DocumentCode
996014
Title
A framework for energy and transient power reduction during behavioral synthesis
Author
Mohanty, Saraju P. ; Ranganathan, Nagarajan
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Univ. of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA
Volume
12
Issue
6
fYear
2004
fDate
6/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
562
Lastpage
572
Abstract
In battery driven portable applications, the minimization of energy, average power, peak power, and peak power differential are equally important to improve reliability and efficiency. The peak power and the peak power differential drive the transient characteristics of a CMOS circuit. In this paper, we propose a framework for the simultaneous reduction of energy and transient power during behavioral synthesis. A new metric called "cycle power function" (CPF) is defined which captures the transient power characteristics as an equally weighted sum of the normalized mean cycle power and the normalized mean cycle differential power. Minimizing CPF using multiple supply voltages and dynamic frequency clocking under resource constraints results in the reduction of both energy and transient power. Based on the above, we develop a new datapath scheduling algorithm called CPF-scheduler which attempts at power and energy minimization by minimizing the CPF parameter during the scheduling process. The type and number of functional units available become the set of resource constraints for the scheduler. Experimental results indicate that the proposed scheduler achieves significant reductions in terms of power and energy.
Keywords
CMOS digital integrated circuits; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit reliability; low-power electronics; minimisation; scheduling; transient analysis; CMOS circuit; average power; battery driven portable applications; behavioral synthesis; complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor circuit; cycle power function; datapath scheduling algorithm; dynamic frequency clocking; energy reduction; normalized mean cycle differential power; normalized mean cycle power; peak power; peak power differential; reliability; resource constraints; supply voltages; transient power reduction; Batteries; Circuit synthesis; Clocks; Dynamic scheduling; Frequency; Minimization methods; Power supplies; Power system reliability; Scheduling algorithm; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-8210
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TVLSI.2004.827568
Filename
1302141
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