A CLB Priority based Power Gating Technique in Field Programmable Gate Arrays
Author(s) -
Abhishek Nag,
Sambhu Nath Pradhan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of image graphics and signal processing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2074-9082
pISSN - 2074-9074
DOI - 10.5815/ijigsp.2018.05.02
Subject(s) - power gating , field programmable gate array , computer science , embedded system , routing (electronic design automation) , gate array , overhead (engineering) , computer hardware , transistor , voltage , electrical engineering , engineering , operating system
In this work, an autonomous technique of power gating is introduced at coarse level in Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) architecture to minimize leakage power. One of the major disadvantages of FPGA is the unnecessary power dissipation associated with the unused logic/inactive blocks. These inactive blocks in a FPGA are automatically cut-off from the power supply in this approach, based on a CLB priority algorithm. Our method focuses on introducing gating into both the logic blocks and routing resources of an FPGA at the same time, contrary to previous approaches. The proposed technique divides the FPGA fabric into clusters of CLBs and associated routing resources and introduces power gating separately for each cluster during runtime. The FPGA prototype has been developed in Cadence virtuoso spectrum at 45 nm technology and the layout of the proposed power gated FPGA is developed also. Simulation has been carried out for a ‘4 CLB’ prototype and results in a maximum of 55 % power reduction. The area overhead is 1.85 % for the ‘4 CLB’ FPGA prototype and tends to reduce with the increase in number of CLBs. The area overhead of a ‘128 CLB’ FPGA prototype is only 0.058 %, considering 4 sleep transistors. As an extension to the proposed gating in ‘4 CLB’ prototype, two techniques for an ‘8 CLB’ prototype are also evaluated in this paper, each having its own advantages. Due to the wake up time associated with power gated blocks, delay tends to increase. The wakeup time however, reduces with the increase in sleep transistor width.
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