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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.
1

Hierarchical Optimization of Digital CMOS Circuits for Power, Performance and Reliability

Dhillon, Yuvraj Singh 20 April 2005 (has links)
Power consumption and soft-error tolerance have become major constraints in the design of DSM CMOS circuits. With continued technology scaling, the impact of these parameters is expected to gain in significance. Furthermore, the design complexity continues to increase rapidly due to the tremendous increase in number of components (gates/transistors) on an IC every technology generation. This research describes an efficient and general CAD framework for the optimization of critical circuit characteristics such as power consumption and soft-error tolerance under delay constraints with supply/threshold voltages and/or gate sizes as variables. A general technique called Delay-Assignment-Variation (DAV) based optimization was formulated for the delay-constrained optimization of directed acyclic graphs. Exact mathematical conditions on the supply and threshold voltages of circuit modules were developed that lead to minimum overall dynamic and static power consumption of the circuit under delay constraints. A DAV search based method was used to obtain the optimal supply and threshold voltages that minimized power consumption. To handle the complexity of design of reliable, low-power circuits at the gate level, a hierarchical application of DAV based optimization was explored. The effectiveness of the hierarchical approach in reducing circuit power and unreliability, while being highly efficient is demonstrated. The usage of the technique for improving upon already optimized designs is described. An accurate and efficient model for analyzing the soft-error tolerance of CMOS circuits is also developed.
2

Energy and Transient Power Minimization During Behavioral Synthesis

Mohanty, Saraju P 17 October 2003 (has links)
The proliferation of portable systems and mobile computing platforms has increased the need for the design of low power consuming integrated circuits. The increase in chip density and clock frequencies due to technology advances has made low power design a critical issue. Low power design is further driven by several other factors such as thermal considerations and environmental concerns. In low-power design for battery driven portable applications, the reduction of peak power, peak power differential, average power and energy are equally important. In this dissertation, we propose a framework for the reduction of these parameters through datapath scheduling at behavioral level. Several ILP based and heuristic based scheduling schemes are developed for datapath synthesis assuming : (i) single supply voltage and single frequency (SVSF), (ii) multiple supply voltages and dynamic frequency clocking (MVDFC), and (iii) multiple supply voltages and multicycling (MVMC). The scheduling schemes attempt to minimize : (i) energy, (ii) energy delay product, (iii) peak power, (iv) simultaneous peak power and average power, (v) simultaneous peak power, average power, peak power differential and energy, and (vi) power fluctuation. A new parameter called "Cycle Power Function" (CPF) is defined which captures the transient power characteristics as the equally weighted sum of normalized mean cycle power and normalized mean cycle differential power. Minimizing this parameter using multiple supply voltages and dynamic frequency clocking results in the reduction of both energy and transient power. The cycle differential power can be modeled as either the absolute deviation from the average power or as the cycle-to-cycle power gradient. The switching activity information is obtained from behavioral simulations. Power fluctuation is modeled as the cycle-to-cycle power gradient and to reduce fluctuation the mean power gradient (MPG) is minimized. The power models take into consideration the effect of switching activity on the power consumption of the functional units. Experimental results for selected high-level synthesis benchmark circuits under different constraints indicate that significant reductions in power, energy and energy delay product can be obtained and that the MVDFC and MVMC schemes yield better power reduction compared to the SVSF scheme. Several application specific VLSI circuits were designed and implemented for digital watermarking of images. Digital watermarking is the process that embeds data called a watermark into a multimedia object such that the watermark can be detected or extracted later to make an assertion about the object. A class of VLSI architectures were proposed for various watermarking algorithms : (i) spatial domain invisible-robust watermarking scheme, (ii) spatial domain invisible-fragile watermarking scheme, (iii) spatial domain visible watermarking scheme, (iv) DCT domain invisible-robust watermarking scheme, and (v) DCT domain visible watermarking scheme. Prototype implementation of (i), (ii) and (iii) are given. The hardware modules can be incorporated in a "JPEG encoder" or in a "digital still camera".
3

Energy and transient power minimization during behavioral synthesis [electronic resource] / by Saraju P Mohanty.

Mohanty, Saraju P. January 2003 (has links)
Includes vita. / Title from PDF of title page. / Document formatted into pages; contains 289 pages. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of South Florida, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. / Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. / ABSTRACT: The proliferation of portable systems and mobile computing platforms has increased the need for the design of low power consuming integrated circuits. The increase in chip density and clock frequencies due to technology advances has made low power design a critical issue. Low power design is further driven by several other factors such as thermal considerations and environmental concerns. In low-power design for battery driven portable applications, the reduction of peak power, peak power differential, average power and energy are equally important. In this dissertation, we propose a framework for the reduction of these parameters through datapath scheduling at behavioral level. Several ILP based and heuristic based scheduling schemes are developed for datapath synthesis assuming : (i) single supply voltage and single frequency (SVSF), (ii) multiple supply voltages and dynamic frequency clocking (MVDFC), and (iii) multiple supply voltages and multicycling (MVMC). / ABSTRACT: The scheduling schemes attempt to minimize : (i) energy, (ii) energy delay product, (iii) peak power, (iv) simultaneous peak power and average power, (v) simultaneous peak power, average power, peak power differential and energy, and (vi) power fluctuation. A new parameter called "Cycle Power Function" CPF) is defined which captures the transient power characteristics as the equally weighted sum of normalized mean cycle power and normalized mean cycle differential power. Minimizing this parameter using multiple supply voltages and dynamic frequency clocking results in the reduction of both energy and transient power. The cycle differential power can be modeled as either the absolute deviation from the average power or as the cycle-to-cycle power gradient. The switching activity information is obtained from behavioral simulations. Power fluctuation is modeled as the cycle-to-cycle power gradient and to reduce fluctuation the mean power gradient MPG is minimized. / ABSTRACT: The power models take into consideration the effect of switching activity on the power consumption of the functional units. Experimental results for selected high-level synthesis benchmark circuits under different constraints indicate that significant reductions in power, energy and energy delay product can be obtained and that the MVDFC and MVMC schemes yield better power reduction compared to the SVSF scheme. Several application specific VLSI circuits were designed and implemented for digital watermarking of images. Digital watermarking is the process that embeds data called a watermark into a multimedia object such that the watermark can be detected or extracted later to make an assertion about the object. / ABSTRACT: A class of VLSI architectures were proposed for various watermarking algorithms : (i) spatial domain invisible-robust watermarking scheme, (ii) spatial domain invisible-fragile watermarking scheme, (iii) spatial domain visible watermarking scheme, (iv) DCT domain invisible-robust watermarking scheme, and (v) DCT domain visible watermarking scheme. Prototype implementation of (i), (ii) and (iii) are given. The hardware modules can be incorporated in a "JPEG encoder" or in a "digital still camera". / System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader. / Mode of access: World Wide Web.

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