Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique
Driven by the battery-operated applications in portable devices, circuit design techniques for reducing the power consumption have been extensively investigated in the past decade. One common approach is the supply voltage scaling, where different voltages are generated by DC-DC converters and provi...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-976362020-03-07T13:24:47Z Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique Sun, Zhuochao Jin, Chongfei Siek, Liter School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering International Caribbean Conference on Devices, Circuits and Systems (8th : 2012 : Playa del Carmen, Mexico) DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering Driven by the battery-operated applications in portable devices, circuit design techniques for reducing the power consumption have been extensively investigated in the past decade. One common approach is the supply voltage scaling, where different voltages are generated by DC-DC converters and provided to corresponding low supply circuits. Because each circuit is supplied by the lowest possible voltage, the power consumption is greatly reduced. However, the voltage converters employed in this method bring in extra design cost and power consumption. Therefore in this paper, the voltage converter is removed from conventional design and the possibility of stacking multiple low supply circuits to achieve virtual supply voltage scaling is discussed. The proposed technique connects the stacking circuits directly to the high voltage source. It saves one or more voltage converters, therefore reduces the chip area and eliminates the power loss associated with the converters. The proposed stacking structure is more applicable to systems with single high voltage supply. 2013-07-18T03:57:10Z 2019-12-06T19:44:48Z 2013-07-18T03:57:10Z 2019-12-06T19:44:48Z 2012 2012 Conference Paper Sun, Z., Jin, C., & Siek, L. (2012). Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique. 2012 8th International Caribbean Conference on Devices, Circuits and Systems (ICCDCS). https://hdl.handle.net/10356/97636 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11853 10.1109/ICCDCS.2012.6188921 en © 2012 IEEE. |
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DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering Sun, Zhuochao Jin, Chongfei Siek, Liter Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
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Driven by the battery-operated applications in portable devices, circuit design techniques for reducing the power consumption have been extensively investigated in the past decade. One common approach is the supply voltage scaling, where different voltages are generated by DC-DC converters and provided to corresponding low supply circuits. Because each circuit is supplied by the lowest possible voltage, the power consumption is greatly reduced. However, the voltage converters employed in this method bring in extra design cost and power consumption. Therefore in this paper, the voltage converter is removed from conventional design and the possibility of stacking multiple low supply circuits to achieve virtual supply voltage scaling is discussed. The proposed technique connects the stacking circuits directly to the high voltage source. It saves one or more voltage converters, therefore reduces the chip area and eliminates the power loss associated with the converters. The proposed stacking structure is more applicable to systems with single high voltage supply. |
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School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering |
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School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Sun, Zhuochao Jin, Chongfei Siek, Liter |
format |
Conference or Workshop Item |
author |
Sun, Zhuochao Jin, Chongfei Siek, Liter |
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Sun, Zhuochao |
title |
Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
title_short |
Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
title_full |
Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
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Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
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Low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
title_sort |
low power integrated circuit design with stacking technique |
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2013 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/97636 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11853 |
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