scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

S. Goel

Other affiliations: Advanced Micro Devices, Samsung
Bio: S. Goel is an academic researcher from University of Louisiana at Lafayette. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motion estimation & XNOR gate. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications receiving 650 citations. Previous affiliations of S. Goel include Advanced Micro Devices & Samsung.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proposed full adder is energy efficient and outperforms several standard full adders without trading off driving capability and reliability and is based on a novel xor-xnor circuit that generates xor and xnor full-swing outputs simultaneously.
Abstract: We present a new design for a 1-b full adder featuring hybrid-CMOS design style. The quest to achieve a good-drivability, noise-robustness, and low-energy operations for deep submicrometer guided our research to explore hybrid-CMOS style design. Hybrid-CMOS design style utilizes various CMOS logic style circuits to build new full adders with desired performance. This provides the designer a higher degree of design freedom to target a wide range of applications, thus significantly reducing design efforts. We also classify hybrid-CMOS full adders into three broad categories based upon their structure. Using this categorization, many full-adder designs can be conceived. We will present a new full-adder design belonging to one of the proposed categories. The new full adder is based on a novel xor-xnor circuit that generates xor and xnor full-swing outputs simultaneously. This circuit outperforms its counterparts showing 5%-37% improvement in the power-delay product (PDP). A novel hybrid-CMOS output stage that exploits the simultaneous xor-xnor signals is also proposed. This output stage provides good driving capability enabling cascading of adders without the need of buffer insertion between cascaded stages. There is approximately a 40% reduction in PDP when compared to its best counterpart. During our experimentations, we found out that many of the previously reported adders suffered from the problems of low swing and high noise when operated at low supply voltages. The proposed full adder is energy efficient and outperforms several standard full adders without trading off driving capability and reliability. The new full-adder circuit successfully operates at low voltages with excellent signal integrity and driving capability. To evaluate the performance of the new full adder in a real circuit, we embedded it in a 4- and 8-b, 4-operand carry-save array adder with final carry-propagate adder. The new adder displayed better performance as compared to the standard full adders

399 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Novel methodologies for designing energy-efficient noise-tolerant exclusive-OR-exclusive- NOR circuits that can operate at low-supply voltages with good signal integrity and driving capability are proposed and prove to be faster and successfully work at all ranges of supply voltage.
Abstract: Scaling down to deep submicrometer (DSM) technology has made noise a metric of equal importance as compared to power, speed, and area. Smaller feature size, lower supply voltage, and higher frequency are some of the characteristics for DSM circuits that make them more vulnerable to noise. New designs and circuit techniques are required in order to achieve robustness in presence of noise. Novel methodologies for designing energy-efficient noise-tolerant exclusive-OR-exclusive- NOR circuits that can operate at low-supply voltages with good signal integrity and driving capability are proposed. The circuits designed, after applying the proposed methodologies, are characterized and compared with previously published circuits for reliability, speed and energy efficiency. To test the driving capability of the proposed circuits, they are embedded in an existing 5-2 compressor design. The average noise threshold energy (ANTE) is used for quantifying the noise immunity of the proposed circuits. Simulation results show that, compared with the best available circuit in literature, the proposed circuits exhibit better noise-immunity, lower power-delay product (PDP) and good driving capability. All of the proposed circuits prove to be faster and successfully work at all ranges of supply voltage starting from 3.3 V down to 0.6 V. The savings in the PDP range from 94% to 21% for the given supply voltage range respectively and the average improvement in the ANTE is 2.67X.

98 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
25 Jul 2004
TL;DR: Several designs for 1-bit full adder cell featuring hybrid CMOS logic style based on a novel XOR-XNOR circuit that simultaneously produces XOR and XNOR full-swing outputs and outperforms its best counterpart showing 39% improvement in PDP.
Abstract: We present several designs for 1-bit full adder cell featuring hybrid CMOS logic style. These designs are based on a novel XOR-XNOR circuit that simultaneously produces XOR and XNOR full-swing outputs and outperforms its best counterpart showing 39% improvement in PDP. The new full-adder designs are also categorized in three main categories depending upon the implementation of the logic expression for sum and carry outputs. The results show that all the proposed designs prove to be energy-efficient and outperform several standard full-adder designs. All the designs are able to operate at low voltages without significant loss in signal integrity. The improvement in terms of PDP obtained by the best full-adder cell as compared the best standard design amounts to 24%.

44 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: This work reduces the computational cost of H.264/AVC by reducing the search space without significant loss in quality and shows that there is at least 90% reduction in computation with a maximum loss of 1.4dB.
Abstract: H.264/AVC is a new recommendation for moving picture coding, in which a lot of new techniques are used for improving encoding efficiency and reducing the bit-rate. However, it involves an exhaustive motion search across multiple block sizes and multiple reference frames leading to a linear increase in processing time. Although, the encoding quality is improved, the complexity of the encoder and computational cost are increased at the same time. We reduce the computational cost by reducing the search space without significant loss in quality. Results show that there is at least 90% reduction in computation with a maximum loss of 1.4dB.

37 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
28 Apr 2003
TL;DR: Results using 0.18m CMOS technology and HSPICE for simulation show that the proposed XOR-XNOR circuit is more noise-immune and displays better power-delay product characteristics than the compared circuit.
Abstract: With scaling down to deep submicron and nanometer technologies, noise immunity is becoming a metric of the same importance as power, speed, and area. Smaller feature sizes, low voltage, and high frequency are the characteristics for deep submicron circuits. This paper proposes a low voltage noise tolerant XOR-XNOR gate with 8 transistors. The proposed gate has been implanted in an already existing (5-2) compressor cell to test its driving capability. The proposed gate is characterized and compared with those published ones for reliability and energy efficiency. The average noise threshold energy (ANTE) and the energy normalized ANTE metrics are used for quantifying the noise immunity and energy efficiency respectively. Results using 0.18m CMOS technology and HSPICE for simulation show that the proposed XOR-XNOR circuit is more noise-immune and displays better power-delay product characteristics than the compared circuit. Also, the circuit proves to be faster in operation and works at all ranges of supply voltage starting from 0.6V to 3.3V.

