Dynamic Power-Performance Adjustment on Clustered Multi-Threading Processors

Author(s):  
Jingwei Chen ◽  
Li Shen ◽  
Zhiying Wang ◽  
Ning Li ◽  
Yemao Xu
Author(s):  
M. Elangovan

The design of low power memory cells is the dream of engineers in memory design. A Darlington-based 8T CNTFET SRAM cell is suggested in this paper. It is called the proposed P_CNTFET Darlington 8T SRAM Cell. Compared with that of the traditional 6T and 8T CNTFET SRAM cells, the power and noise performances of the proposed SRAM cell are comparable. Compared to the traditional SRAM cells, the write, hold, read and dynamic power consumption of the proposed cell is much lower. The CNTFET parameters are optimized to boost the noise margin performance of the suggested bit cell. For optimized parameters, the power consumption and SNM of the proposed cell are compared with conventional cells. In contrast to the conventional cells, the HSNM and WSNM of the proposed cell are improved by 6.25% and 66.6%. The proposed cell’s RSNM is 38% greater than the traditional 6T SRAM cell. The proposed cell’s RSNM is 3.33% less than the traditional 8T SRAM cell. MOSFET is also used to implement the proposed SRAM cell and its noise margin and power performance are compared with traditional MOSFET-based SRAM cells. As with the conventional cells, the MOSFET-based implementation of the proposed cell power and SNM performance is also very good. The simulation is done with the HSPICE simulation tool using the Stanford University 32[Formula: see text]nm CNTFET model.


2017 ◽  
pp. 44-47
Author(s):  
Serguei Aleksandrovich PAKHOMIN ◽  
◽  
Dmitrii Viktorovich KRAINOV ◽  
Fedor Aleksandrovich REDNOV ◽  
Vladinir Leonidovich KOLOMEITSEV ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 138-168
Author(s):  
Andrew Tobolowsky

Scholars are increasingly aware of the dynamic nature of the interaction between the nine-chapter-long genealogy that begins the book of Chronicles and its source material. However, little attention has been paid to the role this interaction might have played in the creation of some key biblical ideas, particularly in the “eponymous imagination” of the tribes as literally the sons of Jacob. Through comparison with scholarly approaches to the pseudo-Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and an investigation into the ramifications for biblical studies of ethnic theory and historical memory on the fluidity of ethnicity and memory over time, this article seeks to reassess the dynamic power of the Chronicles genealogy as an ethnic charter for the elites of Persian Yehud. Focus on the distinctive imagination of Israel in the crucial narratives in the book of Genesis, as compared with narratives elsewhere in the primary history, and the contributions of the Chronicles genealogy to their redefinition, allows us to address the Bible’s dependence upon the lens the Chronicles genealogy imposes upon it.


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