Near- and Sub-Threshold Design for Ultra-Low-Power Embedded Systems
Ultra-low-power (ULP) software-programmable architectures are gradually replacing dedicated VLSI circuits in many applications, including health care and other critical areas. However, the cost for more flexibility is the less frugal use of energy. This cost can be partially recovered by aggressive supply voltage scaling, often deep into the sub-threshold regime, which, however, raises concerns on performance, standby leakage, and reliability. In this talk, we will discuss some of the issues and possible solutions to ULP computing and embedded systems desigm at scaled voltages. We will discuss architectural choices and circuit level aspects and illustrate them with examples including robust Sub-VT memories, ULP multi-core systems, and Sub-VT application specific processors.
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