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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.
11

Effect of Clock and Power Gating on Power Distribution Network Noise in 2D and 3D Integrated Circuits

Patil, Vinay C 07 November 2014 (has links)
In this work, power supply noise contribution, at a particular node on the power grid, from clock/power gated blocks is maximized at particular time and the synthetic gating patterns of the blocks that result in the maximum noise is obtained for the interval 0 to target time. We utilize wavelet based analysis as wavelets are a natural way of characterizing the time-frequency behavior of the power grid. The gating patterns for the blocks and the maximum supply noise at the Point of Interest at the specified target time obtained via a Linear Programming (LP) formulation (clock gating) and Genetic Algorithm based problem formulation (Power Gating).
12

Architecture and Compiler Support for Leakage Reduction Using Power Gating in Microprocessors

Roy, Soumyaroop 31 August 2010 (has links)
Power gating is a technique commonly used for runtime leakage reduction in digital CMOS circuits. In microprocessors, power gating can be implemented by using sleep transistors to selectively deactivate circuit modules when they are idle during program execution. In this dissertation, a framework for power gating arithmetic functional units in embedded microprocessors with architecture and compiler support is proposed. During compile time, program regions are identified where one or more functional units are idle and sleep instructions are inserted into the code so that those units can be put to sleep during program execution. Subsequently, when their need is detected during the instruction decode stage, they are woken up with the help of hardware control signals. For a set of benchmarks from the MiBench suite, leakage energy savings of 27% and 31% are achieved (based on a 70 nm PTM model) in the functional units of a processor, modeled on the ARM architecture, with and without floating point units, respectively. Further, the impact of traditional performance-enhancing compiler optimizations on the amount of leakage savings obtained with this framework is studied through analysis and simulations. Based on the observations, a leakage-aware compilation flow is derived that improves the effectiveness of this framework. It is observed that, through the use of various compiler optimizations, an additional savings of around 15% and even up to 9X leakage energy savings in individual functional units is possible. Finally,in the context of multi-core processors supporting multithreading, three different microarchitectural techniques, for different multithreading schemes, are investigated for state-retentive power gating of register files. In an in-order core, when a thread gets blocked due to a memory stall, the corresponding register file can be placed in a low leakage state. When the memory stall gets resolved, the register file is activated so that it may be accessed again. The overhead due to wake-up latency is completely hidden in two of the schemes, while it is hidden for the most part in the third. Experimental results on multiprogrammed workloads comprised of SPEC 2000 integer benchmarks show that, in an 8-core processor executing 64 threads, the average leakage savings in the register files, modeled in FreePDK 45 nm MTCMOS technology, are 42% in coarse-grained multithreading, while they are between 7% and 8% in fine-grained and simultaneous multithreading. The contributions of this dissertation represent a significant advancement in the quest for reducing leakage energy consumption in microprocessors with minimal degradation in performance.
13

Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling and Power-Gating of Network-on-Chip with Machine Learning

Clark, Mark A. 05 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
14

System-level design of power efficient FSMD architectures

Agarwal, Nainesh 06 May 2009 (has links)
Power dissipation in CMOS circuits is of growing concern as the computational requirements of portable, battery operated devices increases. The ability to easily develop application specific circuits, rather than program general-purpose architectures can provide tremendous power savings. To this end, we present a design platform for rapidly developing power efficient hardware architectures starting at a system level. This high level VLSI design platform, called CoDeL, allows hardware description at the algorithm level, and thus dramatically reduces design time and power dissipation. We compare the CoDeL platform to a modern DSP and find that the CoDeL platform produces designs with somewhat slower run times but dramatically lower power dissipation. The CoDeL compiler produces an FSMD (Finite State Machine with Datapath) implementation of the circuit. This regular structure can be exploited to further reduce power through various techniques. To reduce dynamic power dissipation in the resulting architecture, the CoDeL compiler automatically inserts clock gating for registers. Power analysis shows that CoDeL's automated, high-level clock gating provides considerably more power savings than existing automated clock gating tools. To reduce static power, we use the CoDeL platform to analyze the potential and performance impact of power gating individual registers. We propose a static gating method, with very low area overhead, which uses the information available to the CoDeL compiler to predict, at compile time, when the registers can be powered off and powered on. Static branch prediction is used to more intelligently traverse the finite state machine description of the circuit to discover gating opportunities. Using simulation and estimation, we find that CoDeL with backward branch prediction gives the best overall combination of gating potential and performance. Compared to a dynamic time-based technique, this method gives dramatically more power savings, without any additional performance loss. Finally, we propose techniques to efficiently partition a FSMD using Integer Linear Programming and a simulated annealing approach. The FSMD is split into two or more simpler communicating processors. These separate processors can then be clock gated or power gated to achieve considerable power savings since only one processor is active at any given time. Implementation and estimation shows that significant power savings can be expected, when the original machine is partitioned into two or more submachines.
15

