Title :
Evaluation of multiple supply and threshold voltages for low-power FinFET circuit synthesis
Author :
Mishra, Prateek ; Muttreja, Anish ; Jha, Niraj K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ
Abstract :
In modern circuits, power efficiency is a central determinant of circuit efficiency. The exponential increase in the number of transistors in a chip has led to increased chip power dissipation. Therefore, low-power circuits have become a top priority in modern VLSI design. With scaling, leakage power accounts for an increasingly larger portion (>40%) of the total power consumption in deep submicron technologies. FinFET technology has been proposed as a promising alternative to deep submicron bulk CMOS technology, because of its better scalability, short-channel characteristics, ability to suppress leakage current, and mitigate device-to-device variability when compared to bulk CMOS. The subthreshold slope of a FinFET is approximately 60 mV which is close to ideal. In this paper, we propose a methodology for low-power FinFET based circuit synthesis. A mechanism called TCMS (threshold control through multiple supply voltages) was previously proposed for improving the power efficiency of FinFET based global interconnects. We propose a significant generalization of TCMS to the design of any logic circuit. This scheme represents a significant divergence from the conventional multiple-supply voltage schemes considered in the past. It also obviates the need for voltage level-converters. We employ accurate delay and power estimates using table look-up methods based on HSPICE simulations for supply voltage and threshold voltage optimization. Experimental results demonstrate that TCMS can provide power savings of 67.6% and device area savings of 65.2% under relaxed delay constraints.
Keywords :
CMOS logic circuits; MOSFET; SPICE; VLSI; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit interconnections; low-power electronics; optimisation; table lookup; FinFET based global interconnects power efficiency; FinFET subthreshold slope; HSPICE simulations; chip power dissipation; conventional multiple-supply voltage schemes; deep submicron bulk CMOS technology; low-power FinFET circuit synthesis; modern VLSI design; multiple supply evaluation; power estimation; table look-up methods; threshold voltage optimization; CMOS technology; Circuit synthesis; Delay estimation; Energy consumption; FinFETs; Leakage current; Power dissipation; Scalability; Threshold voltage; Very large scale integration;
Conference_Titel :
Nanoscale Architectures, 2008. NANOARCH 2008. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2552-5
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2553-2
DOI :
10.1109/NANOARCH.2008.4585795