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Mariam Hoseini
Advisor: Dr. Chao You
Supervisor: Dr. Mark Pavicic
Committee members:
Dr. Rajendra Katti, Dr. Subbaraya Yuvarajan, Dr. Deying Li
North Dakota State University
April 2009
• Conformal Computing
• Asynchronous circuit design
 Handshake protocols
 Data encodings
 Signaling protocol
 Asynchronous design methodologies
 Asynchronous primitives
• Constructing an array of cells
• PCC cell design and simulations
• Conclusion
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• Computers are typically rigid boards or boxes with a fixed
computational capability.
• The available computers may have the undesired size or shape,
or have less computing capability than is needed.
• The program investigates a more flexible form of computer which
easily conforms to the physical and computational needs of an
application.
• Potential applications:
– Sorting, cryptography, cellular neural nets, etc
– The computational material can be integrated with arrays of sensors
and/or actuators
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• Potential problems:
– Easily changing the physical shape of the computer
– Adjusting the computational capability
– Propagation delays, synchronization, power distribution, and heat
dissipation.
• One approach is:
– To form extensible arrays of simple reconfigurable computing
elements (cells) into thin wallpaper-like sheets.
– Long signal wires are eliminated.
– Communications are local and synchronized with cell to cell pulses.
• This research presents a cell design, called a pulsed conformal
computer cell (PCC cell).
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•
PCC cell has significant similarities to cellular automata (CA):
– Simple fine-grained elements,
– Integration of processing and storage,
– Local communication
•
CA can model the elements of digital computers, using patterns of cells to
perform the functions of wires, logic, & registers
– The same model is used in the PCC cell design
•
The function and connections of PCC cell are reconfigurable, similar to FPGAs.
– FPGAs are not as fine-grained
– FPGAs are not as regular
– The PCC cell array uses only short-range wires that connect adjacent cells
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• Two major styles of circuit design: Synchronous & Asynchronous
• Advantages of asynchronous design, in terms of:
–
–
–
–
–
Clock skew
Speed
Meta-stability
Modularity
Power
• Disadvantages of asynchronous design:
– More difficult to design for a hazard free behavior and a correct
ordering of operations.
– Additional hardware to initiate, advance, and indicate the completion of
operations.
• Asynchronous systems are specified by handshake protocol, data
encoding, underlying delay model.
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• Handshaking is the alternate for clocking in asynchronous systems.
• Data transfer between two processes is synchronized with signals
that are generated by the same processes.
• Asynchronous operation can also be done without handshaking.
– Handshaking is used to separate successive uses of a component.
– It may not be necessary to separate the use of a component or the separation
can be done by delaying the operations.
• Handshaking can be done at higher levels in an asynchronous
system.
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• Bundled data:
– Normal Boolean levels encodes data values
– Separate request and acknowledge wires are used
• Dual rail:
– Two wires are used to carry a single bit
– Request wire is encoded in dual rail data wires
Dual rail encoding
Meaning
00
No data
01
0
10
1
11
Forbidden
– Dual rail data encoding is used in PCC cell design
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• Pulse Signaling:
–
–
–
–
–
Each request and acknowledge is a pulse
Simple and small cycle like transition signaling
Dealing with levels like level signaling
Better noise immunity than single-track signaling
Potential problem: robustness of sending pulses over long wires.
One cycle
start
event
Request
event
done
Acknowledge
– Pulse signaling is used in PCC cell design & there is no problem of
long wires.
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• Bounded delay


Simplest model
Delays of circuit elements and wires are assumed to be known or bounded.
• Delay insensitive (DI)


Both gates and wires have unbounded and unknown delays.
Completion detection mechanism is needed at receiver
• Quasi delay insensitive (QDI)



DI + Isochronic forks = QDI
Isochronic forks are capable of indication
All input transitions should be indicated by an output signal transition
A
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d2
B
d3
C
d1
10
• In an asynchronous systems, interfaces and inside modules can
be designed with different timing models
• In the PCC cell design, for timing management:
– Internal of a cell is governed by a bounded delay model
– Communications between the cells is done by a QDI model
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• In synchronous systems, Boolean circuits can be constructed from
a primitive like a NAND-gate
• Logic gates provide only logic functionality, not timing functionality,
so not sufficient to make asynchronous circuits
• Asynchronous systems can be made from a set of primitives
• The set of primitives must provide both universal logic and timing
functionalities
• Different sets of primitives have been introduced, such as Keller’s,
Patra’s, Lee’s, and etc
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The set of primitives used in a PCC cell:
• Wire
I
O
– Transfers the output of a component to input of another one.
