A novel design of nano router with high-speed crossbar scheduler for digital systems in QCA paradigm

Circuit World ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kalpana Kasilingam ◽  
Paulchamy Balaiah

Purpose The nano-router would be a mastery device for providing high-speed data delivery. Here nano-router with a space-efficient crossbar scheduler is used for making absolutely less consumption in power. Design/methodology/approach In the emerging modern technology, every one of us is expecting a delivery of data at a high speed. To achieve high-speed delivery the authors are using the router. The router used here is at nanoscale reading which provides a compact size. Findings This can be implemented using the modern tools called Quantum-dot Cellular Automata (QCA) which is operated without the use of a transistor. As conventional complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) designs have some limitations such as low density, high power consumption and requirement of a large area. Research limitations/implications To overcome these limitations the QCA is used. It characterizes capability is used to substituting CMOS technology. The round-robin fashion is used in a high-speed space-efficient crossbar scheduler. Practical implications The simulation of the planned circuit with notional information established the practical identity of the scheme. Social implications The proposed nano router can be stimulated in the QCA environment using the QCADesigner tool and the power of the router can be calculated with the QCADesigner–E tool. Originality/value The proposed nano router can be stimulated in the QCA environment using the QCADesigner tool and the power of the router can be calculated with the QCADesigner–E tool. In this work, the performance of the router can be done in both the QCA environment and CMOS technology.

Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 551
Author(s):  
Zhongjian Bian ◽  
Xiaofeng Hong ◽  
Yanan Guo ◽  
Lirida Naviner ◽  
Wei Ge ◽  
...  

Spintronic based embedded magnetic random access memory (eMRAM) is becoming a foundry validated solution for the next-generation nonvolatile memory applications. The hybrid complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)/magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) integration has been selected as a proper candidate for energy harvesting, area-constraint and energy-efficiency Internet of Things (IoT) systems-on-chips. Multi-VDD (low supply voltage) techniques were adopted to minimize energy dissipation in MRAM, at the cost of reduced writing/sensing speed and margin. Meanwhile, yield can be severely affected due to variations in process parameters. In this work, we conduct a thorough analysis of MRAM sensing margin and yield. We propose a current-mode sensing amplifier (CSA) named 1D high-sensing 1D margin, high 1D speed and 1D stability (HMSS-SA) with reconfigured reference path and pre-charge transistor. Process-voltage-temperature (PVT) aware analysis is performed based on an MTJ compact model and an industrial 28 nm CMOS technology, explicitly considering low-voltage (0.7 V), low tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) (50%) and high temperature (85 °C) scenario as the worst sensing case. A case study takes a brief look at sensing circuits, which is applied to in-memory bit-wise computing. Simulation results indicate that the proposed high-sensing margin, high speed and stability sensing-sensing amplifier (HMSS-SA) achieves remarkable performance up to 2.5 GHz sensing frequency. At 0.65 V supply voltage, it can achieve 1 GHz operation frequency with only 0.3% failure rate.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akhil Dodda ◽  
Darsith Jayachandran ◽  
Shiva Subbulakshmi Radhakrishnan ◽  
Saptarshi Das

Abstract Natural intelligence has many dimensions, and in animals, learning about the environment and making behavioral changes are some of its manifestations. In primates vision plays a critical role in learning. The underlying biological neural networks contain specialized neurons and synapses which not only sense and process the visual stimuli but also learns and adapts, with remarkable energy efficiency. Forgetting also plays an active role in learning. Mimicking the adaptive neurobiological mechanisms for seeing, learning, and forgetting can, therefore, accelerate the development of artificial intelligence (AI) and bridge the massive energy gap that exists between AI and biological intelligence. Here we demonstrate a bio-inspired machine vision based on large area grown monolayer 2D phototransistor array integrated with analog, non-volatile, and programmable memory gate-stack that not only enables direct learning, and unsupervised relearning from the visual stimuli but also offers learning adaptability under photopic (bright-light), scotopic (low-light), as well as noisy illumination conditions at miniscule energy expenditure. In short, our “all-in-one” hardware vision platform combines “sensing”, “computing” and “storage” not only to overcome the von Neumann bottleneck of conventional complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology but also to eliminate the need for peripheral circuits and sensors.


