Title :
A Super-Pipelined Energy Efficient Subthreshold 240 MS/s FFT Core in 65 nm CMOS
Author :
Jeon, Dongsuk ; Seok, Mingoo ; Chakrabarti, Chaitali ; Blaauw, David ; Sylvester, Dennis
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract :
This paper proposes a design approach targeting circuits operating at extremely low supply voltages, with the goal of reducing the voltage at which energy is minimized, thereby improving the achievable energy efficiency of the circuit. The proposed methods accomplish this by minimizing the circuit´s ratio of leakage to active current. The first method, super pipelining, increases the number of pipeline stages compared to conventional ultra low voltage (ULV) pipelining strategies, reducing the leakage/dynamic energy ratio and simultaneously improving performance and energy efficiency. Measurements of super-pipelined multipliers demonstrate 30% energy savings and 1.6× performance improvement. Since super pipelining reduces the logic depth between registers, two-phase latch based design is employed to compensate for reduced averaging effects and provide better variation tolerance. The second technique introduces a parallel-pipelined architecture that suppresses leakage energy by ensuring full utilization of functional units and reduces memory size. We apply these techniques to a 16-b 1024-pt complex-valued Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) core along with low-power first-in first-out (FIFO) design and robust clock distribution network. The FFT core is fabricated in 65 nm CMOS and consumes 15.8 nJ/FFT with a clock frequency of 30 MHz and throughput of 240 Msamples/s at Vdd=270 mV, providing 2.4× better energy efficiency than current state-of-art and >; 10× higher throughput than typical ULV designs. Measurements of 60 dies show modest frequency (energy) σ/μ spreads of 7% (2%).
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; clock distribution networks; fast Fourier transforms; flip-flops; leakage currents; CMOS technology; ULV pipelining strategy; complex-valued FFT core; complex-valued fast Fourier transform core; energy efficiency; frequency 30 MHz; leakage current; leakage-dynamic energy ratio; low-power FIFO design; low-power first-in first-out design; parallel-pipelined architecture; robust clock distribution network; size 65 nm; super-pipelined energy efficient subthreshold FFT Core; super-pipelined multiplier; two-phase latch based design; ultra low voltage pipelining strategy; voltage 270 mV; CMOS integrated circuits; Computer architecture; Fast Fourier transforms; Low voltage; Pipeline processing; Subthreshold current; Voltage control; Fast Fourier Transform (FFT); subthreshold CMOS circuits; super-pipelining; ultra low voltage (ULV) design;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2011.2169311