DocumentCode :
1892964
Title :
Design of low-power, scalable-throughput systems at near/sub threshold voltage
Author :
Srivastav, Meeta ; Henry, Michael B. ; Nazhandali, Leyla
Author_Institution :
Bradley Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
19-21 March 2012
Firstpage :
609
Lastpage :
616
Abstract :
Voltage scaling has been a prevalent method of saving energy for energy constrained applications. However, voltage scaling along with shrinking process technologies exacerbate process variation effects on transistor. Large variation in transistor parameters, result in high variation in performance and power across the chip. These effects if ignored at the stage of designing will result into unpredictable behavior when deployed in the actual field. In this paper, we leverage the benefits of voltage scaling methodology for obtaining energy efficiency and compensate for the loss in throughput by exploiting parallelism present in the various DSP designs. To achieve scalable throughput, we depend on both dynamic voltage scaling with a few operating voltage options and active unit scaling, where the number of active parallel units is reduced using power gating. We show that such hybrid method consumes 8%-77% less power compared to simple dynamic voltage scaling over different throughputs. We study this system architecture in two different workload environments, one static and one dynamic. In the former, the desired target throughput is predetermined and fixed and in the latter, it can be changed dynamically. We show that to achieve highest level of energy efficiency, the number of cores and the operating voltages vary widely between a base designs versus a process variation aware (PVA) design. We further show that the PVA design enjoys an average of 26.9% and 51.1% reduction in energy consumption for the static and dynamic designs respectively over six different DSP applications. This is because the base design needs to compensate for the effects of process variation as an after fact, while the PVA is able to make suitable decisions at the time of the design.
Keywords :
digital signal processing chips; low-power electronics; network synthesis; power aware computing; DSP design; PVA design; active parallel unit; core; dynamic voltage scaling methodology; energy constrained application; energy consumption; energy efficiency; energy saving; loss compensation; low-power scalable-throughput system design; near-sub threshold voltage; power gating reduction; process variation aware design; transistor shrinking process technology exacerbate process variation effect; Algorithm design and analysis; Analytical models; Delay; Digital signal processing; Heuristic algorithms; Throughput; Transistors; 4Snm; Active-unit-scaling; DSP; Energy; Low-power; PTM; Process variation; Voltage scaling;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Quality Electronic Design (ISQED), 2012 13th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Santa Clara, CA
ISSN :
1948-3287
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1034-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISQED.2012.6187556
Filename :
6187556
Link To Document :
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