Title :
Explaining the gap between ASIC and custom power: a custom perspective
Author :
Chang, Andrew ; Dally, William J.
Author_Institution :
Cadence Design Syst., San Jose, CA, USA
Abstract :
Power dissipation is now both a key constraint and an application driver in VLSI systems. For a specific application, the energy efficiency of different implementations can differ by multiple orders of magnitude. This work surveys a range of techniques available to improve energy efficiency and highlights their cumulative benefit. Understanding, adopting and adapting selected techniques from full-custom solutions can help bridge the efficiency gap for the ASIC designs. Architecture and micro-architecture choices yield multiple-order of magnitude improvements in power dissipation by matching the structure of the design to the structure of the application and by providing multiple operating and power-down modes. The combination of methodology and full-custom circuit techniques and libraries provide benefits primarily due to reduced parasitic loading enabling the improved performance to be translated into the potential for factor-of-3 to factor-of-10 improvements in power.
Keywords :
VLSI; application specific integrated circuits; integrated circuit design; low-power electronics; ASIC designs; VLSI systems; application specific integrated circuits; circuit libraries; energy efficiency; full-custom circuit techniques; parasitic loading; power dissipation; Application specific integrated circuits; Application specific processors; Bridge circuits; Electronic design automation and methodology; Energy efficiency; Flexible printed circuits; Libraries; Permission; Power dissipation; Very large scale integration;
Conference_Titel :
Design Automation Conference, 2005. Proceedings. 42nd
Print_ISBN :
1-59593-058-2
DOI :
10.1109/DAC.2005.193817