Design Of Low Power CMOS Cell Structures Based On Adiabatic Switching Principle
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Abstract
The main objective of this thesis is to provide new low power solutions for Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) designers. The dynamic power requirement of CMOS circuits is rapidly becoming a major concern in the design of personal information systems and large computers. In this thesis work, a new CMOS logic family called ADIABATIC LOGIC, based on the adiabatic switching principle is presented. The term adiabatic comes from thermodynamics, used to describe a process in which there is no exchange of heat with the environment. The adiabatic logic structure dramatically reduces the power dissipation. The adiabatic switching technique can achieve very low power dissipation, but at the expense of circuit complexity. Adiabatic logic offers a way to reuse the energy stored in the load capacitors rather than the traditional way of discharging the load capacitors to the ground and wasting this energy.
This thesis work demonstrates the low power dissipation of Adiabatic Logic by presenting the results of designing various design/ cell units employing Adiabatic Logic circuit techniques. A family of full-custom conventional CMOS Logic and an Adiabatic Logic units for example, an inverter, a two-input NAND gate, a two-input NOR gate, a two-input XOR gate, a two-to-one multiplexer and a one-bit Full Adder were designed in Mentor Graphics IC Design Architect using standard TSMC 0.35 µm technology, laid out in Mentor Graphics IC Station.
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M.Tech. (VLSI Design and CAD)
