Low Power Digital CMOS Design

Low Power Digital CMOS Design by Anantha P. Chandrakasan, published by Springer US on October 4, 2012, is a softcover reprint of the original 1st edition from 1995, comprising 409 pages. This book addresses the critical issue of power consumption in both battery-operated portable systems and high-performance desktop systems, emphasizing the need for designers to meet stringent power dissipation limits while accommodating increasing computational demands.
Readers will find a comprehensive exploration of design strategies that span algorithms, architectures, and logic styles, focusing on techniques such as architecture optimization and voltage scaling. The text discusses methods to minimize switched capacitance and highlights the importance of efficient DC-DC converter circuitry for low-voltage operations. Additionally, it includes analyses of fundamental power consumption limits and emerging adiabatic switching techniques, providing insights into reducing energy per computation and applying aggressive shut-down techniques in microprocessor applications.
Official synopsis Publisher
Power consumption has become a major design consideration for battery-operated, portable systems as well as high-performance, desktop systems. Strict limitations on power dissipation must be met by the designer while still meeting ever higher computational requirements. A comprehensive approach is thus required at all levels of system design, ranging from algorithms and architectures to the logic styles and the underlying technology.
Potentially one of the most important techniques involves combining architecture optimization with voltage scaling, allowing a trade-off between silicon area and low-power operation. Architectural optimization enables supply voltages of the order of 1 V using standard CMOS technology. Several techniques can also be used to minimize the switched capacitance, including representation, optimizing signal correlations, minimizing spurious transitions, optimizing sequencing of operations, activity-driven power down, etc. The high- efficiency of DC-DC converter circuitry required for efficient, low-voltage and low-current level operation is described by Stratakos, Sullivan and Sanders. The application of various low-power techniques to a chip set for multimedia applications shows that orders-of-magnitude reduction in power consumption is possible.
The book also features an analysis by Professor Meindl of the fundamental limits of power consumption achievable at all levels of the design hierarchy. Svensson, of ISI, describes emerging adiabatic switching techniques that can break the CV2f barrier and reduce the energy per computation at a fixed voltage. Srivastava, of AT&T, presents the application of aggressive shut-down techniques to microprocessor applications.
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