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High-level power optimisation for Digital Signal Processing in Recon gurable Logic

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Title: High-level power optimisation for Digital Signal Processing in Recon gurable Logic
Authors: Clarke, Jonathan A
Item Type: Thesis or dissertation
Abstract: This thesis is concerned with the optimisation of Digital Signal Processing (DSP) algorithm implementations on recon gurable hardware via the selection of appropriate word-lengths for the signals in these algorithms, in order to minimise system power consumption. Whilst existing word-length optimisation work has concentrated on the minimisation of the area of algorithm implementations, this work introduces the rst set of power consumption models that can be evaluated quickly enough to be used within the search of the enormous design space of multiple word-length optimisation problems. These models achieve their speed by estimating both the power consumed within the arithmetic components of an algorithm and the power in the routing wires that connect these components, using only a high-level description of the algorithm itself. Trading o a small reduction in power model accuracy for a large increase in speed is one of the major contributions of this thesis. In addition to the work on power consumption modelling, this thesis also develops a new technique for selecting the appropriate word-lengths for an algorithm implementation in order to minimise its cost in terms of power (or some other metric for which models are available). The method developed is able to provide tight lower and upper bounds on the optimal cost that can be obtained for a particular word-length optimisation problem and can, as a result, nd provably near-optimal solutions to word-length optimisation problems without resorting to an NP-hard search of the design space. Finally the costs of systems optimised via the proposed technique are compared to those obtainable by word-length optimisation for minimisation of other metrics (such as logic area) and the results compared, providing greater insight into the nature of wordlength optimisation problems and the extent of the improvements obtainable by them.
Issue Date: Sep-2008
Date Awarded: Jan-2009
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/4407
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25560/4407
Supervisor: Cheung, Peter
Constantinides, George
Sponsor/Funder: Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK) and Synplicity
Author: Clarke, Jonathan A
Department: Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Publisher: Imperial College London
Qualification Level: Doctoral
Qualification Name: Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Appears in Collections:Electrical and Electronic Engineering PhD theses



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