Emerging Power-Gating Techniques for Low Power Digital Circuits
dc.contributor.author | Henry, Michael B. | en |
dc.contributor.committeechair | Nazhandali, Leyla | en |
dc.contributor.committeemember | Feng, Wu-chun | en |
dc.contributor.committeemember | Irwin, Mary Jane | en |
dc.contributor.committeemember | Patterson, Cameron D. | en |
dc.contributor.committeemember | Tront, Joseph G. | en |
dc.contributor.department | Electrical and Computer Engineering | en |
dc.date.accessioned | 2014-03-14T20:18:39Z | en |
dc.date.adate | 2011-11-29 | en |
dc.date.available | 2014-03-14T20:18:39Z | en |
dc.date.issued | 2011-11-03 | en |
dc.date.rdate | 2011-11-29 | en |
dc.date.sdate | 2011-11-16 | en |
dc.description.abstract | As transistor sizes scale down and levels of integration increase, leakage power has become a critical problem in modern low-power microprocessors. This is especially true for ultra-low-voltage (ULV) circuits, where high levels of leakage force designers to chose relatively high threshold voltages, which limits performance. In this thesis, an industry-standard technique known as power-gating is explored, whereby transistors are used to disconnect the power from idle portions of a chip. Present power-gating implementations suffer from limitations including non-zero off-state leakage, which can aggregate to a large amount of wasted energy during long idle periods, and high energy overhead, which limits its use to long-term system-wide sleep modes. As this thesis will show however, by vastly increasing the effectiveness of power-gating through the use of emerging technologies, and by implementing aggressive hardware-oriented power-gating policies, leakage in microprocessors can be eliminated to a large extent. This allows the threshold voltage to be lowered, leading to ULV microprocessors with both low switching energy and high performance. The first emerging technology investigated is the Nanoelectromechnical-Systems (NEMS) switch, which is a CMOS-compatible mechanical relay with near-infinite off-resistance and low on-resistance. When used for power-gating, this switch completely eliminates off-state leakage, yet is compact enough to be contained on die. This has tremendous benefits for applications with long sleep times. For example, a NEMS-power-gated architecture performing an FFT per hour consumes 30 times less power than a transistor-power-gated architecture. Additionally, the low on-resistance can lower power-gating area overhead by 36-83\%. The second technology targets the high energy overhead associated with powering a circuit on and off. This thesis demonstrates that a new logic style specifically designed for ULV operation, Sense Amplifier Pass Transistor Logic (SAPTL), requires power-gates that are 8-10 times smaller, and consumes up to 15 times less boot-up energy, compared to static-CMOS. These abilities enable effective power-gating of an SAPTL circuit, even for very short idle periods. Microprocessor simulations demonstrate that a fine-grained power-gating policy, along with this drastically lower overhead, can result in up to a 44\% drop in energy. Encompassing these investigations is an energy estimation framework built around a cycle-accurate microprocessor simulator, which allows a wide range of circuit and power-gating parameters to be optimized. This framework implements two hardware-based power-gating schedulers that are completely invisible to the OS, and have extremely low hardware overhead, allowing for a large number of power-gated regions. All together, this thesis represents the most complete and forward-looking study on power-gating in the ULV region. The results demonstrate that aggressive power-gating allows designers to leverage the very low switching energy of ULV operation, while achieving performance levels that can greatly expand the capabilities of energy-constrained systems. | en |
dc.description.degree | Ph. D. | en |
dc.identifier.other | etd-11162011-152427 | en |
dc.identifier.sourceurl | http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11162011-152427/ | en |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29627 | en |
dc.publisher | Virginia Tech | en |
dc.relation.haspart | Henry_MB_D_2011.pdf | en |
dc.rights | In Copyright | en |
dc.rights.uri | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ | en |
dc.subject | Sense-Amplifier Pass Transistor Logic | en |
dc.subject | NEMS | en |
dc.subject | Digital Electronics | en |
dc.subject | Power-Gating | en |
dc.subject | Low Power | en |
dc.title | Emerging Power-Gating Techniques for Low Power Digital Circuits | en |
dc.type | Dissertation | en |
thesis.degree.discipline | Electrical and Computer Engineering | en |
thesis.degree.grantor | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University | en |
thesis.degree.level | doctoral | en |
thesis.degree.name | Ph. D. | en |
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