Energy efficient low‐power full‐adder by 65 nm CMOS technology in ALU

2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Suresh Kumar N ◽  
Paramasivam K
Circuit World ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 183-192
Author(s):  
Muhammad Yasir Faheem ◽  
Shun'an Zhong ◽  
Xinghua Wang ◽  
Muhammad Basit Azeem

Purpose Successive approximation register (SAR) analogue to digital converter (ADC) is well-known with regard to low-power operations. To make it energy-efficient and time-efficient, scientists are working for the last two decades, and it still needs the attention of the researchers. In actual work, there is no mechanism and circuitry for the production of two simultaneous comparator outputs in SAR ADC. Design/methodology/approach A small-sized, low-power and energy-efficient circuitry of a dual comparator and an amplifier is presented, which is the most important part of SAR ADC. The main idea is to design a multi-dimensional circuit which can deliver two quick parallel comparisons. The circuitry of the three devices is combined and miniaturized by introducing a lower number of MOSFET’s and small-sized capacitors in such a way that there is no need for any matching and calibration. Findings The supply voltage of the proposed comparator is 0.7 V with the overall power consumption of 0.257mW. The input and clock frequencies are 5 and 50 MHz, respectively. There is no requirement for any offset calibration and mismatching concerns due to sharing and centralization of spider-latch circuitry. The total offset voltages are 0.13 0.31 mV with 0.3VDD to VDD. All the components are small-sized and miniaturized to make the circuit cost-effective and energy-efficient. The rise and response time of comparator is around 100 ns. SNDR improved from 56 to 65 dB where the input-referred noise of an amplifier is 98mVrms. Originality/value The proposed design has no linear-complexity compared with the conventional comparator in both modes (working and standby); it is ultimately intended and designed for 11-bit SAR ADC. The circuit based on three rapid clock pulses for three different modes includes amplification and two parallel comparisons controlled and switched by a latch named as “spider-latch”.


Author(s):  
Dan Wang ◽  
Maofeng Yang ◽  
Wu Cheng ◽  
Xuguang Guan ◽  
Zhangming Zhu ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

VLSI Design ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kishore Kumar ◽  
D. Somasundareswari ◽  
V. Duraisamy ◽  
T. Shunbaga Pradeepa

Asynchronous adiabatic logic (AAL) is a novel lowpower design technique which combines the energy saving benefits of asynchronous systems with adiabatic benefits. In this paper, energy efficient full adder using double pass transistor with asynchronous adiabatic logic (DPTAAL) is used to design a low power multiplier. Asynchronous adiabatic circuits are very low power circuits to preserve energy for reuse, which reduces the amount of energy drawn directly from the power supply. In this work, an 8×8 multiplier using DPTAAL is designed and simulated, which exhibits low power and reliable logical operations. To improve the circuit performance at reduced voltage level, double pass transistor logic (DPL) is introduced. The power results of the proposed multiplier design are compared with the conventional CMOS implementation. Simulation results show significant improvement in power for clock rates ranging from 100 MHz to 300 MHz.


In an electronic processing system, addition of binary numbers is a fundamental operation. A one bit low power hybrid FA(full adder) is shown in showing performance improvisation by analysis and comparing with other conventional adders. 1 bit low power hybrid full adder is considered as a good way for enhancing the speed of the circuit in comparison with other conventional circuits of full adders. In that analysis paper, one bit low power hybrid FA(full adder) is implemented by EDA tool and the simulation is analysis by using generic 90nm CMOS technology at 5 volts and comparison is done at various voltages with other conventional full adders. For comparing 1 bit low power hybrid full adder with other conventional adders at various parameters such as static and dynamic power usage, delay & pdp (power delay product) are taken into consideration to show that 1 bit low power hybrid full adder is most suitable for various low power applications.


