Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for Low-power deep sub-micron CMOS logic : sub-threshold current reduction
Title:
Low-power deep sub-micron CMOS logic : sub-threshold current reduction
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Boston, MA : Kluwer Academic Pubs, 2004
ISBN:
9781402028489

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000004717876 TK7874.66 M43 2004 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

1. 1 Power-dissipation trends in CMOS circuits Shrinking device geometry, growing chip area and increased data-processing speed performance are technological trends in the integrated circuit industry to enlarge chip functionality. Already in 1965 Gordon Moore predicted that the total number of devices on a chip would double every year until the 1970s and every 24 months in the 1980s. This prediction is widely known as "Moore's Law" and eventually culminated in the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) technology road map [1]. The SIA road map has been a guide for the in­ dustry leading them to continued wafer and die size growth, increased transistor density and operating frequencies, and defect density reduction. To mention a few numbers; the die size increased 7% per year, the smallest feature sizes decreased 30% and the operating frequencies doubled every two years. As a consequence of these trends both the number of transistors and the power dissi­ pation per unit area increase.In the near future the maximum power dissipation per unit area will be reached. Down-scaling of the supply voltage is not only the most effective way to reduce power dissipation in general it also is a necessary precondition to ensure device reliability by reducing electrical fields and device temperature, to prevent device degradation. A draw-back of this solution is an increased signal propa­ gation delay, which results in a lower data-processing speed performance.


Table of Contents

Index of symbols
1 Introduction
1.1 Power-dissipation trends in CMOS circuits
1.2 Overview of present power-reduction solutions
1.3 Aim and scope of this book
1.4 Organization of the book
2 Power Versus Engergy
2.1 Power considerations
2.2 Energy considerations
2.3 Conclusions
3 Power Dissipation in Digital CMOS Circuits
3.1 Thermodynamics of computation
3.2 Functional power dissipation
3.3 Parasitical power dissipation
3.4 Trends in power dissipation
3.5 Conclusions
4 Reduction of Functional Power Dissipation
4.1 Node transition-cycle activity factor
4.2 Clock frequency
4.3 Transition-cycle energy
4.4 Conclusions
5 Reduction of Parasitical Power Dissipation
5.1 Leakage power dissipation
5.2 Short-circuit power dissipation
5.3 Need for weak-inversion current reduction
5.4 Conclusions
6 Weak-inversion Current Reduction
6.1 Classification
6.2 Conclusions
7 Effectiveness of Weak-inversion Current Reductions
7.1 General effectiveness
7.2 Technique-specific effectiveness
7.3 Conclusions
8 Triple-S Circuit Designs
8.1 Process flow
8.2 Experimental circuits
8.3 Leakage, speed, area and functional power
8.4 Practical applications and limitations
8.5 Conclusions
9 Conclusions
10 Summary
References
Index
Go to:Top of Page