
arXiv: 1806.04570
The need for wireless communication has driven the communication systems to high performance. However, the main bottleneck that affects the communication capability is the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT), which is the core of most modulators. This paper presents FPGA implementation of pipeline digit-slicing multiplier-less radix 22 DIF (Decimation In Frequency) SDF (single path delay feedback) butterfly for FFT structure. The approach is taken, in order to reduce computation complexity in butterfly multiplier, the digit-slicing multiplier-less technique was utilized in the critical path of pipeline Radix-22 DIF SDF FFT structure. The proposed design focused on the trade-off between the speed and active silicon area for the chip implementation. The multiplier input data was sliced into four blocks each one with four bits to process at the same time in parallel. The new architecture was investigated and simulated with MATLAB software. The Verilog HDL code in Xilinx ISE environment was derived to describe the FFT Butterfly functionality and was downloaded to Virtex II FPGA board. Consequently, the Virtex-II FG456 Proto board was used to implement and test the design on the real hardware. As a result, from the findings, the synthesis report indicates the maximum clock frequency of 555.75 MHz with the total equivalent gate count of 32,146 is a marked and significant improvement over Radix 22 DIF SDF FFT butterfly. In comparison with the conventional butterfly architecture design which can only run at a maximum clock frequency of 200.102 MHz and the conventional multiplier can only run at a maximum clock frequency of 221.140 MHz, the proposed system exhibits better results.
European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EUCAP2011). Pp 4168- 4172
Signal Processing (eess.SP), FOS: Computer and information sciences, Hardware Architecture (cs.AR), FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing, Computer Science - Hardware Architecture
Signal Processing (eess.SP), FOS: Computer and information sciences, Hardware Architecture (cs.AR), FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing, Computer Science - Hardware Architecture
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