O2
I1
• Fork
– The output of one component is the input to
several components
• Merge
– Sends one of its input to the output
• Join
O1
I
I1
I2
O
– Data from several independent components are needed
to be synchronized.
O1 12
I1
I2
O
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• An array of cells each having a simple one-bit processing unit
• Von Neumann neighborhood for local connections
• A routing problem occurs:
• A possible solution:
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• Another approach is to combine every two to make a double cell
– The same routing capability with fewer neighboring connections
• A further step is to group 4 cells together to make a quad cell
– The same routing capability with simple connections to 4 nearest
neighbors
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• Logic Unit Design
• Synchronization
• Pulse Regenerator
• Top Level Design
• Configuration Circuitry
• PCC Cell Simulations
– One-bit full adder
– Ring oscillator
– Shift register
• Implementing Pipelines
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• There is a logic unit (LU) and an output register in each quarter
• Each LU has two inputs and one output
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• Dual rail inputs
• Dual rail outputs
• Switches should
be set before
inputs arrival
• 8 switches to
define a function
• 16 functions
• Avoids floating
nodes by pull
down resistors
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• AND function
• D, E , F, G are
“0001”
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A
B
Z
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
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• Wire  one output pulse
triggers the LU inputs of
the neighbor cell in the
same direction.
• Merge is realized by
2:1 Muxs, pulses do right
turns (90 degree)
• Fork Each turn triggers
a neighbor quarter and
also a neighbor cell,
– a single computation forks
into multiple parallel
computations
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Join
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•
A completion detection
circuitry
•
All the participating
quarters should have their
LU outputs ready
•
Complements a fork by
combining multiple parallel
computations into a single
computation.
•
QDI Communications
21
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•
Fork1
– Only when a
pulse turns
– LU should use
only the turned
pulse
•
Fork2 & Fork4
– No timing
assumptions
•
Fork3 & Fork5
– Bounded delay
model
22
• When a pulse travels through many cells, the width of the pulse may
increase or decrease
• Too short pulse may not be detectable at all, too long pulse may catch up
other pulses
• A PRG produces an output pulse with a certain constant width,
D1
independent of the width of the input pulse.
D2
A
B
C
• D1 is the delay by which the input pulse is stretched
• D2 determines the width of the output pulse
D
E
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In a PCC cell : (W/L)p / (W/L)n ≈ 1.6
In an inverter:
Equivalent resistance of a MOS : (R≈ L/W)
•
To match PMOS and NMOS resistances  (W/L)p / (W/L)n = 3 ~ 3.5
tpHL = .69* Rn* CL & tpLH = .69* Rp* CL
if
Rn = Rp

tpHL = tpLH
• A bigger PMOS improves the tpLH by increasing the charging current.
• A bigger PMOS degrades the tpHL by causing a larger parasitic capacitance.
• tp = (tpHL + tpLH)/2 is not minimal.
• The ratio for an optimal speed performance equals to √(Rp/Rn)
• The device can be speed up device by reducing the size of PMOS
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•
Configuration bits (16 bits for LU switches, 8 bits for Merge MUXs & 4 bits for
Join, i.e. total of 28 bits) should be loaded
•
Only some parts of the array may need to be configured
• One solution is to make a long chain of shift
registers of all the cells & configure all of them
• A better solution is to form the chain of shift
registers only by the cells that are needed to be configured.
•
In each cell, a controller:
– decides whether the cell is wanted to be configured or not
– directs the bit flow to one of the cell neighbors
– stops the shift registers whenever all the intended cells are configured
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Decoder
clk-N
clk-W
clk-E
clk-S
OR
clk-N
clk-S
clk-W
clk-E
Decoder
data-N
data-W
data-E
data-S
OR
10
Decoder
11
data-N
data-S
data-W
data-E
01
00
Controller
Shows that the shift register is filled
Shows that the cell is the last one in the chain of shift register
Determines that the cell should/should not be configured
Defines the neighbor to which the bits should be forwarded
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•
•
PCC cell was implemented in TSMC 250 nm CMOS using S-Edit.
