William Song Chosen for IEEE IRPS Best Student Paper Honors

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Contact

Jackie Nemeth

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering

404-894-2906

jackie.nemeth@ece.gatech.edu

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Summaries

Summary Sentence:

ECE Ph.D. student William Song won the Best Student Paper Award at the 2015 IEEE International Reliability Physics Symposium (IRPS), held April 21-23 in Monterey, California.

Full Summary:

ECE Ph.D. student  William Song won the Best Student Paper Award at the 2015 IEEE International Reliability Physics Symposium (IRPS), held April 21-23 in Monterey, California. 

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  • William Song William Song
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William Song won the Best Student Paper Award at the 2015 IEEE International Reliability Physics Symposium (IRPS), held April 21-23 in Monterey, California. IRPS is the preeminent conference for timely research on reliability physics of devices, materials, circuits, and products used in the electronics industry. The award is based on post-conference feedback from attendees.

A Ph.D. student in the Georgia Tech School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE), Song was awarded this distinction for his paper, “Managing Performance-Reliability Tradeoffs in Multicore Processors”, co-authored with ECE Professors Sudhakar Yalamanchili (who is Song’s Ph.D. advisor) and Saibal Mukhopadhyay. 

A fundamental trade-off exists between processor performance and lifetime reliability, and high throughput operations increase power and heat dissipation, which have an adverse impact on lifetime reliability. In contrast, lifetime reliability favors low utilization to reduce stresses and avoid failures.

A key challenge in understanding this tradeoff is in connecting application characteristics to device-level degradation behaviors. Using a full-system microarchitecture and physics simulation framework, the research team analyzed the performance-reliability tradeoff in a multicore processor by introducing a new metric, throughput-lifetime product (TLP). The team’s research findings produced new techniques to effectively manage tradeoffs between lifetime reliability and performance. 

Song's work was supported by the Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) through an SRC Graduate Fellowship.

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Groups

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Categories
Student and Faculty, Computer Science/Information Technology and Security, Student Research, Energy, Engineering, Nanotechnology and Nanoscience, Research, Physics and Physical Sciences
Related Core Research Areas
Data Engineering and Science, Electronics and Nanotechnology, Energy and Sustainable Infrastructure
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Keywords
Computer Architecture and Systems Laboratory, Georgia Tech, Saibal Mukhopadhyay, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Sudhakar Yalamanchili, William Song
Status
  • Created By: Jackie Nemeth
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Aug 27, 2015 - 9:07am
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:19pm