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The increasing complexity of Internet-of-Things (IoT) applications and near-sensor processing algorithms is pushing the computational power of low-power, battery-operated end-node systems. This trend also reveals growing demands for high-speed and energy-efficient inter-chip communications to manage the increasing amount of data coming from off-chip sensors and memories. While traditional microcontroller interfaces such as SPIs cannot cope with tight energy and large bandwidth requirements, low-voltage swing transceivers can tackle this challenge, thanks to their capability to achieve several Gbps of the communication speed at milliwatt power levels. However, recent research on high-speed serial links focused on high-performance systems, with a power consumption significantly larger than the one of low-power IoT end-nodes, or on stand-alone designs not integrated at a system level. This article presents a low-swing transceiver for the energy-efficient and low-power chip-to-chip communication fully integrated within an IoT end-node system-on-chip, fabricated in CMOS 65-nm technology. The transceiver can be easily controlled via a software interface; thus, we can consider realistic scenarios for the data communication, which cannot be assessed in stand-alone prototypes. Chip measurements show that the transceiver achieves 8. 46 higher energy efficiency at 15. 9 higher performance than a traditional microcontroller interface such as a single-SPI.
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Okuhara et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a19359d001a20a9c0d9387b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tvlsi.2021.3108806
Hayate Okuhara
National University of Singapore
Ahmed Elnaqib
University of Bologna
Martino Dazzi
University of Udine
IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems
ETH Zurich
University of Bologna
University of Udine
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