Energy-efficient circuit design
Author(s) -
Antonis F. Antoniadis,
Neal Barcelo,
Michael Nugent,
Kirk Pruhs,
Michele Scquizzato
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
citeseer x (the pennsylvania state university)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/2554797.2554826
Subject(s) - computer science , electronic circuit , circuit design , voltage , energy (signal processing) , efficient energy use , discrete circuit , logic gate , circuit extraction , physical design , electronic engineering , equivalent circuit , electrical engineering , engineering , mathematics , algorithm , embedded system , statistics
We initiate the theoretical investigation of energy-efficient circuit design. We assume that the circuit design specifies the circuit layout as well as the supply voltages for the gates. To obtain maximum energy efficiency, the circuit design must balance the conflicting demands of minimizing the energy used per gate, and minimizing the number of gates in the circuit; If the energy supplied to the gates is small, then functional failures are likely, necessitating a circuit layout that is more fault-tolerant, and thus that has more gates. By leveraging previous work on fault-tolerant circuit design, we show general upper and lower bounds on the amount of energy required by a circuit to compute a given relation. We show that some circuits would be asymptotically more energy efficient if heterogeneous supply voltages were allowed, and show that for some circuits the most energy-efficient supply voltages are homogeneous over all gates.
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