• DocumentCode
    910943
  • Title

    Full-chip subthreshold leakage power prediction and reduction techniques for sub-0.18-μm CMOS

  • Author

    Narendra, Siva ; De, Vivek ; Borkar, Shekhar ; Antoniadis, Dimitri A. ; Chandrakasan, Anantha P.

  • Author_Institution
    Microprocessor Res. Labs., Intel Corp., Hillsboro, OR, USA
  • Volume
    39
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2004
  • fDate
    3/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    501
  • Lastpage
    510
  • Abstract
    The driving force for the semiconductor industry growth has been the elegant scaling nature of CMOS technology. In future CMOS technology generations, supply and threshold voltages will have to continually scale to sustain performance increase, control switching power dissipation, and maintain reliability. These continual scaling requirements on supply and threshold voltages pose several technology and circuit design challenges. With threshold voltage scaling, subthreshold leakage power is expected to become a significant portion of the total power in future CMOS systems. Therefore, it becomes crucial to predict and reduce subthreshold leakage power of such systems. In the first part of this paper, we present a subthreshold leakage power prediction model that takes into account within-die threshold voltage variation. Statistical measurements of 32-bit microprocessors in 0.18-μm CMOS confirm that the mean error of the model is 4%. In the second part of this paper, we present the use of stacked devices to reduce system subthreshold leakage power without reducing system performance. A model to predict the scaling nature of this stack effect and verification of the model through statistical device measurements in 0.18-μm and 0.13-μm are presented. Measurements also demonstrate reduction in threshold voltage variation for stacked devices compared to nonstack devices. Comparison of the stack effect to the use of high threshold voltage or longer channel length devices for subthreshold leakage reduction is also discussed.
  • Keywords
    CMOS integrated circuits; leakage currents; network topology; CMOS; circuit design; circuit model verification; control switching power dissipation; full-chip subthreshold leakage power prediction; full-chip subthreshold leakage power reduction; longer channel length devices; microprocessors; nonstack devices; semiconductor industry; stacked devices; supply voltage; threshold voltage scaling; within-die threshold voltage variation; CMOS technology; Electronics industry; Power generation; Power semiconductor switches; Power system modeling; Predictive models; Semiconductor device modeling; Subthreshold current; Threshold voltage; Voltage control;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9200
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JSSC.2003.821776
  • Filename
    1269927