DocumentCode
3679166
Title
Near/Sub-Threshold Circuits and Approximate Computing: The Perfect Combination for Ultra-Low-Power Systems
Author
Jeremy Schlachter;Vincent Camus;Christian Enz
Author_Institution
Integrated Circuits Lab. (ICLAB), Ecole Polytech. Fed. de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland
fYear
2015
fDate
7/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
476
Lastpage
480
Abstract
While sub/near-threshold design offers the minimal power and energy consumption, such approach strongly deteriorates circuit performances and robustness against PVT (process/voltage/temperature) variations, leading to gigantic speed penalties and large silicon areas. Inexact and approximate circuit design can address these issues by trading calculation accuracy for better silicon area, circuit speed and even better power consumption. This paper reviews and proposes improvements for two approximate computing techniques applicable to arithmetic circuits: gate-level pruning and carry speculation. A critical study is then carried out considering several error metrics, and for the first time, those techniques are combined to produce approximate adders showing even higher gains at similar error levels. It is then shown that those techniques can be applied to a sub-threshold library to mitigate the large variability.
Keywords
"Adders","Logic gates","Accuracy","Delays","Hardware","Error analysis","Silicon"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
VLSI (ISVLSI), 2015 IEEE Computer Society Annual Symposium on
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISVLSI.2015.41
Filename
7309616
Link To Document