• DocumentCode
    1511654
  • Title

    An 0.5-μm CMOS analog random access memory chip for TeraOPS speed multimedia video processing

  • Author

    Carmona-Galán, Ricardo ; Rodriguez-Vazquez, Angel ; Espejo-Meana, Servando ; Dominguez-Castro, Rafael ; Roska, Tamas ; Kozek, Tibor ; Chua, Leon O.

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. de Microelectron., Seville Univ., Spain
  • Volume
    1
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    1999
  • fDate
    6/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    121
  • Lastpage
    135
  • Abstract
    Data compressing, data coding, and communications in object-oriented multimedia applications like telepresence, computer-aided medical diagnosis, or telesurgery require an enormous computing power-in the order of trillions of operations per second (TeraOPS). Compared with conventional digital technology, cellular neural/nonlinear network (CNN)-based computing is capable of realizing these TeraOPS-range image processing tasks in a cost-effective implementation. To exploit the computing power of the CNN Universal Machine (CNN-UM), the CNN chipset architecture has been developed-a mixed-signal hardware platform for CNN-based image processing. One of the nonstandard components of the chipset is the cache memory of the analog array processor, the analog random access memory (ARAM). This paper reports on an ARAM chip that has been designed and fabricated in a 0.5-μm CMOS technology. This chip consists of a fully addressable array of 32×256 analog memory registers and has a packing density of 637 analog-memory-cells/mm2. Random and nondestructive access of the memory contents is available. Bottom-plate sampling techniques have been employed to eliminate harmonic distortion introduced by signal-dependent feedthrough. Signal coupling and interaction have been minimized by proper layout measures, including the use of protection rings and separate power supplies for the analog and the digital circuitry. This prototype features an equivalent resolution of up to 7 bits-measured by comparing the reconstructed waveform with the original input signal. Measured access times for writing/reading to/from the memory registers are of 200 ns. I/O rates via the l6-line-wide I/O bus exceed 10 Msamples/s. Storage time at room temperature is in the 80 to 100 ms range, without accuracy loss
  • Keywords
    CMOS memory circuits; cellular arrays; cellular neural nets; multimedia systems; random-access storage; video coding; 0.5-μm CMOS analog random access memory chip; CNN Universal Machine; TeraOPS speed multimedia video processing; analog random access memory; cache memory; cellular neural/nonlinear network-based computing; computer-aided medical diagnosis; data coding; data compressing; mixed-signal hardware platform; object-oriented multimedia; telepresence; telesurgery; Application software; CMOS technology; Cellular neural networks; Computer applications; Image coding; Image processing; Multimedia communication; Multimedia computing; Random access memory; Registers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Multimedia, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1520-9210
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/6046.766734
  • Filename
    766734