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Energy-Efficient Floating-Point Unit Design.

Authors :
Galal, S
Horowitz, M
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Computers. Jul2011, Vol. 60 Issue 7, p913-922. 10p.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Energy-efficient computation is critical if we are going to continue to scale performance in power-limited systems. For floating-point applications that have large amounts of data parallelism, one should optimize the throughput/mm2 given a power density constraint. We present a method for creating a trade-off curve that can be used to estimate the maximum floating-point performance given a set of area and power constraints. Looking at FP multiply-add units and ignoring register and memory overheads, we find that in a 90 nm CMOS technology at 1 W/mm2, one can achieve a performance of 27 GFlops/mm2 single precision, and 7.5 GFlops/mm double precision. Adding register file overheads reduces the throughput by less than 50 percent if the compute intensity is high. Since the energy of the basic gates is no longer scaling rapidly, to maintain constant power density with scaling requires moving the overall FP architecture to a lower energy/performance point. A 1 W/mm2 design at 90 nm is a "high-energy" design, so scaling it to a lower energy design in 45 nm still yields a 7× performance gain, while a more balanced 0.1 W/mm2 design only speeds up by 3.5× when scaled to 45 nm. Performance scaling below 45 nm rapidly decreases, with a projected improvement of only ~3x for both power densities when scaling to a 22 nm technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00189340
Volume :
60
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101185780
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/TC.2010.121