Challenges and opportunities of extremely thin SOI (ETSOI) CMOS technology for future low power and general purpose system-on-chip applications

Author(s):  
A. Khakifirooz ◽  
K. Cheng ◽  
P. Kulkarni ◽  
J. Cai ◽  
S. Ponoth ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 240-248
Author(s):  
Hicham Akhamal ◽  
Mostafa Chakir ◽  
Hatim Ameziane ◽  
Mohammed Akhamal ◽  
Kamal Zared ◽  
...  

This paper presents a nano-power Low Drop-Out (LDO) voltage regulator circuit for Radio-Frequency System-on-Chip (RF SoC) applications, this LDO is designed for a smaller dimension due to CMOS technology and in the weak inversion region, can thus be used to minimize power loss of LDO regulator without transientresponse degradation. The proposed structure its low power dissipation make it ideal for RF system-on-chip applications that require low power dissipation under different loading conditions. In order to optimize performance for LDO, the proposed amplifier helps to minimize power of LDO regulators without using any onchip and off-chip compensation capacitors. The output spot noise at 100Hz and 1 kHz are 200nV/sqrt (Hz) and 6nV/sqrt (Hz), respectively. The active area of the circuit is 850 µm2 . The regulator operates with supply voltages from 1.2V to 2V.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 311-319
Author(s):  
Hicham Akhamal ◽  
Mostafa Chakir ◽  
Hatim Ameziane ◽  
Mohammed, Akhamal ◽  
Kamal Zared ◽  
...  

This paper presents a nano-power Low Drop-Out (LDO) voltage regulator circuit for RadioFrequency System-on-Chip (RF SoC) applications, this LDO is designed for a smaller dimension due to CMOS technology and in the weak inversion region, can thus be used to minimize power loss of LDO regulator without transient-response degradation. The proposed structure its low power dissipation make it ideal for RF system-on-chip applications that require low power dissipation under different loading conditions. In order to optimize performance for LDO, the proposed amplifier helps to minimize power of LDO regulators without using any on-chip and off-chip compensation capacitors. The power is 916 nW. The output spot noise at 100Hz and 1 kHz are 200nV/sqrt (Hz) and 6nV/sqrt (Hz), respectively. The active area of the circuit is 850 μm2. The regulator operates with supply voltages from 1.2V to 2V


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 431
Author(s):  
Zhenyi Gao ◽  
Bin Zhou ◽  
Xiang Li ◽  
Lei Yang ◽  
Qi Wei ◽  
...  

Sensors based on capacitance detection are common in the field of inertial measurement and have the potential for miniaturization and low power consumption. In order to control and process such sensors, a novel digital-analog hybrid system-on-chip (SoC) is designed and implemented. The system includes a capacitor to voltage (C/V) conversion circuit and a band-pass sigma-delta modulator (BPSDM) as the analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The digital signal is processed by the dedicated circuit module based on the least mean square error demodulation (LMSD) algorithm on the chip. The low-power Cortex-M3 processor supports software implementation of control algorithms and circuit parameter configuration. The control signal is output through a digital BPSDM. The chip was taped out under SMIC 180 nm Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology and tested for performance. The result shows that the maximum operating frequency of the chip is 105 MHz. The total area is 77.43 mm2. When the system clock is set to 51.2 MHz, the static power consumption and dynamic power consumption of the digital system are 18 mW and 54 mW respectively.


Electronics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Padmanabhan Balasubramanian ◽  
Douglas Maskell ◽  
Nikos Mastorakis

Adder is an important datapath unit of a general-purpose microprocessor or a digital signal processor. In the nanoelectronics era, the design of an adder that is modular and which can withstand variations in process, voltage and temperature are of interest. In this context, this article presents a new robust early output asynchronous block carry lookahead adder (BCLA) with redundant carry logic (BCLARC) that has a reduced power-cycle time product (PCTP) and is a low power design. The proposed asynchronous BCLARC is implemented using the delay-insensitive dual-rail code and adheres to the 4-phase return-to-zero (RTZ) and the 4-phase return-to-one (RTO) handshaking. Many existing asynchronous ripple-carry adders (RCAs), carry lookahead adders (CLAs) and carry select adders (CSLAs) were implemented alongside to perform a comparison based on a 32/28 nm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology. The 32-bit addition was considered for an example. For implementation using the delay-insensitive dual-rail code and subject to the 4-phase RTZ handshaking (4-phase RTO handshaking), the proposed BCLARC which is robust and of early output type achieves: (i) 8% (5.7%) reduction in PCTP compared to the optimum RCA, (ii) 14.9% (15.5%) reduction in PCTP compared to the optimum BCLARC, and (iii) 26% (25.5%) reduction in PCTP compared to the optimum CSLA.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (08) ◽  
pp. 1350068
Author(s):  
XINSHENG WANG ◽  
YIZHE HU ◽  
LIANG HAN ◽  
JINGHU LI ◽  
CHENXU WANG ◽  
...  

Process and supply variations all have a large influence on current-mode signaling (CMS) circuits, limiting their application on the fields of high-speed low power communication over long on-chip interconnects. A variation-insensitive CMS scheme (CMS-Bias) was offered, employing a particular bias circuit to compensate the effects of variations, and was robust enough against inter-die and intra-die variations. In this paper, we studied in detail the principle of variation tolerance of the CMS circuit and proposed a more suitable bias circuit for it. The CMS-Bias with the proposed bias circuit (CMS-Proposed) can acquire the same variation tolerance but consume less energy, compared with CMS-Bias with the original bias circuit (CMS-Original). Both the CMS schemes were fabricated in 180 nm CMOS technology. Simulation and measured results indicate that the two CMS interconnect circuits have the similar signal propagation delay when driving signal over a 10 mm line, but the CMS-Proposed offers about 9% reduction in energy/bit and 7.2% reduction in energy-delay-product (EDP) over the CMS-Original. Simulation results show that the two CMS schemes only change about 5% in delay when suffering intra-die variations, and have the same robustness against inter-die variations. Both simulation and measurements all show that the proposed bias circuits, employing self-biasing structure, contribute to robustness against supply variations to some extent. Jitter analysis presents the two CMS schemes have the same noise performance.


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