:Energy Efficient and Variability Resilient Techniques
First Statement of Responsibility
/ by Vibhu Sharma, Francky Catthoor, Wim Dehaene
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
New York, NY
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
: Springer New York :Imprint: Springer,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
, 2013.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
X, 188 p. 139 illus., online resource.
SERIES
Series Title
(Analog Circuits and Signal Processing)
NOTES PERTAINING TO PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Text of Note
Electronic
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
This book features various, ultra low energy, variability resilient SRAM circuit design techniques for wireless sensor network applications. Conventional SRAM design targets area efficiency and high performance at the increased cost of energy consumption, making it unsuitable for computation-intensive sensor node applications. This book, therefore, guides the reader through different techniques at the circuit level for reducing energy consumption and increasing the variability resilience. It includes a detailed review of the most efficient circuit design techniques and trade-offs, introduces new memory architecture techniques, sense amplifier circuits and voltage optimization methods for reducing the impact of variability for the advanced technology nodes. Discusses fundamentals of energy reduction for SRAM circuits and applies them to energy limitation challenges associated with wireless sensor nodes; Explains impact of variability resilience in reducing the energy consumption; Describes various memory architectures and provides detailed overview of different types of SRAM cells; Includes sense amplifier design techniques for solving energy-offset tradeoff.
Text of Note
Introduction -- SRAM Bit Cell Optimization -- Adaptive Voltage Optimization Techniques: Low Voltage SRAM Operation -- Circuit Techniques to Assist SRAM Cell: Local Assist Circuitry -- SRAM Energy Reduction Techniques -- Variation Tolerant Low Power Sense Amplifiers -- Prototypes -- Conclusions.