DocumentCode :
114118
Title :
Complexity-theoretic obstacles to achieving energy savings with near-threshold computing
Author :
Antoniadis, Antonios ; Barcelo, Neal ; Nugent, Michael ; Pruhs, Kirk ; Scquizzato, Michele
fYear :
2014
fDate :
3-5 Nov. 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
8
Abstract :
In the traditional approach to circuit design the supply voltages for each transistor/gate are set sufficiently high so that with sufficiently high probability no transistor fails. One potential method to attain more energy-efficient circuits is Near-Threshold Computing, which simply means that the supply voltages are designed to be closer to the threshold voltage. However, this energy saving comes at a cost of a greater probability of functional failure, which necessitates that the circuits must be more fault tolerant, and thus contain more gates. Thus achieving energy savings with Near-Threshold Computing involves properly balancing the energy used per gate with the number of gates used. We show that if there is a better (in terms of worst-case relative error with respect to energy) method than the traditional approach then P = NP, and thus there is a complexity theoretic obstacle to achieving energy savings with Near-Threshold Computing.
Keywords :
computational complexity; integrated circuit design; power aware computing; circuit design; complexity theoretic obstacle; energy savings; energy-efficient circuits; fault tolerant circuits; near-threshold computing; supply voltages; transistor-gate; Approximation methods; Computational modeling; Integrated circuit modeling; Logic gates; Threshold voltage; Transistors; Wires;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Green Computing Conference (IGCC), 2014 International
Conference_Location :
Dallas, TX
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IGCC.2014.7039142
Filename :
7039142
Link To Document :
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