Power–delay product
In digital electronics, the power–delay product (PDP) is a figure of merit correlated with the energy efficiency of a logic gate or logic family.[1] Also known as switching energy, it is the product of power consumption P (averaged over a switching event) times the input–output delay or duration of the switching event D.[1] It has the dimension of energy and measures the energy consumed per switching event.
In a CMOS circuit the switching energy and thus the PDP for a 0-to-1-to-0 computation cycle is CL·VDD2. Therefore, lowering the supply voltage VDD lowers the PDP.[1]
Energy-efficient circuits with a low PDP may also be performing very slowly, thus energy–delay product (EDP), the product of E and D (or P and D2), is sometimes a more preferable metric.[1]
In CMOS circuits the delay is inversely proportional to the supply voltage VDD and hence EDP is proportional to VDD. Consequently, lowering VDD also benefits EDP.[1]
See also
References
Further reading
- Sah, Chih-Tang (1991-07-11). Fundamentals of Solid-State Electronics (1 ed.). World Scientific. ISBN 978-9-81020637-6. ISBN 9-81020637-2.
- Singh, Brahmadeo Prasad; Singh, Rekha (2008). Electronic Devices and Integrated Circuits. Prentice-Hall Of India Pvt. Limited. ISBN 978-8-12033192-1. ISBN 8-12033192-3.
- Soudris, Dimitrios; Piguet, Christian; Goutis, Costas, eds. (2002-10-31). Designing CMOS Circuits for Low Power. European Low-Power Initiative for Electronic System Design. Springer US. ISBN 978-1-40207234-5. ISBN 1-40207234-1.
- Nebel, Wolfgang; Mermet, Jean, eds. (1997-06-30). Low Power Design in Deep Submicron Electronics. Series E: Applied Sciences. NATO ASI Series. 337. Kluwer Academic Publishing. ISBN 0-7923-4569-X. ISSN 0168-132X.