1 / 31

Green Computing

Green Computing. Reducing the environmental and economic impact of energy consumption by low-power Integrated Circuit Design Faculty Forum, April 1, 2008. Peiyi Zhao, Ph.D. Department of Mathematics, Computer Science, and Physics Chapman University. Overview. Integrated Circuits

salena
Télécharger la présentation

Green Computing

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. Green Computing Reducing the environmental and economic impact of energy consumption by low-power Integrated Circuit Design Faculty Forum, April 1, 2008 Peiyi Zhao, Ph.D. Department of Mathematics, Computer Science, and Physics Chapman University

  2. Overview • Integrated Circuits • Power Consumption • Green Computing • Understanding the levels of a Computer • Where does the power go? • How can we reduce power?

  3. Integrated Circuits • The first transistor was built in 1947. • The first integrated circuit was invented in 1959. • Market driven by military, computer, communications, and consumer needs. • Equipment once used by the military are now available on a number of consumer products.

  4. Integrated Circuits are Everywhere Climate Control Lighting Dashboard Display Door Modules Engine Control Fuel Injection Entertainment Chassis Electronics Safety Control

  5. Integrated Circuit Market • Six billion microcontroller units were shipped in 2004, predicted to be increasing by 10% each year from 2004-2009 (Instate Inc. market research) • Semiconductor annual revenue of 2004 is estimated at US $211.4 billion.

  6. Power Consumption • Desktop consumption has reached 100 watts • Total Personal Computer(400 million) energy usage in 2000 = 26 nuclear power plants • Power is the bottleneck of improving the system performance • Power consumption is causing serious problems because of excessive heat. Water Cooled Computer (www.water-cooling.com)

  7. Nuclear Reactor Pentium 4 Hot Plate Pentium 3 Pentium 2 Pentium Pro Pentium 486 386 Power Consumption of Processor

  8. Power Consumption • As circuit speed increases, power consumption grows • Designing low power circuits has been the most important issue • Mobile applications demand long battery life • Low power consumption is listed as the second greatest challenge for the industry

  9. The Current Situation • Energy provisioning is arguably the most important business, geo-political, and societal issue of our time • Global Warming is influencing policies and laws which require energy usage and greenhouse emissions to be measured and controlled • The cost of energy and increases in IT power requirements present significant expense, supply, and handling challenges for data centers • “Intelligent Energy” Dr. Bernard S. Meyerson, IBM Fellow, VP Strategic Alliances and CTO, IBM Systems & Technology Group, on ASE – Great Energy Efficiency Day, February 14, 2007 - Washington, DC

  10. Power Consumption & Data Centers Internet • Where are the web pages you browse? • Data Center • One single room in Datacenter contains 100 Racks • 1 Rack = 5 to 20 kW • Contributed to the 2000/2001 California Energy Crisis Client Racks Data Center • “Intelligent Energy” Dr. Bernard S. Meyerson, IBM Fellow, VP Strategic Alliances and CTO, IBM Systems & Technology Group, on ASE – Great Energy Efficiency Day, February 14, 2007 - Washington, DC Gateway

  11. 200 M tons of CO2= CO2 produced by 40 million cars

  12. Atmospheric CO2 concentrations measured at Mauna Loa Observatory.

  13. Cooling the Data Center Flickr.com • Current coolants: CFCs and HCFCs = Ozone Depletion • The other alternative coolant: HFC = increase in green house emission 1300 times (http://www.cs.virginia.edu/kim/courses/cs771/lectures/CS771-22.ppt) • Moving Datacenters to exotic locations(Microsoft -> Cold Siberia, Sun -> underground) Siberia umw.edu Underground Japan

  14. Energy Usage of Data Centers http://www.westportnow.com • 2006: $15 Billion for energy usage • Impact of 10% Reduction of Power Consumption of Data Centers • $15b x 10% = $1.5 billion in savings • 200 x 10% = 20 million tons of CO2 • 4 million cars(Number of cars that would have to be taken off the road to reduce the same amount of CO2 emissions.)

