2016
DOI: 10.1109/mssc.2016.2573864
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Asynchronous Circuit Designs for the Internet of Everything: A Methodology for Ultralow-Power Circuits with GALS Architecture

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Cited by 20 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Finally, as the AR part is based on a programmable core architecture, it can adaptively configure OD triggering conditions to limit the false detections. In [25], an asynchronous circuit design methodology is described for ultra-low power systems. The authors evaluate the gains of an asynchronous wake-up controller on the alwaysresponsive sub-system.…”
Section: L-iot Approach and Samurai Proposalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, as the AR part is based on a programmable core architecture, it can adaptively configure OD triggering conditions to limit the false detections. In [25], an asynchronous circuit design methodology is described for ultra-low power systems. The authors evaluate the gains of an asynchronous wake-up controller on the alwaysresponsive sub-system.…”
Section: L-iot Approach and Samurai Proposalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The event-driven scheme provides robustness to operating parameters such as temperature, supply voltage level, or process variations, while implementing automatic sleep mode (i.e., clock-gated mode in synchronous circuits). These advantages make asynchronous QDI circuits highly suitable for low power applications such as the Internet of Things [9]. While the dual-rail encoding is used to implement the four-phase handshake protocol, mixing data and request, bundled-data implementation may be used to allow lighter binary encoding.…”
Section: Asynchronous Wake Up Controller Architecturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As mentioned previously, we used asynchronous logic [22] to implement the asynchronous service network. It allows us to achieve a plug-and-play implementation and avoid power domain crossing problems common to many SoC circuits [23], since we no longer have to worry about timing problems.…”
Section: Network's Micro-architecturementioning
confidence: 99%