asynchronous design
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2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Ney Laert Vilar Calazans ◽  
Taciano Ares Rodolfo ◽  
Marcos L. L. Sartori

The current technologies behind the design of semiconductor integrated circuits allow embedding billions of components in a singe silicon die, enabling the construction of very complex circuits in a tiny space, dissipating little energy and producing huge amounts of useful computational work. However, the current levels of integration for electronic components in silicon and similar materials are not easily managed, as parameter variations grow steadily, making the design tasks increasingly challenging. Synchronous techniques have dominated the digital system design landscape for many decades, but their costs are increasingly hard to cope with. Asynchronous design and particularly quasi-delay insensitive design promises to deal with the same challenges more gracefully in current advanced nodes, and possibly irrevocably in future technology nodes. This article proposes a review of the state of the art in using asynchronous circuit design techniques to achieve energy-efficient and robust digital circuit and system design. In particular, the definition of a robust digital circuit comprises addressing several aspects to which a digital system design is expected to be robust to, including: (1) voltage variations; (2) process variations; (3) temperature variations; (4) circuit aging. Besides addressing energy-efficiency and all the mentioned robustness aspects, this work also approaches some of the state-of-the-art tools available to deal with asynchronous design, and points to desirable research development to be conducted in these subjects in the future.


Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1687
Author(s):  
Pallavi Srivastava ◽  
Edwin Chung ◽  
Stepan Ozana

Addition is the key operation in digital systems, and floating-point adder (FPA) is frequently used for real number addition because floating-point representation provides a large dynamic range. Most of the existing FPA designs are synchronous and their activities are coordinated by clock signal(s). However, technology scaling has imposed several challenges like clock skew, clock distribution, etc., on synchronous design due to presence of clock signal(s). Asynchronous design is an alternate approach to eliminate these challenges imposed by the clock, as it replaces the global clock with handshaking signals and utilizes a communication protocol to indicate the completion of activities. Bundled data and dual-rail coding are the most common communication protocols used in asynchronous design. All existing asynchronous floating-point adder (AFPA) designs utilize dual-rail coding for completion detection, as it allows the circuit to acknowledge as soon as the computation is done; while bundled data and synchronous designs utilizing single-rail encoding will have to wait for the worst-case delay irrespective of the actual completion time. This paper reviews all the existing AFPA designs and examines the effects of the selected communication protocol on its performance. It also discusses the probable outcome of AFPA designed using protocols other than dual-rail coding.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. e0239395
Author(s):  
P. Balasubramanian ◽  
N. E. Mastorakis

Electronic circuits and systems employed in mission- and safety-critical applications such as space, aerospace, nuclear plants etc. tend to suffer from multiple faults due to radiation and other harsh external phenomena. To overcome single or multiple faults from affecting electronic circuits and systems, progressive module redundancy (PMR) has been suggested as a potential solution that recommends the use of different levels of redundancy for the vulnerable portions of a circuit or system depending upon their criticality. According to PMR, triple modular redundancy (TMR) can be used where a single fault is likely to occur and should be masked, and quintuple modular redundancy (QMR) can be used where double faults are likely to occur and should be masked. In this article, we present asynchronous QDI majority voter designs for QMR and state which are preferable from cycle time (i.e., speed), area, power, and energy perspectives. Towards this, we implemented example QMR circuits in a robust QDI asynchronous design style by employing a delay insensitive dual rail code for data encoding and adopting four-phase handshake protocols for data communication. Based on physical implementations using a 32/28nm CMOS process, we find that our proposed QMR majority voter achieves improved optimization in speed and energy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
pp. 1667-1677 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sai Aparna Aketi ◽  
Smriti Gupta ◽  
Huimei Cheng ◽  
Joycee Mekie ◽  
Peter A. Beerel

In digital design, there are two types of design, synchronous design and asynchronous design. In synchronous design, global clock is one of the main system that consume a lot of power. The power in synchronous design is consumed by clock even if there is no data processing take place. The asynchronous design that depends on data is clockless and as far as the power is concerned, asynchronous design does not consume much power compared with synchronous design and this really make asynchronus design the preffered choice for low power consumption. Besides having low power consumption, there are many advantages of aynchronous design compared with synchronous design. This paper proposed new dual rail completion detector (CD), 3-6 CD, 2-7 CD and 1-4 CD for on-chip communication that are used widely in an asynchronous communication system. The design of CD is based on the principle of sum adder. The circuit is designed by using Altera Quartus II CAD tools, synthesis and implementation process is executed to check the syntax error of the design. The design proved to be successful by using asynchronous on-chip communication in the simulation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 20170162-20170162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ziho Shin ◽  
Myeong-Hoon Oh ◽  
Jeong-Gun Lee ◽  
Hag Young Kim ◽  
Young Woo Kim

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