: Degertekin, F.; Committee Member: Ghovanloo, Maysam; Committee Member: Minch, Bradley. Part of the SMARTech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Collection.
190

High performance embedded reconfigurable computing: data security and media processing applications

Kwok, Tai-on, Tyrone., 郭泰安. January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Electrical and Electronic Engineering / Master / Master of Philosophy

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