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Switch Box Architectures for Three-Dimensional FPGAs
Napa, California April 24-April 26
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/FCCM.2006.6614th Annual IEEE Symposium on Field-P ...
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Aman Gayasen, Pennsylvania State University
N. Vijaykrishnan, Pennsylvania State University
Mahmut Kandemir, Pennsylvania State University
Arif Rahman, Xilinx Research Labs
Three-dimensional (3-D) integration is a promising technology [1] for reducing wire lengths in an integrated circuit. 3-D is especially attractive for FPGAs because the interconnect dominates their total area, delay, and power. Here, we design a 3-D FPGA that uses wafer bonding [2] to stack multiple programmable fabrics. Our results indicate that the area-delay product for a 5-layer 3-D FPGA reduces by 36% compared with that for a 2-D FPGA. Three-D technology also has some drawbacks, such as thermal issues because of increased power density. Analyzing these issues constitutes our next step towards designing 3-D FPGAs.
Citation:
Aman Gayasen, N. Vijaykrishnan, Mahmut Kandemir, Arif Rahman, "Switch Box Architectures for Three-Dimensional FPGAs," fccm, pp.335-336, 14th Annual IEEE Symposium on Field-Programmable Custom Computing Machines (FCCM'06), 2006
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