• Title/Summary/Keyword: clock scheme

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An On-Chip Test Clock Control Scheme for Circuit Aging Monitoring

  • Yi, Hyunbean
    • JSTS:Journal of Semiconductor Technology and Science
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.71-78
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    • 2013
  • In highly reliable and durable systems, failures due to aging might result in catastrophes. Aging monitoring techniques to prevent catastrophes by predicting such a failure are required. Aging can be monitored by performing a delay test at faster clocks than functional clock in field and checking the current delay state from the test clock frequencies at which the delay test is passed or failed. In this paper, we focus on test clock control scheme for a system-on-chip (SoC) with multiple clock domains. We describe limitations of existing at-speed test clock control methods and present an on-chip faster-than-at-speed test clock control scheme for intra/inter-clock domain test. Experimental results show our simulation results and area analysis. With a simple control scheme, with low area overhead, and without any modification of scan architecture, the proposed method enables faster-than-at-speed test of SoCs with multiple clock domains.

Low Latency Synchronization Scheme Using Prediction and Avoidance of Synchronization Failure in Heterochronous Clock Domains

  • Song, Sung-Gun;Park, Seong-Mo;Lee, Jeong-Gun;Oh, Myeong-Hoon
    • JSTS:Journal of Semiconductor Technology and Science
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.208-222
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    • 2015
  • For the performance-efficient integration of IPs on an SoC utilizing heterochronous multi-clock domains, we propose a synchronization scheme that causes low latency overhead when data are crossing clock boundaries. The proposed synchronization scheme is composed of a clock predictor and a synchronizer. The clock predictor of a sender clock domain produces a predicted clock that is used in a receiver clock domain to detect possible synchronization failures in advance. When the possible synchronization failures are detected, a synchronizer at the receiver delays data-capture times to avoid the possible synchronization failures. From the simulation of the proposed scheme through SPICE modeling using a Chartered $0.18{\mu}m$ CMOS process, we verified the functionalities and timing behavior of the clock predictor and the synchronizer. The simulation results show that the clock predictor produces a predicted clock before a synchronization failure, and the synchronizer samples data correctly using the predicted clock.

A 1.7 Gbps DLL-Based Clock Data Recovery for a Serial Display Interface in 0.35-${\mu}m$ CMOS

  • Moon, Yong-Hwan;Kim, Sang-Ho;Kim, Tae-Ho;Park, Hyung-Min;Kang, Jin-Ku
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.34 no.1
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    • pp.35-43
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    • 2012
  • This paper presents a delay-locked-loop-based clock and data recovery (CDR) circuit design with a nB(n+2)B data formatting scheme for a high-speed serial display interface. The nB(n+2)B data is formatted by inserting a '01' clock information pattern in every piece of N-bit data. The proposed CDR recovers clock and data in 1:10 demultiplexed form without an external reference clock. To validate the feasibility of the scheme, a 1.7-Gbps CDR based on the proposed scheme is designed, simulated, and fabricated. Input data patterns were formatted as 10B12B for a high-performance display interface. The proposed CDR consumes approximately 8 mA under a 3.3-V power supply using a 0.35-${\mu}m$ CMOS process and the measured peak-to-peak jitter of the recovered clock is 44 ps.

A Byzantine Fault-tolerant Clock Synchronization Scheme in Wireless Sensor Networks (무선 센서 네트워크에서 비잔틴 오류를 허용하는 클럭 동기화 기법)

  • Lim, Hyung-Geun;Nam, Young-Jin;Baek, Jang-Woon;Ko, Seok-Young;Seo, Dae-Wha
    • Journal of KIISE:Computing Practices and Letters
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    • v.14 no.5
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    • pp.487-491
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    • 2008
  • This paper proposes the Byzantine fault tolerant clock synchronization scheme for wireless sensor networks to cope with the clock synchronization disturbance attack of malicious nodes. In the proposed scheme, a node which is requiring clock synchronization receives 3m+1 clock synchronization messages not only from its parent nodes but also from its sibling nodes in order to tolerate malicious attacks even if up to m malicious nodes exist among them. The results show that the proposed scheme is 7 times more resilient to the clock synchronization disturbance attack of malicious nodes than existing schemes in terms of synchronization accuracy.

New current memory cell with clock-feedthrough reduction scheme (클럭-피드쓰루를 개선한 새로운 전류 기억 소자)

  • 민병무;김재완;김수원
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Telematics and Electronics D
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    • v.34D no.1
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    • pp.30-34
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    • 1997
  • An improved clock-feedthrough compensation scheme for switche dcurrent system is proposed. Both the signal dependent and the constant clock-feedthrough terms are cancelled by using both NMOS and PMOS current samplers and by adopting a source replication technique. The proposed current memory cell was fabricated with 0.6$\mu$m CMOS process. Both experimental and theoretical results on clock-feedthrough error reveal substantial reduction over the existing compensation schemes.

