• DocumentCode
    2509406
  • Title

    A new technique for leakage reduction in CMOS circuits using self-controlled stacked transistors

  • Author

    Hanchate, Narender ; Ranganathan, N.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Univ. of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA
  • fYear
    2004
  • fDate
    2004
  • Firstpage
    228
  • Lastpage
    233
  • Abstract
    In CMOS circuits, the reduction of the threshold voltage due to voltage scaling leads to increase in sub threshold leakage current and hence, static power dissipation. We propose a novel technique called LECTOR for designing CMOS gates which significantly cuts down the leakage current without increasing the dynamic power dissipation. In the proposed technique, we introduce two leakage control transistors (a p-type and a n-type) within the logic gate for which the gate terminal of each leakage control transistor (LCT) is controlled by the source of the other. In this arrangement, one of the LCT\´s is always "near its cut-off voltage" for any input combination. This increases the resistance of the path from Vdd to ground leading to significant decrease in leakage currents. The gate-level netlist of the given circuit is first converted into a static CMOS complex gate implementation and then LCTs are introduced to obtain a leakage controlled circuit. The significant feature of LECTOR is that it works effectively in both active and idle states of the circuit, resulting in better leakage reduction compared to other techniques. Further, the proposed technique overcomes the limitations posed by other existing methods for leakage reduction. Experimental results indicate an average leakage reduction of 79.4% for MCNC \´91 benchmark circuits.
  • Keywords
    CMOS logic circuits; leakage currents; logic design; logic gates; low-power electronics; threshold logic; transistors; CMOS circuits; CMOS gates; benchmark circuits; complementary metal oxide semiconductor; cut off voltage; leakage control transistors; leakage reduction; logic gate; self controlled stacked transistors; static power dissipation; subthreshold leakage current; threshold voltage; Circuits; Computer science; Dynamic voltage scaling; Leakage current; Nanomaterials; Power dissipation; Power engineering and energy; Sleep; Threshold voltage; Very large scale integration;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    VLSI Design, 2004. Proceedings. 17th International Conference on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2072-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICVD.2004.1260929
  • Filename
    1260929