Adiabatic circuit

Adiabatic circuits are low power circuits which use "reversible logic" to conserve energy. [1] Unlike traditional CMOS circuits, which dissipate energy during switching, adiabatic circuits attempt to conserve charge by following two key rules:

  1. Never turn on a transistor when there is a voltage potential between the source and drain.
  2. Never turn off a transistor when current is flowing through it.

While this is an area of active research, current techniques rely heavily on transmission gates and trapezoidal clocks to achieve these goals.

See also

Reversible computing
Asymptotically Zero Energy Computing Using Split-Level Charge Recovery Logic

References

  1. ^ "Adiabatic Logic", Benjamin Gojman August 8, 2004