  15. Reducing Power Consumption • Data centers = huge energy bill + produce CO2 + green house emission + air pollution… • Moore’s Law: transistor density doubles every 18 months. • “We must reduce power usage. Computing is part of the solution, part of the problem”-- ”Sustainable Computing,” David Douglas, VP, Ecological Responsibility, Sun Microsystems Source: University of Delaware

  16. Green Computing • In order to achieve sustainable computing, we need to rethink from a “Green Computing” perspective. • GreenComputing: • Maximize energy efficiency • Reduce of the use of hazardous materials such as lead • Maximize recyclability of both a defunct product and of any factory waste. • “Green Computing” in view of energy efficiency at the nanometer scale - design low power consumption integrated circuits at 180nm and below.

  17. A Perfect “Green Computing” Example • A super low-power “processor”: • 800x faster • 1000x more memory • 3000x less power

  18. A super low power “Processor”

  19. What can we do about power? • Understand all levels of the computer • Understand where power is dissipated • Think about ways to reduce power usage at all levels

  20. The 6 Levels of a Computer 5 High Level Programming 4 Assembly Language Software 3 Operating System 2 Instruction Set Architecture 1 Digital Logic Hardware 0 Integrated Circuit

  21. The Need for Both Sides “The performance of software systems is dramatically affected by how well software designers understand the basic hardware technologies at work in a system. Similarly, hardware designers must understand the far-reaching effects their design decisions have on software applications.” - John Hennessy, President of Stanford University & David Patterson, UC Berkeley, President of ACM “[Students] should know the device, layout, circuit, architecture, algorithm, and system-6 levels.” - Dr. Mehdi Hatamian, V.P, Broadcom, Nov.2006

  22. The Chapman Approach 5 High Level Programming CPSC 230/231, 350, 353, 354, 402, 408 4 Assembly Language CPSC 250 3 Operating System CPSC 380 2 Instruction Set Architecture CPSC 252 1 Digital Logic CPSC 330 0 Integrated Circuit CPSC 465

  23. Where does power go? Power Breakdown of an Itanium 2 Processor

  24. Processor Clock • Power consumption is proportional to clock frequency. • Clock frequency: how often the clock changes every second; of course, every change of the clock consumes power. • Analogous to how many times the motor spins per second in your car. • Traditionally only one edge of the clock is used to process information, and the other edge is ignored.

  25. Using Double Edge Clocking • Using double edge clocking, the clock frequency can be reduced to half. • “Low Power clock branch sharing Double-EdgeFlip-Flop,” P. Zhao, Jason McNeely, Pradeep Golconda, agdy A. Bayoumi, Kuang W.D, and Robert Barcenas, IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems,Vol.15, No.3, pp. 338-345, March 2007. • Proposed clock branch sharing technique: used least number of clocked transistors to implement double edge clocking efficiently. Conventional Single edge Design: Proposed Design:

  26. Potential Savings 33% x 0.5 = 15% Savings from Double Edge Usage by using half of the frequency Clock Power Usage Power Savings $15b x 15% = $2.25b Annual Energy Cost of Data Centers Savings Annual Savings

  27. Peer Reviewed Journal Publications, Patent for Low Power Consumption Peer Reviewed Journal Publications (all as first author) • P. Zhao, T. Darwish, M. Bayoumi, “High Performance and Low Power Conditional Discharge Flip-Flop,” in Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, Vol 12., No. 5, pp. 477-484, May 2004. • P. Zhao, Jason McNeely, Pradeep Golconda, Magdy A. Bayoumi, Kuang W.D, and Robert Barcenas, “Low Power Clock Branch Sharing Double-Edge Triggered Flip-Flop,” IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems,Vol.15, No.3, pp. 338-345, March 2007. • Journal Paper under Revision: P. Zhao, Jason McNeely, G. P. Kumar, Nan Wang, M. Bayoumi, and Robert Barcenas, “Low Power Clocked-pseudo-NMOS Flip-flops for Level Conversion in Dual Supply Systems,” submitted to IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems under 1st revision. Patent • Single transistor clocked flip flop, by P.Zhao, T.Darwish, M.Bayoumi

  28. Student Research Assistance • Chapman undergraduate student Robert Barcenas is involved with research and is one of the co-authors of a journal paper • Two previous students who worked with me on my project were hired by Intel

  29. Low Power Research Recognition • Our research results are comparable to the results from other more well-funded research groups: • Our designs outperformed those of Intel and UC Davis • Our designs have attracted industry attention from Toshiba

  30. Thank You

More Related