1 / 23

Vishwani D. Agrawal James J. Danaher Professor Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering

ELEC 5270/6270 Spring 2013 Low-Power Design of Electronic Circuits Pseudo- nMOS , Dynamic CMOS and Domino CMOS Logic. Vishwani D. Agrawal James J. Danaher Professor Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849 vagrawal@eng.auburn.edu

keola
Télécharger la présentation

Vishwani D. Agrawal James J. Danaher Professor Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ELEC 5270/6270 Spring 2013Low-Power Design of Electronic CircuitsPseudo-nMOS, Dynamic CMOSand Domino CMOS Logic Vishwani D. Agrawal James J. Danaher Professor Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849 vagrawal@eng.auburn.edu http://www.eng.auburn.edu/~vagrawal/COURSE/E6270_Spr13/course.html ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  2. Static CMOS: Pros and Cons • Advantages: Static (robust) operation, low power, scalable with technology. • Disadvantages: • Large size: An N input gate requires 2N transistors. • Large capacitance: Each fanout must drive two devices. • Alternatives: Pass-transistor logic (PTL), pseudo-nMOS, dynamic CMOS, domino CMOS. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  3. A Pseudo-nMOS Gate VDD VDD PUN Output Output PDN PDN Inputs Inputs CMOS Gate Pseudo-nMOS Gate ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  4. Pseudo-nMOS NOR VDD Output Input 3 Input 2 Input 1 ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  5. Pseudo-nMOS NAND VDD Output Input 1 Input 2 ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  6. Pseudo-nMOS Inverter VDD Output Input ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  7. Inverter Characteristics 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 Nominal device: W 0.5μ ── = ──── = 2 Ln 0.25μ W/Lp = 4 Output voltage, V W/Lp = 0.5 W/Lp = 1 W/Lp = 2 W/Lp = 0.25 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 Input voltage, V ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  8. Performance of Inverter J. M. Rabaey, A. Chandrakasan and B. Nokolić, Digital Integrated Circuits, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education, 2003, page 262. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  9. Negative Aspects of Pseudo-nMOS • Output 0 state is ratioed logic. • Faster gates mean higher static power. • Low static power means slow gates. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  10. A Dynamic CMOS Gate VDD Precharge transistor Output PDN CL Inputs Evaluate transistor CK ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  11. Two-Phase Operation in a Vector Period ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  12. 4-Input NAND Dynamic CMOS Gate VDD CK A B C D CK Output = CK’ + (ABCD)’∙ CK CL tL→H ≈ 0 ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  13. Characteristics of Dynamic CMOS • Nonratioed logic – sizing of pMOS transistor is not important for output levels. • Smaller number of transistors, N+2 vs. 2N. • Larger precharge transistor reduces output fall time, but increases precharge power. Faster switching due to smaller capacitance. • Static power – negligible. • Short-circuit power – none. • Dynamic power • no glitches – following precharge, signals can either make transitions only in one direction, 1→0, or no transition, 1→1. • only logic transitions – all nodes at logic 0 are charged to VDD during precharge phase. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  14. Switching Speed and Power • Fewer transistors mean smaller node capacitance. • No short-circuit current to slow down discharging of capacitance. • Only dynamic power consumed, but can be higher than CMOS. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  15. Logic Activity • Probability of 0 → 1 transition: • Static CMOS, p0 p1 = p0(1 – p0) • Dynamic CMOS, p0 ≥ p0 p1 • Example: 2-input NOR gate • Static CMOS, Pdyn = 0.1875 CLVDD2fCK • Dynamic CMOS, Pdyn = 0.75 CLVDD2fCK p1 = 0.5 p1 = 0.25 p0 = 0.75 p1 = 0.5 ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  16. Charge Leakage CK Precharge Evaluate VDD Output A’ CK A=0 CK A’ CL Ideal Actual Time J. M. Rabaey, A. Chandrakasan and B. Nokolić, Digital Integrated Circuits, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education, 2003. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  17. Bleeder Transistor VDD VDD CK A B C D CK CK A B C D CK Output Output CL CL ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  18. A Problems With Dynamic CMOS VDD VDD CK A B C prech. evaluate CK A=0→1 CK CK CK B C J. M. Rabaey, A. Chandrakasan and B. Nokolić, Digital Integrated Circuits, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education, 2003. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  19. Remedy • Set all inputs to gates to 0 during precharge. • Since precharge raises all outputs to 1, inserting inverters between gates will do the trick. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  20. Domino CMOS VDD VDD CK A B C prech. evaluate CK A=0→1 CK CK CK C B R. H. Krambeck, C. M. Lee and H.-F. S. Law, “High-Speed Compact Circuits with CMOS,” IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-17, no. 3, pp. 614-619, June 1982. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  21. Bleeder in Domino CMOS VDD CK A B C D CK Output CL ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  22. Logic Mapping for Noninverting Gates AND A B C D E F G H ABC X Y G+H AND/OR ABC D E F G+H OR Y ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

  23. Selecting a Logic Style • Static CMOS: most reliable and predictable, reasonable in power and speed, voltage scaling and device sizing are well understood. • Pass-transistor logic: beneficial for multiplexer and XOR dominated circuits like adders, etc. • For large fanin gates, static CMOS is inefficient; a choice can be made between pseudo-nMOS, dynamic CMOS and domino CMOS. ELEC6270 Spring 13, Lecture 11

More Related