DocumentCode
3174360
Title
Emerging on-board power architectures
Author
White, Robert V.
Author_Institution
Artesyn Technol., Colorado, USA
Volume
2
fYear
2003
fDate
9-13 Feb. 2003
Firstpage
799
Abstract
In recent years, the feature size of silicon devices has decreased at a steady rate. Each step in feature size has required a reduction in operating voltage. As today´s system designers seek to maximize performance, they use a wide variety of integrated circuits. The result is a system that requires many different supply voltages for various devices in the system. It is not unusual for a system today to require seven or eight different voltages and systems with twelve or more voltages are not uncommon. To meet this challenge, the traditional distributed power architecture has been extended to create the intermediate bus architecture. This paper explores the Intermediate Bus Architecture and highlights areas of special concern to system and power system developers.
Keywords
computer power supplies; integrated circuit design; distributed power architecture; integrated circuits; intermediate bus architecture; on-board power architectures; power system developer; silicon devices; voltage reduction; voltage supply; Communication equipment; Computer architecture; Costs; Disk drives; Emergency power supplies; Fans; Logic design; Microprocessors; Power systems; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Applied Power Electronics Conference and Exposition, 2003. APEC '03. Eighteenth Annual IEEE
Conference_Location
Miami Beach, FL, USA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7768-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/APEC.2003.1179308
Filename
1179308
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