Computing Reviews

Optimum transistor sizing of CMOS logic circuits using logical effort theory and evolutionary algorithms
Singh K., Jain A., Mittal A., Yadav V., Singh A., Jain A., Gupta M. Integration, the VLSI Journal60 25-38,2018.Type:Article
Date Reviewed: 03/01/18

This paper proposes a methodology for optimizing and evaluating chip designs by coupling the well-known logical effort (LE) theory with heuristic algorithms. Complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS)-level optimization can dramatically improve the system-level performance, particularly when the timing constraints of sequential circuits are considered. Since the industrial application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) design flow starts from the behavioral model-level design, the control for the physical implementations is limited. The chip size/power/speed is mainly decided by synthesis algorithms and tools. Additionally, in the high abstract-level design, the power-delay area (PDA) is usually considered as a tradeoff or balance; however, an increase in the PDA product is possible at the transistor level. The automated approach for finding a minimum PDA has a great potential to be adopted in synthesis tools like a DC or RTL compiler.

Reviewer:  Xiaokun Yang Review #: CR145892 (1805-0261)

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