Publication | Closed Access
Bus-invert coding for low-power I/O
961
Citations
16
References
1995
Year
Portable ApplicationsEngineeringVlsi DesignEnergy EfficiencyBus-invert CodingComputer ArchitectureIterative DecodingPower ElectronicsTechnology TrendsJoint Source-channel CodingPower-aware DesignElectrical EngineeringComputer EngineeringMicroelectronicsSignal ProcessingLow-power ElectronicsVlsi ArchitectureCmos CircuitModulation Coding
Technology trends and especially portable applications drive the quest for low-power VLSI design. Solutions that involve algorithmic, structural or physical transformations are sought. The focus is on developing low-power circuits without affecting too much the performance (area, latency, period). For CMOS circuits most power is dissipated as dynamic power for charging and discharging node capacitances. This is why many promising results in low-power design are obtained by minimizing the number of transitions inside the CMOS circuit. While it is generally accepted that because of the large capacitances involved much of the power dissipated by an IC is at the I/O little has been specifically done for decreasing the I/O power dissipation. We propose the bus-invert method of coding the I/O which lowers the bus activity and thus decreases the I/O peak power dissipation by 50% and the I/O average power dissipation by up to 25%. The method is general but applies best for dealing with buses. This is fortunate because buses are indeed most likely to have very large capacitances associated with them and consequently dissipate a lot of power.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1