* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Lecture 2: Dynamic and static power in CMOS
Electrification wikipedia , lookup
Opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
History of electric power transmission wikipedia , lookup
Transmission line loudspeaker wikipedia , lookup
Voltage optimisation wikipedia , lookup
Buck converter wikipedia , lookup
Power engineering wikipedia , lookup
Mains electricity wikipedia , lookup
Power MOSFET wikipedia , lookup
Alternating current wikipedia , lookup
Low-Power Design and Test Dynamic and Static Power in CMOS Vishwani D. Agrawal Srivaths Ravi Auburn University, USA Texas Instruments India [email protected] [email protected] Hyderabad, July 30-31, 2007 http://www.eng.auburn.edu/~vagrawal/hyd.html Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 1 Components of Power Dynamic Signal transitions Logic activity Glitches Short-circuit Static Leakage Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Ptotal = Pdyn + Pstat Ptran + Psc + Pstat Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 2 Power of a Transition: Ptran Ron VDD ic(t) vi (t) vo(t) CL R = large Ground Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 3 Charging of a Capacitor R t=0 v(t) i(t) C V Charge on capacitor, q(t) = C v(t) Current, i(t) = C dv(t)/dt Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 = dq(t)/dt Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 4 C dv(t)/dt = [V – v(t)] /R dv(t) V – v(t) ─── = ───── dt RC dv(t) dt ∫ ───── = ∫ ──── V – v(t) RC -t ln [V – v(t)] = ── + A RC i(t) = Initial condition, t = 0, v(t) = 0 → A = ln V -t v(t) = V [1 – exp(───)] RC Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 5 v(t) = i(t) = Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 -t V [1 – exp( ── )] RC dv(t) C ─── dt = Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 V -t ── exp( ── ) R RC 6 Total Energy Per Charging Transition from Power Supply Etrans = = Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 ∞ ∫ V i(t) dt = 0 ∞ V2 -t ∫ ── exp( ── ) dt 0 R RC CV2 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 7 Energy Dissipated per Transition in Resistance ∞2 R ∫ i (t) dt 0 Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 = V2 ∞ -2t R ── ∫ exp( ── ) dt 2 R 0 RC = 1 ─ CV2 2 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 8 Energy Stored in Charged Capacitor ∞ ∞ -t V -t ∫ v(t) i(t) dt = ∫ V [1-exp( ── )] ─ exp( ── ) dt 0 0 RC R RC 1 = ─ CV2 2 Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 9 Transition Power Gate output rising transition Energy dissipated in pMOS transistor = CV 2/2 Energy stored in capacitor = CV 2/2 Gate output falling transition Energy dissipated in nMOS transistor = CV 2/2 Energy dissipated per transition = CV 2/2 Power dissipation: Ptrans = Etrans α fck = α fck CV2/2 α Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 = activity factor Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 10 Components of Power Dynamic Signal transitions Logic activity Glitches Short-circuit Static Leakage Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Ptotal = Pdyn + Pstat Ptran + Psc + Pstat Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 11 Short Circuit Power of a Transition: Psc VDD vi (t) isc(t) vo(t) CL Ground Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 12 Short Circuit Current, isc(t) VDD VDD - VTp Vi (t) Volt p-transistor starts conducting n-transistor cuts-off Vo(t) VTn 0 Iscmaxf isc(t) Isc 0 Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 tB tE Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 1 Time (ns) 13 Peak Short Circuit Current Increases with the size (or gain, β) of transistors Decreases with load capacitance, CL Largest when CL = 0 Reference: M. A. Ortega and J. Figueras, “Short Circuit Power Modeling in Submicron CMOS,” PATMOS ’96, Aug. 1996, pp. 147-166. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 14 Short-Circuit Energy per Transition Escf = = ∫tB tE VDD isc(t)dt (tE – tB) Iscmaxf VDD / 2 Escf = tf (VDD - |VTp| - VTn) Iscmaxf / 2 Escr = tr (VDD - |VTp| - VTn) Iscmaxr / 2 Escf = Escr = 0, when VDD = |VTp| + VTn Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 15 Short-Circuit Energy Increases with rise and fall times of input Decreases for larger output load capacitance Decreases and eventually becomes zero when VDD is scaled down but the threshold voltages are not scaled down Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 16 Short-Circuit Power Calculation Assume equal rise and fall times Model input-output capacitive coupling (Miller capacitance) Use a spice model for transistors T. Sakurai and A. Newton, “Alpha-power Law MOSFET model and Its Application to a CMOS Inverter,” IEEE J. Solid State Circuits, vol. 25, April 1990, pp. 584-594. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 17 Short Circuit Power Psc = Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 α fck Esc Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 18 Psc, Rise Time and Capacitance VDD Ron vi (t) tf VDD ic(t)+isc(t) vo(t) CL R = large Ground Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 vo(t) tr vo(t) ─── R↑ Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 19 isc, Rise Time and Capacitance Isc(t) = -t VDD[1- exp(─────)] vo(t) R↓(t) C ──── = ────────────── R↑(t) R↑(t) Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 20 iscmax, Rise Time and Capacitance i Small C vo(t) Large C vo(t) 1 ──── R↑(t) iscmax t tf Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 21 Psc, Rise Times, Capacitance For given input rise and fall times short circuit power decreases as output capacitance increases. Short circuit power increases with increase of input rise and fall times. Short circuit power is reduced if output rise and fall times are smaller than the input rise and fall times. