International Journal of Computer Applications
Foundation of Computer Science (FCS), NY, USA
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Volume 69 - Issue 2 |
Published: May 2013 |
Authors: Majid Moghaddam, Mohammad Eshghi, Mohammad Hossein Moaiyeri |
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Majid Moghaddam, Mohammad Eshghi, Mohammad Hossein Moaiyeri . A Low-Voltage Single-Supply Level Converter for Sub-VTH /Super-VTH Operation: 0.3V to 1.2V. International Journal of Computer Applications. 69, 2 (May 2013), 14-18. DOI=10.5120/11813-7481
@article{ 10.5120/11813-7481, author = { Majid Moghaddam,Mohammad Eshghi,Mohammad Hossein Moaiyeri }, title = { A Low-Voltage Single-Supply Level Converter for Sub-VTH /Super-VTH Operation: 0.3V to 1.2V }, journal = { International Journal of Computer Applications }, year = { 2013 }, volume = { 69 }, number = { 2 }, pages = { 14-18 }, doi = { 10.5120/11813-7481 }, publisher = { Foundation of Computer Science (FCS), NY, USA } }
%0 Journal Article %D 2013 %A Majid Moghaddam %A Mohammad Eshghi %A Mohammad Hossein Moaiyeri %T A Low-Voltage Single-Supply Level Converter for Sub-VTH /Super-VTH Operation: 0.3V to 1.2V%T %J International Journal of Computer Applications %V 69 %N 2 %P 14-18 %R 10.5120/11813-7481 %I Foundation of Computer Science (FCS), NY, USA
Digital sub-threshold circuits are significant for ultra-low power (ULP) applications. Operating circuits at ultra-low voltage levels leads to the less power per operation. An optimized method is separating the logic blocks based on performance requirement and utilizing multiple-supply voltage (VDD) for each blocks. In order to prevent an enormous static current in these multi-VDD circuits, voltage level converters are required. The advantages of single-supply level converter (SSLC) over dual-supply level converter (DSLC) are on the grounds of pin count, congestion in supply routing, complexity and overall system cost. In this paper, a novel sub-threshold single-supply voltage level converter (S_SSLC) based on dynamically-controlled body biasing technique is presented. In this work, a dynamically-controlled body biasing is utilized for setting the threshold voltages of the transistors in order to reduce the delay. This dynamic design can convert an input signal at sub-threshold/super–threshold region ranging from 0. 3v-1. 2v to 1. 2v as output. Simulation results at 180nm CMOS technology node demonstrate the superiority of the proposed design compared to the conventional SSLC designs.