Near-threshold operation enables high energy efficiency, but requires proper design techniques to deal with performance loss and increased sensitivity to process variations. In this paper, we address both issues with two synergistic approaches. First, we introduce a novel body-biasing technique to mitigate the performance loss at near-threshold voltages while not requiring any additional circuitry for the body-bias control, thereby minimizing the design effort and simplifying the systems-on-chip integration. Second, we introduce a novel statistical design methodology to efficiently and accurately evaluate the design guardband strictly needed in the worst case, thereby keeping the area cost of variations at its very minimum. A 65-nm advanced encryption standard testchip demonstrates 1.65x throughput improvement over a baseline design without body biasing, and enables reliable operation over a wide voltage range (0.5-1.2 V) as opposed to traditional body-biasing schemes. In addition, our testchip achieves 1.63x area efficiency improvement compared with a design based on corner analysis. Accordingly, the proposed techniques are well suited for the design of near-threshold specialized hardware with improved performance, reduced silicon area, and design effort.
Zhao, W., Ha, Y., Alioto, M. (2014). Novel Self-Body-Biasing and Statistical Design for Near-Threshold Circuits With Ultra Energy-Efficient AES as Case Study. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VERY LARGE SCALE INTEGRATION (VLSI) SYSTEMS, 23(8), 1390-1401 [10.1109/TVLSI.2014.2342932].
Novel Self-Body-Biasing and Statistical Design for Near-Threshold Circuits With Ultra Energy-Efficient AES as Case Study
Alioto, Massimo
2014-01-01
Abstract
Near-threshold operation enables high energy efficiency, but requires proper design techniques to deal with performance loss and increased sensitivity to process variations. In this paper, we address both issues with two synergistic approaches. First, we introduce a novel body-biasing technique to mitigate the performance loss at near-threshold voltages while not requiring any additional circuitry for the body-bias control, thereby minimizing the design effort and simplifying the systems-on-chip integration. Second, we introduce a novel statistical design methodology to efficiently and accurately evaluate the design guardband strictly needed in the worst case, thereby keeping the area cost of variations at its very minimum. A 65-nm advanced encryption standard testchip demonstrates 1.65x throughput improvement over a baseline design without body biasing, and enables reliable operation over a wide voltage range (0.5-1.2 V) as opposed to traditional body-biasing schemes. In addition, our testchip achieves 1.63x area efficiency improvement compared with a design based on corner analysis. Accordingly, the proposed techniques are well suited for the design of near-threshold specialized hardware with improved performance, reduced silicon area, and design effort.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11365/47189
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