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 22 Summary: Short-Circuit Power Short-circuit power is consumed by each transition (increases with input transition time). Reduction requires that gate output transition should not be faster than the input transition (faster gates can consume more short-circuit power). Increasing the output load capacitance reduces short-circuit power. Scaling down of supply voltage with respect to threshold voltages reduces short-circuit power; completely eliminated when VDD ≤ |Vtp|+Vtn . Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 23 Components of Power Dynamic Signal transitions Logic activity Glitches Short-circuit Static Leakage Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 24 Leakage Power IG Ground Gate VDD R Source Drain n+ Bulk Si (p) Isub IPT IGIDL n+ ID nMOS Transistor Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 25 Leakage Current Components Subthreshold conduction, Isub Reverse bias pn junction conduction, ID Gate induced drain leakage, IGIDL due to tunneling at the gate-drain overlap Drain source punchthrough, IPT due to short channel and high drain-source voltage Gate tunneling, IG through thin oxide; may become significant with scaling Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 26 Subthreshold Current Isub = μ0 Cox (W/L) Vt2 exp{(VGS –VTH ) / nVt } μ0: carrier surface mobility Cox: gate oxide capacitance per unit area L: channel length W: gate width Vt = kT/q: thermal voltage n: a technology parameter Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 27 IDS for Short Channel Device Isub= μ0 Cox(W/L)Vt2 exp{(VGS –VTH + ηVDS)/nVt} VDS = drain to source voltage η: a proportionality factor W. Nebel and J. Mermet (Editors), Low Power Design in Deep Submicron Electronics, Springer, 1997, Section 4.1 by J. Figueras, pp. 81-104 Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 28 Increased Subthreshold Leakage Log (Drain current) Scaled device Ic Isub 0 VTH’ VTH Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 Gate voltage 29 Summary: Leakage Power Leakage power as a fraction of the total power increases as clock frequency drops. Turning supply off in unused parts can save power. For a gate it is a small fraction of the total power; it can be significant for very large circuits. Scaling down features requires lowering the threshold voltage, which increases leakage power; roughly doubles with each shrinking. Multiple-threshold devices are used to reduce leakage power. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 30 Technology Scaling Scaling down 0.7 micron by factors 2 and 4 leads to 0.35 and 0.17 micron technologies Constant electric field assumed Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 31 Constant Electric Field Scaling B. Davari, R. H. Dennard and G. G. Shahidi, “CMOS Scaling for High Performance and Low Power—The Next Ten Years,” Proc. IEEE, April 1995, pp. 595-606. Other forms of scaling are referred to as constant-voltage and quasi-constantvoltage. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 32 Bulk nMOSFET Polysilicon Gate Drain W Source n+ n+ L p-type body (bulk) SiO2 Thickness = tox Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 33 Technology Scaling A scaling factor (S ) reduces device dimensions as 1/S. Successive generations of technology have used a scaling S = √2, doubling the number of transistors per unit area. This produced 0.25μ, 0.18μ, 0.13μ, 90nm and 65nm technologies, continuing on to 45nm and 30nm. A 5% gate shrink (S = 1.05) is commonly applied to boost speed as the process matures. N. H. E. Weste and D. Harris, CMOS VLSI Design, Third Edition, Boston: Pearson Addison-Wesley, 2005, Section 4.9.1. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 34 Constant Electric Field Scaling Device Parameter Scaling Length, L 1/S Width, W 1/S Gate oxide thickness, tox 1/S Supply voltage, VDD 1/S Threshold voltages, Vtn, Vtp 1/S Substrate doping, NA Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 S 35 Constant Electric Field Scaling (Cont.) Device Characteristic Scaling W / (L tox) β Current, Ids β (VDD – Vt ) S 2 1/S Resistance, R VDD / Ids 1 Gate capacitance, C W L / tox 1/S Gate delay, τ RC 1/S Clock frequency, f 1/ τ S Dynamic power per gate, P CV 2 f Chip area, A 1/S 2 1/S 2 Power density P/A 1 Current density Ids /A S Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 36 Problem: A Design Example A battery-operated 65nm digital CMOS device is found to consume equal amounts (P ) of dynamic power and leakage power while the short-circuit power is negligible. The energy consumed by a computing task, that takes T seconds, is 2PT. Compare two power reduction strategies for extending the battery life: A. B. Clock frequency is reduced to half, keeping all other parameters constant. Supply voltage is reduced to half. This slows the gates down and forces the clock frequency to be lowered to half of its original (full voltage) value. Assume that leakage current is held unchanged by modifying the design of transistors. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 37 Solution: Part A. Clock Frequency Reduction Reducing the clock frequency will reduce dynamic power to P / 2, keep the static power the same as P, and double the execution time of the task. Energy consumption for the task will be, Energy = (P / 2 + P ) 2T = 3PT which is greater than the original 2PT. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 38 Solution: Part B. Supply Voltage Reduction When the supply voltage and clock frequency are reduced to half their values, dynamic power is reduced to P / 8 and static power to P / 2. The time of task is doubled and the total energy consumption is, Energy = (P / 8 + P / 2) 2T = 5PT / 4 =1.25PT The voltage reduction strategy reduces energy consumption while a simple frequency reduction consumes more energy. Copyright Agrawal & Srivaths, 2007 Low-Power Design and Test, Lecture 2 39