DocumentCode
424432
Title
Managing Standby and Active Mode Leakage Power in Deep Sub-micron Design
Author
Clark, Lawrence T. ; Patel, Rahul
Author_Institution
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM
fYear
2004
fDate
11-11 Aug. 2004
Firstpage
274
Lastpage
279
Abstract
Scaling has allowed rising transistor counts per die and increases leakage at an exponential rate, making power a primary constraint in all integrated circuit designs. Future designs must address emerging leakage components due to direct band to band tunneling, through MOSFET oxides and at steep junction doping gradients. In this paper, we describe circuit design techniques for managing leakage power, both during standby and for limiting the leakage power contribution during active operation. The efficacy, design effort, and process ramifications of different approaches are examined. The schemes are primarily aimed at hand-held devices such as cell phones, since the needs for low power are most acute in these markets due to limited battery capacity.
Keywords
Drowsy mode; MTCMOS; SRAM leakage control; TGSRAM; battery lifetime; thick gate shadow latch; transistor leakage; Drowsy mode; MTCMOS; SRAM leakage control; TGSRAM; battery lifetime; thick gate shadow latch; transistor leakage;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Low Power Electronics and Design, 2004. ISLPED '04. Proceedings of the 2004 International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Newport Beach, CA, USA
Print_ISBN
1-58113-929-2
Type
conf
Filename
1383003
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