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This book provides an invaluable primer on the techniques utilized
in the design of low power digital semiconductor devices. Readers
will benefit from the hands-on approach which starts form the
ground-up, explaining with basic examples what power is, how it is
measured and how it impacts on the design process of
application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs). The authors use
both the Unified Power Format (UPF) and Common Power Format (CPF)
to describe in detail the power intent for an ASIC and then guide
readers through a variety of architectural and implementation
techniques that will help meet the power intent. From analyzing
system power consumption, to techniques that can be employed in a
low power design, to a detailed description of two alternate
standards for capturing the power directives at various phases of
the design, this book is filled with information that will give
ASIC designers a competitive edge in low-power design.
iming, timing, timing! That is the main concern of a digital
designer charged with designing a semiconductor chip. What is it,
how is it T described, and how does one verify it? The design team
of a large digital design may spend months architecting and
iterating the design to achieve the required timing target. Besides
functional verification, the t- ing closure is the major milestone
which dictates when a chip can be - leased to the semiconductor
foundry for fabrication. This book addresses the timing
verification using static timing analysis for nanometer designs.
The book has originated from many years of our working in the area
of timing verification for complex nanometer designs. We have come
across many design engineers trying to learn the background and
various aspects of static timing analysis. Unfortunately, there is
no book currently ava- able that can be used by a working engineer
to get acquainted with the - tails of static timing analysis. The
chip designers lack a central reference for information on timing,
that covers the basics to the advanced timing veri- cation
procedures and techniques.
This book provides an invaluable primer on the techniques utilized
in the design of low power digital semiconductor devices. Readers
will benefit from the hands-on approach which starts form the
ground-up, explaining with basic examples what power is, how it is
measured and how it impacts on the design process of
application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs). The authors use
both the Unified Power Format (UPF) and Common Power Format (CPF)
to describe in detail the power intent for an ASIC and then guide
readers through a variety of architectural and implementation
techniques that will help meet the power intent. From analyzing
system power consumption, to techniques that can be employed in a
low power design, to a detailed description of two alternate
standards for capturing the power directives at various phases of
the design, this book is filled with information that will give
ASIC designers a competitive edge in low-power design.
iming, timing, timing! That is the main concern of a digital
designer charged with designing a semiconductor chip. What is it,
how is it T described, and how does one verify it? The design team
of a large digital design may spend months architecting and
iterating the design to achieve the required timing target. Besides
functional verification, the t- ing closure is the major milestone
which dictates when a chip can be - leased to the semiconductor
foundry for fabrication. This book addresses the timing
verification using static timing analysis for nanometer designs.
The book has originated from many years of our working in the area
of timing verification for complex nanometer designs. We have come
across many design engineers trying to learn the background and
various aspects of static timing analysis. Unfortunately, there is
no book currently ava- able that can be used by a working engineer
to get acquainted with the - tails of static timing analysis. The
chip designers lack a central reference for information on timing,
that covers the basics to the advanced timing veri- cation
procedures and techniques.
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