Title :
A VLSI implementation of a cellular rotator array
Author :
Burleson, Wayne P. ; Scharf, Louis L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Colorado Univ., Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract :
A description is given of the design of a systolic VLSI chip for the implementation of signal-processing algorithms that may be decomposed into simple real rotations. Applications of this chip include projection operators and discrete Fourier and cosine transforms. Large problems may be computed by tilting together many chips for increased throughput. A CMOS VLSI chip containing 138000 transistors in a 5×3 array of rotators has been designed, fabricated, and tested. The chip has a 32-MHz clock and performs real rotations at a rate of 30 MHz. The systolic nature of the chip makes use of fully synchronous bit-serial interconnects and a very regular structure. The result is a very simple and quickly implemented hardware solution
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; VLSI; cellular arrays; computerised signal processing; fast Fourier transforms; integrated logic circuits; logic CAD; microprocessor chips; 30 MHz; 32 MHz; CMOS VLSI chip; FFT; cellular rotator array; computerised signal processing; cosine transforms; discrete Fourier transform; projection operators; real rotations; signal-processing algorithms; systolic VLSI chip; Algorithm design and analysis; Computer architecture; Design methodology; Discrete Fourier transforms; Fourier transforms; Signal design; Signal processing algorithms; Testing; Throughput; Very large scale integration;
Conference_Titel :
Custom Integrated Circuits Conference, 1988., Proceedings of the IEEE 1988
Conference_Location :
Rochester, NY
DOI :
10.1109/CICC.1988.20821