The simulation was done by Pspice
• The supply voltage is 5V
• Input pulse widths are 400ps
• Propagation delay through a cell
is 480ps ~ 500ps.
• Better speed:
Slope ≤ gate propagation delay
• Slope of the external inputs
are 12ps.
• No overshoots and undershoots
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Voltage source =5V
Average current = 6 mA for 1.4 ns & 17 mA for 8.6 ns
For 20 pulses:
Energy = (5 * 6* 1.4) + (5 * 17 * 8.6) = 773 pJ
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For 1 pulse (1-bit of operation):
Voltage source= 5 V
Average current = 5 mA
Voltage source= 3.3 V Average current = 3 mA
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Energy = 5 * 5 *1.5 ns =37.5 pJ
Energy = 3 * 3.3 *1.8 ns=17.8 pJ
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• Sum = A B C
 1 1 1= 1
• Carry= AB + BC + AC = AB + (A+B)C
 1.1 + (1+1).1=1
• Sum & carry products are ready after 0.5ns & 1.8ns
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• Loops are important for many circuits such as sequential circuits,
iterative computations and For, If, and While constructs
• The ring oscillator represents two capabilities of PCC cell:
– A loop can be controlled externally (started & stopped)
– Utilizing Join of pulses, communications can be QDI
Start Pulse ‘0’
0
1
0 1 0
0
1
Output is always a ‘1’
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• Ring oscillator implemented in an array of PCC cells
One
One
XOR
WR
Nand
•
•
Pass
WR
One
Pass
‘0’ pulses are shown in blue, ‘1’ pulses are shown in red
The input Mux is configured to receive a ‘0’ pulse only from external of the 1st
cell and a ‘1’ pulse only from a turn.
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Simulation
Results:
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An input bit stream of “1010” is used.
Cell
1
Cell
2
Cell Cell
3
4
D1
x
x
x
D2
D1
x
x
D3
D2
D1
x
D4
D3
D2
D1
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•
•
If handshaking is done for every component, the components can form a pipeline.
Each component should supply an Ack to indicate that it is available for re-use.
Ack is received
Ack is received
LU
LU
LU
LU
LU
LU
Ack
LU
Ack
LU
LU
Delay(1) = 3X + (n-2)5X + 3X= (5n - 4)X
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•
Some cells don’t handshake & they are cascaded. The cascaded cells form a
unit of a pipeline. So, handshaking is done only at higher level.
Ack is received
LU
LU
LU
LU
Ack
LU
A unit of the pipeline
Ack
LU
LU
A unit of the pipeline
Delay(2) = 3X + (n-2)2X + 3x= (2n +2)X
Delay(2)/Delay(1) = (2n + 2)X=(5n-4)X = 2/5
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PCC Cell
Technology
TSMC 250nm
Voltage Source
5V (3.3V)
Transistor Count
760
Propagation delay
500 ps (600 ps)
Minimum input pulse width
400 ps
Energy consumption for 1-bit
operation
37.5 pJ (17.8 pJ)
Routing Capability
Data can be routed in
4 directions
QDI Communications
Yes, by perfuming
Join
Performance:
Speed  very good
Energy  good
Area  average
Implementing comb/seq circuits Yes
Controlling a loop externally
Yes
Implementing pipelines
Yes
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• Contribution:
– Utilizing asynchrony, reconfigurability, and the properties of CA to
make an extensible array with more regular and finer grained cells
than that of FPGAs.
• Future works:
– Improving the performance of the cell in terms of area and thermal
management
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• Express my deepest gratitude to my supervisors, Dr. Mark
Pavicic and Dr. Chao You.
• Gratitude are also due to graduate committee, Dr. Rajendra
Katti, Dr. Subbaraya Yuvarajan, Dr. Deying Li.
• Express my love and gratitude to my beloved spouse,
Hamed.
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