Circuit World ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Majeed ◽  
Esam Alkaldy

Purpose This study aims to replace current multi-layer and coplanar wire crossing methods in QCA technology to avoid fabrication difficulties caused by them. Design/methodology/approach Quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) is one of the newly emerging nanoelectronics technology tools that is proposed as a good replacement for complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology. This technology has many challenges, among them being component interconnection and signal routing. This paper will propose a new wire crossing method to enhance layout use in a single layer. The presented method depends on the central cell clock phase to enable two signals to cross over without interference. QCADesigner software is used to simulate a full adder circuit designed with the proposed wire crossing method to be used as a benchmark for further analysis of the presented wire crossing approach. QCAPro software is used for power dissipation analysis of the proposed adder. Findings A new cost function is presented in this paper to draw attention to the fabrication difficulties of the technology when designing QCA circuits. This function is applied to the selected benchmark circuit, and the results show good performance of the proposed method compared to others. The improvement is around 59, 33 and 75% compared to the best reported multi-layer wire crossing, coplanar wire crossing and logical crossing, respectively. The power dissipation analysis shows that the proposed method does not cause any extra power consumption in the circuit. Originality/value In this paper, a new approach is developed to bypass the wire crossing problem in the QCA technique.


Electronics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Wang ◽  
Xiaoge Zhu ◽  
Xuan Guo ◽  
Jian Luan ◽  
Lei Zhou ◽  
...  

This paper presents an eight-channel time-interleaved (TI) 2.6 GS/s 8-bit successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) prototype in a 55-nm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process. The channel-selection-embedded bootstrap switch is adopted to perform sampling times synchronization using the full-speed master clock to suppress the time skew between channels. Based on the segmented pre-quantization and bypass switching scheme, double alternate comparators clocked asynchronously with background offset calibration are utilized in sub-channel SAR ADC to achieve high speed and low power. Measurement results show that the signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) of the ADC is above 38.2 dB up to 500 MHz input frequency and above 31.8 dB across the entire first Nyquist zone. The differential non-linearity (DNL) and integral non-linearity (INL) are +0.93/−0.85 LSB and +0.71/−0.91 LSB, respectively. The ADC consumes 60 mW from a 1.2 V supply, occupies an area of 400 μm × 550 μm, and exhibits a figure-of-merit (FoM) of 348 fJ/conversion-step.


Circuit World ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 300-310
Author(s):  
Piyush Tankwal ◽  
Vikas Nehra ◽  
Sanjay Prajapati ◽  
Brajesh Kumar Kaushik

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze and compare the characteristics of hybrid conventional complementary metal oxide semiconductor/magnetic tunnel junction (CMOS/MTJ) logic gates based on spin transfer torque (STT) and differential spin Hall effect (DSHE) magnetic random access memory (MRAM). Design/methodology/approach Spintronics technology can be used as an alternative to CMOS technology as it is having comparatively low power dissipation, non-volatility, high density and high endurance. MTJ is the basic spin based device that stores data in form of electron spin instead of charge. Two mechanisms, namely, STT and SHE, are used to switch the magnetization of MTJ. Findings It is observed that the power consumption in DSHE based logic gates is 95.6% less than the STT based gates. DSHE-based write circuit consumes only 5.28 fJ energy per bit. Originality/value This paper describes how the DSHE-MRAM is more effective for implementing logic circuits in comparison to STT-MRAM.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (10) ◽  
pp. 1950165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandeep Garg ◽  
Tarun K. Gupta

In this paper, a fin field-effect transistor (FinFET)-based domino technique dynamic node-driven feedback transistor domino logic (DNDFTDL) is designed for low-power, high-speed and improved noise performance. In the proposed domino technique, the concept of current division is explored below the evaluation network for enhancement of performance parameters. Simulations are carried out for 32-nm complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) and FinFET node using HSPICE for 2-, 4-, 8- and 16-input OR gates with a DC supply voltage of 0.9[Formula: see text]V. Proposed technique shows a maximum power reduction of 73.93% in FinFET short-gate (SG) mode as compared to conditional stacked keeper domino logic (CSKDL) technique and a maximum power reduction of 72.12% as compared to modified high-speed clocked delay domino logic (M-HSCD) technique in FinFET low-power (LP) mode. The proposed technique shows a maximum delay reduction of 35.52% as compared to voltage comparison domino (VCD) technique in SG mode and a reduction of 25.01% as compared to current mirror footed domino logic (CMFD) technique in LP mode. The unity noise gain (UNG) of the proposed circuit is 1.72–[Formula: see text] higher compared to different existing techniques in FinFET SG mode and is 1.42–[Formula: see text] higher in FinFET LP mode. The Figure of Merit (FOM) of the proposed circuit is up to [Formula: see text] higher as compared to existing domino logic techniques because of lower values of power, delay and area and higher values of UNG of the proposed circuit. In addition, the proposed technique shows a maximum power reduction of up to 68.64% in FinFET technology as compared to its counterpart in CMOS technology.