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Measurement Scheme for One-Way Delay Variation with Detection and Removal of Clock Skew

  • Aoki, Makoto;Oki, Eiji;Rojas-Cessa, Roberto
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.32 no.6
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    • pp.854-862
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    • 2010
  • One-way delay variation (OWDV) has become increasingly of interest to researchers as a way to evaluate network state and service quality, especially for real-time and streaming services such as voice-over-Internet-protocol (VoIP) and video. Many schemes for OWDV measurement require clock synchronization through the global-positioning system (GPS) or network time protocol. In clock-synchronized approaches, the accuracy of OWDV measurement depends on the accuracy of the clock synchronization. GPS provides highly accurate clock synchronization. However, the deployment of GPS on legacy network equipment might be slow and costly. This paper proposes a method for measuring OWDV that dispenses with clock synchronization. The clock synchronization problem is mainly caused by clock skew. The proposed approach is based on the measurement of inter-packet delay and accumulated OWDV. This paper shows the performance of the proposed scheme via simulations and through experiments in a VoIP network. The presented simulation and measurement results indicate that clock skew can be efficiently measured and removed and that OWDV can be measured without requiring clock synchronization.

A Novel Clock Distribution Scheme for High Performance System and A Structural Analysis of Coplanar and Microstrip Transmission Line (고성능 시스템을 위한 클록 분배 방식 및 Coplanar 및 Microstrip 전송라인의 구조적 분석)

  • Park, Jung-Keun;Moon, Gyu;Wee, Jae-Kyung
    • Journal of the Institute of Electronics Engineers of Korea SD
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    • v.41 no.4
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2004
  • A novol clock distribution scheme is proposed for high-speed and low-power digital system to minimize clock skew and reduce dynamic power consumption. This scheme has ideal zero-skew characteristic by using folded clock lines (FCL) and phase blending circuit. For analyzing suitable line structures to FCLs, microstrip line and coplanar line are placed with folded clock lines. Simulation results show that the maximum clock-skew between two receivers located 10mm apart is less than lops at 1㎓ and the maximum clock-skew between two receivers located 20mm apart is less than 60ps at 1㎓. Also the results show that the minimum skews of clock signals regardless of process, voltage, and temperature variation are invariant.

A Cost-effective 60Hz FHD LCD Using 800Mbps AiPi Technology

  • Nam, Hyoung-Sik;Oh, Kwan-Young;Kim, Seon-Ki;Kim, Nam-Deog;Kim, Sang-Soo
    • Journal of Information Display
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.37-44
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    • 2009
  • AiPi technology incorporates an embedded clock and control scheme with a point-to-point bus topology, thereby having the smallest possible number of interface lines between a timing controller and column drivers. A point-to-point architecture boosts the data rate and reduces the number of interface lines, because impedance matching can be easily achieved. An embedded clock and control scheme is implemented by means of multi-level signalling, which results in a simple clock/data recovery circuitry. A 46" AiPi-based 10-bit FHD prototype requires only 20 interface lines, compared to 38 lines for mini-LVDS. The measured maximum data rate per data pair is more than 800 Mbps.

Fault Tolerant Clock Management Scheme in Sensor Networks (센서 네트워크에서 고장 허용 시각 관리 기법)

  • Hwang So-Young;Baek Yun-Ju
    • The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences
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    • v.31 no.9A
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    • pp.868-877
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    • 2006
  • Sensor network applications need synchronized time to the highest degree such as object tracking, consistent state updates, duplicate detection, and temporal order delivery. In addition, reliability issues and fault tolerance in sophisticated sensor networks have become a critical area of research today. In this paper, we proposed a fault tolerant clock management scheme in sensor networks considering two cases of fault model such as network faults and clock faults. The proposed scheme restricts the propagation of synchronization error when there are clock faults of nodes such as rapid fluctuation, severe changes in drift rate, and so on. In addition, it handles topology changes. Simulation results show that the proposed method has about $1.5{\sim}2.0$ times better performance than TPSN in the presence of faults.

A 0.9-V human body communication receiver using a dummy electrode and clock phase inversion scheme

  • Oh, Kwang-Il;Kim, Sung-Eun;Kang, Taewook;Kim, Hyuk;Lim, In-Gi;Park, Mi-Jeong;Lee, Jae-Jin;Park, Hyung-Il
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.44 no.5
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    • pp.859-874
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    • 2022
  • This paper presents a low-power and lightweight human body communication (HBC) receiver with an embedded dummy electrode for improved signal acquisition. The clock data recovery (CDR) circuit in the receiver operates with a low supply voltage and utilizes a clock phase inversion scheme. The receiver is equipped with a main electrode and dummy electrode that strengthen the capacitive-coupled signal at the receiver frontend. The receiver CDR circuit exploits a clock inversion scheme to allow 0.9-V operation while achieving a shorter lock time than at 3.3-V operation. In experiments, a receiver chip fabricated using 130-nm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology was demonstrated to successfully receive the transmitted signal when the transmitter and receiver are placed separately on each hand of the user while consuming only 4.98 mW at a 0.9-V supply voltage.