Breaking News

TerraMaster Launches F2-425 2-Bay NAS Announcing ASUS NUC 15 Performance ASUS and Noctua announce ASUS GeForce RTX 5080 Noctua Edition graphics card G.SKILL DDR5 R-DIMM Achieves DDR5-8400 CL38 256GB (8x32GB) Overclock with AMD Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9985WX Processor TEAMGROUP Unveils NV5000 M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD

logo

  • Share Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
  • Home
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Forum
  • Legacy
  • About
    • Submit News

    • Contact Us
    • Privacy

    • Promotion
    • Advertise

    • RSS Feed
    • Site Map

Search form

Toshiba Develops New Energy-Saving Flip-Flop Circuit

Toshiba Develops New Energy-Saving Flip-Flop Circuit

Enterprise & IT Feb 21,2011 0

Toshiba will present a new power eficient flip-flop circuit for mobile equipment at t the 2011 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC). The new flip-flop circuit has been developed using the 40nm CMOS process is is expected to reduce power consumption in mobile equipment. Measured data verifies that the power dissipation of the new flip-flop is up to 77% less than that of a typical conventional flip-flop and that it achieves a 24% reduction in total power consumption when applied to a wireless LAN chip.

Measured data verifies that the power dissipation of the new flip-flop is up to 77% less than that of a typical conventional flip-flop and that it achieves a 24% reduction in total power consumption when applied to a wireless LAN chip.

A flip-flop is a circuit that temporarily stores one bit of data during arithmetic processing by a digital system-on-a-chip (SoC) incorporated in mobile equipment and other digital equipment. As a typical SoC uses 100,000 to 10 million flip-flops they are an essential part of an SoC design.

A typical flip-flop incorporates a clock buffer to produce a clock inverted signal required for the circuit's operation. When triggered by a signal from the clock, the clock buffer consumes power, even when the data is unchanged. In order to reduce this power dissipation, a power-saving design technique called clock gating is widely used to cut delivery of the clock signal to unused blocks. However, after applying the clock gating, the flip-flop active rate, a measure of data change rate per clock, is only 5-15%, indicating that there is still plenty of room for further power reduction.

In order to save power, Toshiba changed the structure of the typical flip-flop and eliminated the power-consuming clock buffer. This approach brings with it the problem of data collision between the data writing circuitry and the state holding circuitry in the flip-flop, which Toshiba overcame by adding adaptive coupling circuitry to the flip-flop. A combination of an nMOS transistor and a pMOS transistor, this circuitry adaptively weakens state-retention coupling and prevents collisions. Despite the addition of the adaptive coupling circuitry, overall simplification of the basic flip-flop configuration reduces the transistor count from 24 to 22, and the cell area is less than that of the conventional flip-flop.

This achievement will be announced on February 23 at the 2011 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) now being held in the United States.

Tags: Toshiba
Previous Post
Google Docs Viewer Supports New File Formats
Next Post
Samsung Develops Mobile DRAM with Wide Interface

Related Posts

  • Toshiba Canvio Flex 2TB

  • Toshiba expands storage evaluation services in EMEA with new HDD Innovation Lab

  • Toshiba Unveils New Canvio Flex and Canvio Gaming 2.5” Portable Hard Drives

  • Toshiba Collaborates with PROMISE Technology on Providing the Optimal Data Storage Technology for CERN’s Large Hadron Collider

  • Toshiba Announces 24TB CMR and 28TB SMR Enterprise Hard Disk Drives

  • Toshiba Canvio Flex 4TB

  • Toshiba Canvio Basics 1TB

  • Toshiba’s next-generation S300 Pro Surveillance HDDs for large-scale video surveillance systems

Latest News

TerraMaster Launches F2-425 2-Bay NAS
Enterprise & IT

TerraMaster Launches F2-425 2-Bay NAS

Announcing ASUS NUC 15 Performance
Enterprise & IT

Announcing ASUS NUC 15 Performance

ASUS and Noctua announce ASUS GeForce RTX 5080 Noctua Edition graphics card
GPUs

ASUS and Noctua announce ASUS GeForce RTX 5080 Noctua Edition graphics card

G.SKILL DDR5 R-DIMM Achieves DDR5-8400 CL38 256GB (8x32GB) Overclock with AMD Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9985WX Processor
PC components

G.SKILL DDR5 R-DIMM Achieves DDR5-8400 CL38 256GB (8x32GB) Overclock with AMD Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9985WX Processor

TEAMGROUP Unveils NV5000 M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD
Enterprise & IT

TEAMGROUP Unveils NV5000 M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD

Popular Reviews

be quiet! Light Loop 360mm

be quiet! Light Loop 360mm

be quiet! Dark Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Dark Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Light Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Light Mount Keyboard

Noctua NH-D15 G2

Noctua NH-D15 G2

Soundpeats Pop Clip

Soundpeats Pop Clip

be quiet! Light Base 600 LX

be quiet! Light Base 600 LX

be quiet! Pure Base 501

be quiet! Pure Base 501

Terramaster F8-SSD

Terramaster F8-SSD

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Forum
  • Legacy
  • About
    • Submit News

    • Contact Us
    • Privacy

    • Promotion
    • Advertise

    • RSS Feed
    • Site Map
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Promotional Opportunities @ CdrInfo.com
  • Advertise on out site
  • Submit your News to our site
  • RSS Feed