Abstract

Rotary clock is a resonant clocking technique that delivers on-chip clock signal distribution with very low power dissipation. Since it can only generate clock signals with multiple phases that are spatially distributed, rotary clock is often considered not applicable to industrial very large scale integration (VLSI) designs. This paper presents the first rotary-clock-based nontrivial digital circuit. Our design, a low-power and high-speed finite-impulse response (FIR) filter, is fully digital and generated using CMOS standard cells in 0.18 mum technology. We have shown that the proposed FIR filter is seamlessly integrated with the rotary clock technique. It uses the spatially distributed multiple clock phases of rotary clock and achieves high power savings. Simulation results demonstrate that our rotary-clock-based FIR filter can operate successfully at 610 MHz, providing a throughput of 39 Gb/s. In comparison with the conventional clock-tree-based design, our design achieves a 34.6% clocking power saving and a 12.8% overall circuit power saving. In addition, the peak current consumed by the rotary-clock-based filter is substantially lower by 40% on the average. Our study makes the crucial step toward the application of rotary clock technique to a broad range of VLSI designs.

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