In the deep sub-micron regime, the power consumption has become one of
the most important issues for competitive design of digital circuits.
Due to dramatically increasing leakage currents, the power consumption
does not take advantage of technology scaling as before. State-of-art
power reduction techniques like the use of multiple supply and threshold
voltages, transistor stack forcing and power gating are discussed with
respect to implementation and power saving capability. Focus is given
especially on technology dependencies, process variations and technology
scaling. Design and implementation issues are discussed with respect to
the trade-off between power reduction, performance degradation, and
system level constraints. A complete top-down design flow is
demonstrated for power gating techniques introducing new design
methodologies for the switch sizing task and circuit blocks for
data-retention and block activation. The leakage reduction ratio and the
minimum power-down time are introduced as figures of merit to describe
the power gating technique on system level and give a relation to
physical circuit parameters. Power Management of Digital Circuits in
Deep Sub-Micron CMOS Technologies mainly deals with circuit design but
also addresses the interface between circuit and system level design on
the one side and between circuit and physical design on the other side.