Abstract:
A reliable high-speed bus employing low-swing signaling can be designed by encoding the bus to prevent crosstalk and provide error correction. Coding for on-chip buses re...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
A reliable high-speed bus employing low-swing signaling can be designed by encoding the bus to prevent crosstalk and provide error correction. Coding for on-chip buses requires additional bus wires and codec circuits. In this paper, fundamental bounds on the number of wires required to provide joint crosstalk avoidance and error correction using memoryless codes are presented. The authors propose a code construction that results in practical codec circuits with the number of wires being within 35% of the fundamental bounds. When applied to a 10-mm 32-bit bus in a 0.13-μm CMOS technology with low-swing signaling, one of the proposed codes provides 2.14× speedup and 27.5% energy savings at the cost of 2.1× area overhead, but without any loss in reliability.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems ( Volume: 26, Issue: 5, May 2007)