Title :
Low-power design methodology for an on-chip with adaptive bandwidth capability
Author :
Bashirullah, Rizwan ; Liu, Wentai ; Cavin, Ralph K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC, USA
Abstract :
This paper describes a low-power design methodology for a bus architecture based on hybrid current/voltage mode signaling for deep sub-micrometer on-chip interconnects that achieves high data transmission rates while minimizing the number of repeaters by nearly 1/3. The technique uses low-impedance current-mode sensing to increase the data throughput and minimizes the static power dissipation inherent to current-mode signaling by adaptively changing the interconnection bandwidth given a change in input signal activity. Since bandwidth is related to power dissipation, the adaptive bus attains energy efficient data transmission by expending minimum power required to support the bus signal activity. The design method is based on statistical analysis of address streams extracted for typical benchmark programs using a microprocessor time-based simulator in combination with circuit-level power analysis. Simulation results indicate improvements in power dissipation of up to 65% and 40% over current and voltage mode signaling schemes, respectively.
Keywords :
adaptive control; bandwidth allocation; integrated circuit design; low-power electronics; system buses; system-on-chip; adaptive bandwidth capability; bus architecture; circuit-level power analysis; data throughput; deep sub-micrometer on-chip interconnect; high data transmission rate; hybrid current mode; hybrid voltage mode; interconnection bandwidth; low-impedance current-mode sensing; low-power design methodology; microprocessor time-based simulator; static power dissipation; statistical analysis; Bandwidth; Circuit simulation; Data communication; Design methodology; Energy efficiency; Integrated circuit interconnections; Power dissipation; Repeaters; Throughput; Voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Design Automation Conference, 2003. Proceedings
Print_ISBN :
1-58113-688-9
DOI :
10.1109/DAC.2003.1219094