Circuit World ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandeep Garg ◽  
Tarun Kumar Gupta

Purpose This paper aims to propose a new fin field-effect transistor (FinFET)-based domino technique low-power series connected foot-driven transistors logic in 32 nm technology and examine its performance parameters by performing transient analysis. Design/methodology/approach In the proposed technique, the leakage current is reduced at footer node by a division of current to improve the performance of the circuit in terms of average power consumption, propagation delay and noise margin. Simulation of existing and proposed techniques are carried out in FinFET and complementary metal-oxide semiconductor technology at FinFET 32 nm technology for 2-, 4-, 8- and 16-input domino OR gates on a supply voltage of 0.9 V using HSPICE. Findings The proposed technique shows maximum power reduction of 77.74% in FinFET short gate (SG) mode in comparison with current-mirror-based process variation tolerant (CPVT) technique and maximum delay reduction of 51.34% in low power (LP) mode in comparison with CPVT technique at a frequency of 100 MHz. The unity noise gain of the proposed circuit is 1.10× to 1.54× higher in comparison with different existing techniques in FinFET SG mode and 1.11× to 1.71× higher in FinFET LP mode. The figure of merit of the proposed circuit is up to 15.77× higher in comparison with existing domino techniques. Originality/value The research proposes a new FinFET-based domino technique and shows improvement in power, delay, area and noise performance. The proposed design can be used for implementing high-speed digital circuits such as microprocessors and memories.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satheesh Kumar S ◽  
Kumaravel S

Due to the reduction in technology scaling, gate capacitance and charge storage in sensitive nodes are rapidly decreasing, making Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) circuits more sensitive to soft errors caused by radiation. In this paper, a low-power and high-speed single event upset radiation hardened latch is proposed. The proposed latch can withstand single event upsets completely when the high energy particle hit on any one of its intermediate nodes. The proposed latch structure comprises of four CMOS feedback schemes and a Muller C-element with clock gating technique. For the sake of comparison, the proposed and the existing latches in the literature are implemented in 45nm CMOS technology. From the post layout simulation results, it may be noted that the proposed latch achieves 8% low power consumption, 95% less delay, and a 94% reduction in power-delay-product compared to the existing single event upset resilient and single event tolerant latches. Monte Carlo simulations show that the proposed latch is less sensitive to process, voltage, and temperature variations in comparison with the existing hardened latches in the literature.


Electronics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 432 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Prinzie ◽  
Karel Appels ◽  
Szymon Kulis

This paper presents a novel scalable physical implementation method for high-speed Triple Modular Redundant (TMR) digital integrated circuits in radiation-hard designs. The implementation uses a distributed placement strategy compared to a commonly used bulk 3-bank constraining method. TMR netlist information is used to optimally constrain the placement of both sequential cells and combinational cells. This approach significantly reduces routing complexity, net lengths and dynamic power consumption with more than 60% and 20% respectively. The technique was simulated in a 65 nm Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology.


2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anu Mehra ◽  
Smita Singhal ◽  
Upendra Tripathi

Domino logic is a clocked CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor) logic with fewer transistors than static CMOS logic. A PMOS (P-type Metal-Oxide Semiconductor) transistor, known as “keeper”, is included in the design to improve the noise tolerance performance and to reduce the leakage current. The aspect ratio i.e. W/L of the keeper (W=width and L=length) is kept low for the correct functionality of the domino logic. This paper proposes a domino logic with modified keeper in order to improve the circuit with respect to power and area as compared to various existing techniques of domino logic i.e. clock delayed domino logic (CDD), high speed domino logic (HSD), multi threshold high speed domino logic (MHSD), clock delayed sleep mode domino logic (CDSMD), sleep switch domino logic (SSDD), PMOS only sleep switch domino logic (PSSDD), reduced delay variations domino logic (RDVD) and Foot Driven Stack Transistor Domino Logic (FDSTDL). The proposed as well as existing domino logics, for 8-input as well as 16-input OR gate in 16nm CMOS technology, are simulated for different values of W/L of keeper with W/L ratio ranging from 1 to 6. The power-delay-product(PDP) of proposed design has improved as compared to the existing designs. For 8-input OR gate and W/L=6, PDP had improved to maximum of 99.99% for CDD and minimum of 38.09% for SSDD.


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