Circuit underutilization

Circuit underutilization also chip underutilization, programmable circuit underutilization, gate underutilization, logic block underutilization refers to a physical incomplete utility of semiconductor grade silicon on a standardized mass-produced circuit programmable chip, such as a gate array type ASIC, an FPGA, or a CPLD.

Gate array

In the example of a gate array, which may come in sizes of 5,000 or 10,000 gates, a design which utilizes even 5,001 gates would be required to use a 10,000 gate chip. This inefficiency results in underutilization of the silicon.[1]

FPGA

Due to the design components of field-programmable gate array into logic blocks, simple designs that underutilize a single block suffer from gate underutilization, as do designs that overflow onto multiple blocks, such as designs that use wide gates.[2] Additionally, the very generic architecture of FPGAs lends to high inefficiency; multiplexers occupy silicon real estate for programmable selection, and an abundance of flip-flops to reduce setup and hold times, even if the design does not require them,[1] resulting in 40 times less density than of standard cell ASICs.

See also

References

  1. "Chip Design ยป The Death of the Structured ASIC by Bob Zeidman, president, Zeidman Technologies". chipdesignmag.com. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
  2. Zilic, Zeljko; Lemieux, Guy; Loveless, Kelvin; Brown, Stephen; Vranesic, Zvonko (June 1995). Designing for High Speed-Performance in CPLDs and FPGAs. Proceeding of the Third Canadian Workshop on FPGAs. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.52.3689.
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