2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (03) ◽  
pp. 1850046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sadulla Shaik ◽  
K. Sri Rama Krishna ◽  
Ramesh Vaddi

Tunnel field-effect transistors (TFETs) as low voltage device options have attracted recent attention for energy efficient circuit designs with CMOS technology scaling. This paper presents the circuit and architectural co-design approach for designing reliable and energy efficient architectures (adder cells) for new computing platforms at supply voltages. At circuit level TFET-based 28-transistor static logic design (28T) and 24-transistor transmission gate logic design (24T) have been explored. At architectural level, multiplexer (MUX)-based 22-transistor full adder design (22T) is proposed. Performance of TFET-based architectures have also been benchmarked with 20[Formula: see text]nm double gate Si FinFET technology. It has been seen that with FinFET technology 24T design is not effective in terms of energy efficiency and reliability (due to the large leakage currents in transmission gate logic topology). 28T design is the best in reliability perspective (in terms of reduced over shoots, full logic swing and reduced glitch duration etc.) and 22T design to be energy efficient option. It has been demonstrated in this paper that TFET’s steep slope characteristics enable the 24T design to have similar reliability characteristics like 28T design and energy efficiency like 22T design. TFET-based 22T design has [Formula: see text]91% smaller energy delay product (EDP) and [Formula: see text]84.4% less power delay product (PDP) in comparison to the low threshold voltage (LVT) FinFET 22T design at 0.2[Formula: see text]V VDD.


2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (03) ◽  
pp. 439-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. GHADIRY ◽  
ABU KHARI A'AIN ◽  
M. NADI S.

This paper, presents a new full-swing low power high performance full adder circuit in CMOS technology. It benefits from a full swing XOR-XNOR module with no feedback transistors, which decreases delay and power consumption. In addition, high driving capability of COUT module and low PDP design of SUM module contribute to more PDP reduction in cascaded mode. In order to have accurate analysis, the new circuit along with several well-known full adders from literature have been modeled and compared with CADENCE. Comparison consists of power consumption, performance, PDP, and area. Results show that there are improvements in both power consumption and performance. This design trades area with low PDP.


VLSI Design ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Srivastava ◽  
K. Venkatapathy

In this work, the design and implementation of a low power ternary full adder are presented in CMOS technology. In a ternary full adder design, the basic building blocks, the positive ternary inverter (PTI) and negative ternary inverter (NTI) are developed using a CMOS inverter and pass transistors. In designs of PTI and NTI, W/L ratios of transistors have been varied for their optimum performance. The ternary full adder and its building blocks have been simulated with SPICE 2G.6 using the MOSIS model parameters. The rise and fall times of PTI show an improvement by a factor of 14 and 4, respectively, and that of the NTI by a factor of nearly 4 and 17, respectively over that of earlier designs implemented in depletion-enhancement CMOS (DECMOS) technology. The noise margins improve by a factor of nearly 2 in PTI and NTI, respectively.The ternary full adder has been fabricated in MOSIS two micron n-well CMOS technology. The full adder and its building blocks, NTI and PTI have been tested experimentally for static and dynamic performance, compared with the SPICE simulated behavior, and close agreement is observed.The ternary-valued logic circuits designed in the present work which do not use depletion mode MOSFETS perform better than that implemented earlier in DECMOS technology. The present design is fully compatible with the current CMOS technology, uses fewer components and dissipates power in the microwatt range.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pratibha Aggarwal ◽  
Bharat Garg

Abstract Adders are one of the most important digital components used in any arithmetic applications. Many improvements in past have been made to improve its architecture. In this paper, we present two new symmetric designs for Energy efficient full adder cells featuring GDI (Gate-Diffusion Input) logic. The main design objectives for these adder modules are to operate at Low-Power with reduced area but also provide full-voltage swing. In the first (AEG-FA) design, a new approach of Inverted and Non-Inverted Carry-ins were taken to give complementary Carry-out and Sum with desired performance. These were then applied in different combinations to form higher bit width Adder architecture. This provides a higher degree of design freedom to target a wide range of applications, hence reducing design efforts. The second (PEG-FA) design is based on conventional approach which tries to reduce the critical path delay and lower switching activity in GDI circuit, providing Low-Power and high speed digital component at full voltage swing circuit. Many of the previously reported adders in literature suffered from the problems of low-swing and high noise when operated at low supply voltages. These two new designs successfully operate at low voltage with high signal integrity and driving capability. In order to evaluate the performance of proposed full adders, we incorporated 8-bit ripple carry adders. The studied circuits are optimized for energy efficiency using 45 nm CMOS process technology. The comparison between these novel circuits with standard full adder cells shows improvement in terms of Area, Delay, Power and Power-Delay-Product (PDP), Area-Delay Product (ADP), Area-Power Product (APP). At architecture level proposed adder shows 12.8% over CMOS, 14.8% over hybrid and 11.4% over other GDI logic power savings, by having almost 55% reduction in area.


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