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TVLSI
1998

Some experiments about wave pipelining on FPGA's

13 years 3 months ago
Some experiments about wave pipelining on FPGA's
— Wave pipelining offers a unique combination of high speed, low latency, and moderate power consumption. The construction of wave pipelines is benefited by the use of gates and buffers with data-independent delays and the knowledge of the interconnection delays. These two features are present in several SRAM-based field programmable gate arrays (FPGA’s): look-up tables (LUT’s) allow the designer to mask the delay of different gates and combinational functions, and the timing characteristics of each wire segment are a priori known. This work describes a set of experiments about wave pipelining on FPGA’s. The results show that a 13-LUT logic depth circuit mapped on an XC4005PC84-6 runs as high as 85 MHz (single phase clocking) or 80 MHz (intentionally skewed clocking), exhibiting a latency of 95 ns. This high throughput/latency ratio is unattainable using classic pipelining.
Eduardo I. Boemo, Sergio López-Buedo, Juan
Added 23 Dec 2010
Updated 23 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 1998
Where TVLSI
Authors Eduardo I. Boemo, Sergio López-Buedo, Juan M. Meneses
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