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Journal ArticleDOI

Design space exploration and data memory architecture design for a hybrid nano/CMOS dynamically reconfigurable architecture

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TLDR
A thorough design space exploration is conducted to optimize a high-performance hybrid nano/CMOS reconfigurable architecture with high performance, superior logic density, and outstanding design flexibility, which is very attractive for deployment in cost-conscious embedded systems.
Abstract
In recent years, research on nanotechnology has advanced rapidly. Novel nanodevices have been developed, such as those based on carbon nanotubes, nanowires, etc. Using these emerging nanodevices, diverse nanoarchitectures have been proposed. Among them, hybrid nano/CMOS reconfigurable architectures have attracted attention because of their advantages in performance, integration density, and fault tolerance. Recently, a high-performance hybrid nano/CMOS reconfigurable architecture, called NATURE, was presented. NATURE comprises CMOS reconfigurable logic and interconnect fabric, and CMOS-fabrication-compatible nanomemory. High-density, fast nano RAMs are distributed in NATURE as on-chip storage to store multiple reconfiguration copies for each reconfigurable element. It enables cycle-by-cycle runtime reconfiguration and a highly efficient computational model, called temporal logic folding. Through logic folding, NATURE provides more than an order of magnitude improvement in logic density and area-delay product, and significant design flexibility in performing area-delay trade-offs, at the same technology node. Moreover, NATURE can be fabricated using mainstream photolithography fabrication techniques. Hence, it offers a currently commercially viable reconfigurable architecture with high performance, superior logic density, and outstanding design flexibility, which is very attractive for deployment in cost-conscious embedded systems.In order to fully explore the potential of NATURE and further improve its performance, in this article, a thorough design space exploration is conducted to optimize its architecture. Investigations in terms of different logic element architectures, interconnect designs, and various technologies for nano RAMs are presented. Nano RAMs can not only be used as storage for configuration bits, but the high density of nano RAMs also makes them excellent candidates for large-capacity on-chip data storage in NATURE. Many logic- and memory-intensive applications, such as video and image processing, require large storage of temporal results. To enhance the capability of NATURE for implementing such applications, we investigate the design of nano data memory structures in NATURE and explore the impact of memory density. Experimental results demonstrate significant throughput improvements due to area saving from logic folding and parallel data processing.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

SPaC: a segment-based parallel compression for backup acceleration in nonvolatile processors

TL;DR: A segment-based parallel compression (SPaC) architecture to achieve tradeoffs between area and backup speed and an off-line and online hybrid method to balance the workloads of different compression modules in SPaC is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low-power 3D nano/CMOS hybrid dynamically reconfigurable architecture

TL;DR: This article explores the introduction of embedded coarse-grain modules in the fine-grain NATURE architecture and presents a unified dynamically reconfigurable architecture, which can significantly enhance NATURE's computation power for data-dominated applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

FDR 2.0: A Low-Power Dynamically Reconfigurable Architecture and Its FinFET Implementation

TL;DR: An augmented FDR 2.0 architecture is presented, where the LE is augmented with dedicated carry logic to facilitate arithmetic operations; diagonal direct links are incorporated to improve the flexibility of local communication; and coarse-grain blocks are added to support fast data-intensive computations.
Book ChapterDOI

A Hybrid Nano/CMOS Dynamically Reconfigurable System

TL;DR: This chapter describes a hybrid nono/CMOS reconfigurable architecture called NATURE that can support cycle-level dynamic reconfiguration and allows the amount of functionality mapped in the same chip area to increase by more than an order of magnitude.

Design of Dynamically-Reconfigurable Architectures Aimed at Reducing FPGA-ASIC Gaps

Ting-Jung Lin
TL;DR: A new fine-grain dynamically reconfigurable architecture (FDR) that is specifically optimized for logic folding is proposed, which can achieve more than an order of magnitude improvement in the area-delay product with smaller power consumption compared to conventional FPGAs that do not use logic folding.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Book ChapterDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Force-directed scheduling for the behavioral synthesis of ASICs

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