Proceedings Article | 21 April 2003
KEYWORDS: Printed circuit board testing, Image processing, Image compression, Signal processing, Clocks, Computer architecture, Standards development, Prototyping, Matrices, Multiplexers
The Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) is the most widely used transform for image compression. The Integer Cosine Transform denoted ICT (10, 9, 6, 2, 3, 1) has been shown to be a promising alternative to the DCT due to its implementation simplicity, similar performance and compatibility with the DCT. This paper describes the design and implementation of a 8×8 2-D ICT processor for image compression, that meets the numerical characteristic of the IEEE std. 1180-1990. This processor uses a low latency data flow that minimizes the internal memory and a parallel pipelined architecture, based on a numerical strength reduction Integer Cosine Transform (10, 9, 6, 2, 3, 1) algorithm, in order to attain high throughput and continuous data flow. A prototype of the 8×8 ICT processor has been implemented using a standard cell design methodology and a 0.35-μm CMOS CSD 3M/2P 3.3V process on a 10 mm2 die. Pipeline circuit techniques have been used to attain the maximum frequency of operation allowed by the technology, attaining a critical path of 1.8ns, which should be increased by a 20% to allow for line delays, placing the estimated operational frequency at 500Mhz. The circuit includes 12446 cells, being flip-flops 6757 of them. Two clock signals have been distributed, an external one (fs) and an internal one (fs/2). The high number of flip-flops has forced the use of a strategy to minimize clock-skew, combining big sized buffers on the periphery and using wide metal lines (clock-trunks) to distribute the signals.