Tapered Coating for Nano-electro-mechanical (NEM) Relay to Improve Energy-delay Product

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 367-372
Author(s):  
Kihun Choe ◽  
Changhwan Shin
Keyword(s):  
2022 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Dongsuk Shin ◽  
Hakbeom Jang ◽  
Kiseok Oh ◽  
Jae W. Lee

A long battery life is a first-class design objective for mobile devices, and main memory accounts for a major portion of total energy consumption. Moreover, the energy consumption from memory is expected to increase further with ever-growing demands for bandwidth and capacity. A hybrid memory system with both DRAM and PCM can be an attractive solution to provide additional capacity and reduce standby energy. Although providing much greater density than DRAM, PCM has longer access latency and limited write endurance to make it challenging to architect it for main memory. To address this challenge, this article introduces CAMP, a novel DRAM c ache a rchitecture for m obile platforms with P CM-based main memory. A DRAM cache in this environment is required to filter most of the writes to PCM to increase its lifetime, and deliver highest efficiency even for a relatively small-sized DRAM cache that mobile platforms can afford. To address this CAMP divides DRAM space into two regions: a page cache for exploiting spatial locality in a bandwidth-efficient manner and a dirty block buffer for maximally filtering writes. CAMP improves the performance and energy-delay-product by 29.2% and 45.2%, respectively, over the baseline PCM-oblivious DRAM cache, while increasing PCM lifetime by 2.7×. And CAMP also improves the performance and energy-delay-product by 29.3% and 41.5%, respectively, over the state-of-the-art design with dirty block buffer, while increasing PCM lifetime by 2.5×.


Author(s):  
Jameel Ahmed ◽  
Mohammed Yakoob Siyal ◽  
Shaheryar Najam ◽  
Zohaib Najam
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (19) ◽  
pp. 4831-4837
Author(s):  
Yang Dan ◽  
Geng Ye-Liang ◽  
Hu Jian-Ping

2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 1650149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Abid ◽  
Dalia A. El-Dib ◽  
Rizwan Mudassir

A low power operand decomposition multiplication architecture implementation is modified to further reduce its power dissipation and delay. First, the multiplier’s implementation was modified to generate the partial products using NAND gates instead of AND and OR gates in order to reduce the number of transistors (area utilized) and to reduce the delay. Then, new types of adders and (4:2) compressors, that accept negatively weighted bits are used to reduce the number of inverters. Therefore, the resulting multiplier architecture reduces the number of transistors significantly. These modifications result in 20% and 36% reduction in power consumption and energy delay product (EDP), respectively.


Author(s):  
Rahnuma Rahman ◽  
Supriyo Bandyopadhyay

Binary switches, which are the primitive units of all digital computing and information processing hardware, are usually benchmarked on the basis of their ‘energy-delay product’ which is the product of the energy dissipated in completing the switching action and the time it takes to complete that action. The lower the energy-delay product, the better the switch (supposedly). This approach ignores the fact that lower energy dissipation and faster switching usually come at the cost of poorer reliability (i. e. higher switching error rate) and hence the energy-delay product alone cannot be a good metric for benchmarking switches. Here, we show the trade-off between energy dissipation, energy-delay product and error-probability, for both an electronic switch (a metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor) and a magnetic switch (a magnetic tunnel junction switched with spin transfer torque). As expected, reducing energy dissipation and/or energy-delay-product generally results in increased switching error probability and reduced reliability.


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