Title :
Estimation of maximum power for sequential circuits considering spurious transitions
Author :
Wang, Chuan-Yu ; Roy, Kaushik
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
Abstract :
With the high demand for reliability and performance, accurate estimation of maximum instantaneous power dissipation in CMOS circuits is essential to determine the IR drop on supply lines and to optimize the power and ground routing. Unfortunately, the problem of determining the input patterns to induce maximum current, and hence, the maximum power, is NP-complete. Even for circuits with small number of primary inputs (PIs), it is CPU time intensive to conduct efficiently search in the input vector space. The authors present an automatic test generation (ATG) based technique to efficiently generate tight lower bounds of the maximum instananeous power for CMOS sequential circuits under non-zero gate delays. Power dissipation due to spurious transitions has been considered by incorporating static timing analysis into the estimation process. Experiments were performed on ISCAS and MCNC benchmarks. Results show that the ATG-based technique is superior to the traditional simulation-based technique in both speed and performance. On average, for sequential circuits having over 10,000 gates (ISCAS-89 benchmarks), the ATG-based approach executes 981 times faster, and generates a lower bound which is 1.8 times better compared to simulation based approaches
Keywords :
CMOS logic circuits; automatic testing; circuit analysis computing; delays; electric potential; integrated circuit reliability; network routing; sequential circuits; CMOS sequential circuits; IR drop; ISCAS benchmark; MCNC benchmark; automatic test generation based technique; induced maximum current; induced maximum power; input patterns; input vector space; maximum instantaneous power dissipation estimation; nonzero gate delays; optimized ground routing; optimized power routing; performance; primary inputs; reliability; spurious transitions; static timing analysis; supply lines; Automatic testing; Central Processing Unit; Circuit simulation; Circuit testing; Delay; Power dissipation; Power generation; Routing; Sequential analysis; Sequential circuits;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Design: VLSI in Computers and Processors, 1997. ICCD '97. Proceedings., 1997 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Austin, TX
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-8206-X
DOI :
10.1109/ICCD.1997.628948