Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems

The increasing demand of portable applications motivates the research on low power and high speed circuits. The tighter timing constraint as well as the low power requirement has made the timing elements such as latches and flip-flop critical to the performance of a digital system. In this projec...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chua, Yong Kiang.
Other Authors: Goh Wang Ling
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/40816
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-40816
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-408162023-07-07T16:29:31Z Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems Chua, Yong Kiang. Goh Wang Ling Yeo Kiat Seng School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Centre for Integrated Circuits and Systems DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electronic circuits The increasing demand of portable applications motivates the research on low power and high speed circuits. The tighter timing constraint as well as the low power requirement has made the timing elements such as latches and flip-flop critical to the performance of a digital system. In this project, studies were done on State-Of-The art of flip-flop designs particularly on double edge-triggered flip-flop for low power and high performance system. Four conditional techniques were discovered and have implemented two of those techniques in the proposed design. A new low power flip-flop for high performance system is proposed. The proposed design demonstrated a gain in power consumption as activity rate of the flip-flop, α, decreases. At α = 1.0, α = 0.5, α = 0.25 and α = 0, the proposed design achieve power saving of 8%, 15%, 16% and 37%, respectively compare to other State-Of-The art dual edge-triggered flip-flops. On top of this, the proposed design is able to operate at a supply voltage of 1.22 V which is at least 13% lower compare to other designs. Furthermore, the proposed circuit is able to operate at a maximum clocking frequency of 1.48 GHz. Besides, the Monte Carlo analysis shows that the proposed design has high immunity to process variations with 87.29% of this design will have its tCQ fall within ±10% of the mean value. System level simulation was done to verify the credibility of designs. All designs studied were configured as a component in synchronous binary counter with size ranging from 4 bits to 32 bits. The proposed design has achieved a reduction of 27% in power consumption and 33% improvement in Power-Delay-Product (PDP). Bachelor of Engineering 2010-06-22T06:17:55Z 2010-06-22T06:17:55Z 2010 2010 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/40816 en Nanyang Technological University 110 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electronic circuits
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electronic circuits
Chua, Yong Kiang.
Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
description The increasing demand of portable applications motivates the research on low power and high speed circuits. The tighter timing constraint as well as the low power requirement has made the timing elements such as latches and flip-flop critical to the performance of a digital system. In this project, studies were done on State-Of-The art of flip-flop designs particularly on double edge-triggered flip-flop for low power and high performance system. Four conditional techniques were discovered and have implemented two of those techniques in the proposed design. A new low power flip-flop for high performance system is proposed. The proposed design demonstrated a gain in power consumption as activity rate of the flip-flop, α, decreases. At α = 1.0, α = 0.5, α = 0.25 and α = 0, the proposed design achieve power saving of 8%, 15%, 16% and 37%, respectively compare to other State-Of-The art dual edge-triggered flip-flops. On top of this, the proposed design is able to operate at a supply voltage of 1.22 V which is at least 13% lower compare to other designs. Furthermore, the proposed circuit is able to operate at a maximum clocking frequency of 1.48 GHz. Besides, the Monte Carlo analysis shows that the proposed design has high immunity to process variations with 87.29% of this design will have its tCQ fall within ±10% of the mean value. System level simulation was done to verify the credibility of designs. All designs studied were configured as a component in synchronous binary counter with size ranging from 4 bits to 32 bits. The proposed design has achieved a reduction of 27% in power consumption and 33% improvement in Power-Delay-Product (PDP).
author2 Goh Wang Ling
author_facet Goh Wang Ling
Chua, Yong Kiang.
format Final Year Project
author Chua, Yong Kiang.
author_sort Chua, Yong Kiang.
title Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
title_short Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
title_full Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
title_fullStr Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
title_full_unstemmed Low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
title_sort low power flip-flop circuits for high-performance systems
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/40816
_version_ 1772825308887515136