scholarly journals Design of a High Speed XAUI Based on Dynamic Reconfigurable Transceiver IP Core

Author(s):  
Haipeng Zhang ◽  
Lingjun Kong ◽  
Xiuju Huang ◽  
Mengmeng Cao
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-98
Author(s):  
Sujit Rokka Chhetri ◽  
Bikash Poudel ◽  
Sandesh Ghimire ◽  
Shaswot Shresthamali ◽  
Dinesh Kumar Sharma

This paper describes the theory and implementation of audio effects such as echo, distortion and pitch-shift in Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). At first the mathematical formulation for generation of such effects is explained and then the algorithm is described for its implementation in FPGA using Very high speed integrated circuit hardware descriptive language (VHDL). The digital system being designed, which is synthesizable and reconfigurable, offers a great flexibility and scalability in designing and prototyping in FPGAs. The system is divided into three HDL blocks, each for echo, distortion, and pitch-shift effect generation, which are multiplexed in order to share the common ADC and DAC. The audio effect generator designed in this paper was successfully implemented in Spartan-3E FPGA utilizing the resources available effectively. There has been tremendous research being carried out in the field of IP core. Efficient IP cores designed to carry out digital signal processing are implemented in every modern device using configurable logics. This trend hasn’t yet been realized in Nepal. Through the design and implementation of audio effect generator, this paper also aims at bringing the field of IP core development to limelight among scholars of Nepal.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/njst.v15i1.12022 Nepal Journal of Science and TechnologyVol. 15, No.1 (2014) 89-98


Author(s):  
Venkata Raghavendra Miriampally

<p>PCI Express is a high-speed serial connection that operates more like a network than a bus.<strong> </strong>PCI Express will serve as a general purpose I/O interconnects for a wide variety of future computing and communications platforms.<strong> </strong>PCI Express (PCIe) is implemented with a split-transaction protocol that provides more bandwidth and is compatible with existing operating systems. PCI Express has three discrete logical layers: the Transaction Layer, the Data Link Layer, and the Physical Layer. This paper  analyze and simulates the function of Transaction layer <strong> </strong>IP core in the System Level with top-down design method, wrote the codes to implement Transaction Layer using Very high speed hardware description language (VHDL) and provided the simulation results using Active HDL Simulation tool. The simulation result shows that the designed IP core meets the required protocol specifications for the proper functioning of PCI Express Transaction layer.</p><p> </p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 23 (01) ◽  
pp. 1450002 ◽  
Author(s):  
NEMANJA SAVIĆ ◽  
MILE STOJČEV ◽  
TATJANA NIKOLIĆ ◽  
VLADIMIR PETROVIĆ ◽  
GORAN JOVANOVIĆ

High operating speed, fault tolerance (FT), low power and reconfiguration become today dominant issues during development and design of linear feedback shift registers (LFSRs), used as sequence generators, with randomness properties, in a process of testing complex CMOS VLSI ICs. In our design solution, we accomplish FT by using triple modular redundancy (TMR), i.e., a hardware scheme that uses spatial redundancy. For reduction of dynamic power consumption, clock-gating technique, as a simple and effective method, is implemented. The reconfigurable FPGA architecture provides us a feature to program and configure the degree of the primitive polynomial that the LFSR uses. High speed of operation, over 100 MHz, during testing is achieved by using circuits fabricated in submicron technology. An architecture which integrates in a single structure (IP core) all aforementioned design issues, named fault tolerant reconfigurable low-power pseudo-random number generator (FT_RLRG), is described in this article. The design of FT_RLRG is of practical interest in testing triple modular FT systems in the presence of single event upsets (SEUs), especially in a case when the design is SRAM-based. As an IP core the FT_RLRG has been implemented both on FPGA and ASIC technology. The main idea was to design a low-cost and low-power hardware structure which is able to adjust to any standards (past, present and future) operating at high-speed with different polynomials (currently up to 32nd order). The performance of FT_RLRG in respect to speed of operation (up to 150 MHz for FPGA and ASIC designs), low hardware overhead (0.033 mm2 area for ASIC and up to 530 slices for FPGA) and low-power consumption (0.45 mW for ASIC), for three different FPGA architecture (Spartan-3E, Virtex-4 and Virtex-6LP) and as an ASIC design implemented in 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS technology, have been estimated.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document