Uma abordagem para suporte à verificação funcional no nível de sistema aplicada a circuitos digitais que empregam a Técnica Power Gating. / An approach to support the system-level functional verification applied to digital circuits employing the Power Gating Technique.

SILVEIRA, George Sobral. 07 November 2018 (has links)
Submitted by Johnny Rodrigues (johnnyrodrigues@ufcg.edu.br) on 2018-11-07T17:16:29Z No. of bitstreams: 1 GEORGE SOBRAL SILVEIRA - TESE PPGEE 2012..pdf: 4756019 bytes, checksum: 743307d8794218c3a447296994c05332 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2018-11-07T17:16:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 GEORGE SOBRAL SILVEIRA - TESE PPGEE 2012..pdf: 4756019 bytes, checksum: 743307d8794218c3a447296994c05332 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012-08-10 / Capes / A indústria de semicondutores tem investido fortemente no desenvolvimento de sistemas complexos em um único chip, conhecidos como SoC (System-on-Chip). Com os diversos recursos adicionados ao SoC, ocorreu o aumento da complexidade no fluxo de desenvolvimento, principalmente no processo de verificação e um aumento do seu consumo energético. Entretanto, nos últimos anos, aumentou a preocupação com a energia consumida por dispositivos eletrônicos. Dentre as diversas técnicas utilizadas para reduzir o consumo de energia, Power Gating tem se destacado pela sua eficiência. Ultimamente, o processo de verificação dessa técnica vem sendo executado no nível de abstração RTL (Register TransferLevel), com base nas tecnologias CPF (Common Power Format) e UPF (Unified Power Format). De acordo com a literatura, as tecnologias que oferecem suporte a CPF e UPF, e baseadas em simulações, limitam a verificação até o nível de abstração RTL. Nesse nível, a técnica de Power Gating proporciona um considerável aumento na complexidade do processo de verificação dos atuais SoC. Diante desse cenário, o objetivo deste trabalho consiste em uma abordagem metodológica para a verificação funcional no nível ESL (Electronic System-Level) e RTL de circuitos digitais que empregam a técnica de Power Gating, utilizando uma versão modificada do simulador OSCI (Open SystemC Initiative). Foram realizados quatro estudos de caso e os resultados demonstraram a eficácia da solução proposta. / The semiconductor industry has strongly invested in the development of complex systems on a single chip, known as System-on-Chip (SoC), which are extensively used in portable devices. With the many features added to SoC, there has been an increase of complexity in the development flow, especially in the verification process, and an increase in SoC power consumption. However, in recent years, the concern about power consumption of electronic devices, has increased. Among the different techniques to reduce power consumption, Power Gating has been highlighted for its efficiency. Lately, the verification process of this technique has been executed in Register Transfer-Level (RTL) abstraction, based on Common Power Format (CPF) and Unified Power Format (UPF) . The simulators which support CPF and UPF limit the verification to RTL level or below. At this level, Power Gating accounts for a considerable increase in complexity of the SoC verification process. Given this scenario, the objective of this work consists of an approach to perform the functional verification of digital circuits containing the Power Gating technique at the Electronic System Level (ESL) and at the Register Transfer Level (RTL), using a modified Open SystemC Initiative (OSCI) simulator. Four case studies were performed and the results demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed solution.

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