35 citations


Cited by
More filters
01 Dec 1996

452 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proposed full adder is energy efficient and outperforms several standard full adders without trading off driving capability and reliability and is based on a novel xor-xnor circuit that generates xor and xnor full-swing outputs simultaneously.
Abstract: We present a new design for a 1-b full adder featuring hybrid-CMOS design style. The quest to achieve a good-drivability, noise-robustness, and low-energy operations for deep submicrometer guided our research to explore hybrid-CMOS style design. Hybrid-CMOS design style utilizes various CMOS logic style circuits to build new full adders with desired performance. This provides the designer a higher degree of design freedom to target a wide range of applications, thus significantly reducing design efforts. We also classify hybrid-CMOS full adders into three broad categories based upon their structure. Using this categorization, many full-adder designs can be conceived. We will present a new full-adder design belonging to one of the proposed categories. The new full adder is based on a novel xor-xnor circuit that generates xor and xnor full-swing outputs simultaneously. This circuit outperforms its counterparts showing 5%-37% improvement in the power-delay product (PDP). A novel hybrid-CMOS output stage that exploits the simultaneous xor-xnor signals is also proposed. This output stage provides good driving capability enabling cascading of adders without the need of buffer insertion between cascaded stages. There is approximately a 40% reduction in PDP when compared to its best counterpart. During our experimentations, we found out that many of the previously reported adders suffered from the problems of low swing and high noise when operated at low supply voltages. The proposed full adder is energy efficient and outperforms several standard full adders without trading off driving capability and reliability. The new full-adder circuit successfully operates at low voltages with excellent signal integrity and driving capability. To evaluate the performance of the new full adder in a real circuit, we embedded it in a 4- and 8-b, 4-operand carry-save array adder with final carry-propagate adder. The new adder displayed better performance as compared to the standard full adders

399 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two high-speed and low-power full-adder cells designed with an alternative internal logic structure and pass-transistor logic styles that lead to have a reduced power-delay product (PDP) outperform its counterparts exhibiting an average PDP advantage.
Abstract: We present two high-speed and low-power full-adder cells designed with an alternative internal logic structure and pass-transistor logic styles that lead to have a reduced power-delay product (PDP). We carried out a comparison against other full-adders reported as having a low PDP, in terms of speed, power consumption and area. All the full-adders were designed with a 0.18-μm CMOS technology, and were tested using a comprehensive testbench that allowed to measure the current taken from the full-adder inputs, besides the current provided from the power-supply. Post-layout simulations show that the proposed full-adders outperform its counterparts exhibiting an average PDP advantage of 80%, with only 40% of relative area.

283 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a hybrid 1-bit full adder design employing both complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) logic and transmission gate logic is reported and is found to offer significant improvement in terms of power and speed.
Abstract: In this paper, a hybrid 1-bit full adder design employing both complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) logic and transmission gate logic is reported. The design was first implemented for 1 bit and then extended for 32 bit also. The circuit was implemented using Cadence Virtuoso tools in 180-and 90-nm technology. Performance parameters such as power, delay, and layout area were compared with the existing designs such as complementary pass-transistor logic, transmission gate adder, transmission function adder, hybrid pass-logic with static CMOS output drive full adder, and so on. For 1.8-V supply at 180-nm technology, the average power consumption (4.1563 $\mu $ W) was found to be extremely low with moderately low delay (224 ps) resulting from the deliberate incorporation of very weak CMOS inverters coupled with strong transmission gates. Corresponding values of the same were 1.17664 $\mu $ W and 91.3 ps at 90-nm technology operating at 1.2-V supply voltage. The design was further extended for implementing 32-bit full adder also, and was found to be working efficiently with only 5.578-ns (2.45-ns) delay and 112.79- $\mu $ W (53.36- $\mu $ W) power at 180-nm (90-nm) technology for 1.8-V (1.2-V) supply voltage. In comparison with the existing full adder designs, the present implementation was found to offer significant improvement in terms of power and speed.

215 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These circuits are designed based on the unique properties of CNFETs, such as the capability of setting the desired threshold voltage by changing the diameters of the nanotubes, which makes them very suitable for the multiple- V t design method.
Abstract: Novel high-performance ternary circuits for nanotechnology are presented here. Each of these carbon nanotube field-effect transistor (CNFET)-based circuits implements all the possible kinds of ternary logic, including negative, positive and standard ternary logics, in one structure. The proposed designs have good driving capability and large noise margins and are robust. These circuits are designed based on the unique properties of CNFETs, such as the capability of setting the desired threshold voltage by changing the diameters of the nanotubes. This property of CNFETs makes them very suitable for the multiple- V t design method. The proposed circuits are simulated exhaustively, using Synopsys HSPICE with 32 nm-CNFET technology in various test situations and different supply voltages. Simulation results demonstrate great improvements in terms of speed, power consumption and insusceptibility to process variations with respect to other conventional and state-of-the-art 32 nm complementary metal-oxide semiconductor and CNFET-based ternary circuits. For instance at 0.9 V, the proposed ternary logic and arithmetic circuits consume on average 53 and 40 less energy, respectively, compared to the CNFET-based ternary logic and arithmetic circuits, recently proposed in the literature.

202 citations