Bernard, Sébastien
[UCL]
The explosion market of the mobile application and the paradigm of the Internet of Things lead to a huge demand for energy-efficient systems. To overcome the limit of Moore’s law due to bulk technology, a new transistor technology has appeared recently in industrial process: the fully-depleted silicon on insulator, or FDSOI. In modern ASIC designs, a large portion of the total power consumption is due to the leaves of the clock tree: the flip-flops. Therefore, the appropriate flip-flop architecture is a major choice to reach the speed and energy constraints of mobile and ultra-low power applications. After a thorough overview of the literature, the explicit pulse-triggered flip-flop topology is pointed out as a very interesting flip-flop architecture for high-speed and low-power systems. However, it is today only used in high-performances circuits mainly because of its poor robustness at ultra-low voltage. In this work, explicit pulse-triggered flip-flops architecture design is developed and studied in order to improve their robustness and their energy-efficiency. A large comparison of resettable and scannable latch architecture is performed in the energy-delay domain by modifying the sizing of the transistors, both at nominal and ultra-low voltage. Then, it is shown that the back biasing technique allowed by the FDSOI technology provides better energy and delay performances than the sizing methodology. As the pulse generator is the main cause of functional failure, we proposed a new architecture which provides both a good robustness at ultra-low voltage and an energy efficiency. A selected topology of explicit pulse-triggered flip-flop was implemented in a 16x32b register file which exhibits better speed, energy consumption and area performances than a version with master-slave flip-flops, mainly thanks to the sharing of the pulse generator over several latches.
Bibliographic reference |
Bernard, Sébastien. Robust and energy-efficient explicit pulse-triggered flip-flops in 28nm FDSOI technology for ultra-wide voltage range and ultra-low power circuits. Prom. : Legat, Jean-Didier ; Belleville, Marc |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/153437 |