A 594 Gbps LDPC Decoder Based on Finite-Alphabet Message Passing
An ultra-high throughput low-density parity check (LDPC) decoder with an unrolled full-parallel architecture is proposed, which achieves the highest decoding throughput compared to previously reported LDPC decoders in literature. The decoder benefits from a serial message-transfer approach between the decoding stages to alleviate the well-known routing congestion problem in parallel LDPC decoders. Furthermore, a finite-alphabet message passing algorithm is employed to replace the variable node update rule of standard min-sum decoders with optimized look-up tables, designed in a way that maximize the mutual information between decoding messages. The proposed algorithm results in an architecture with reduced bit-width messages, leading to a significantly higher decoding throughput and to a lower area as compared to a min-sum decoder when serial message-transfer is used. The architecture is placed and routed for the standard min-sum reference decoder and for the proposed finite-alphabet decoder using a custom pseudo-hierarchical backend design strategy to further alleviate routing congestions and to handle the large design. Post-layout results show that the finite-alphabet decoder with the serial message-transfer architecture achieves a throughput as large as 594 Gbps with an area of 16.2 mm^2 and dissipates an average power of 22.7 pJ per decoded bit in a 28 nm FD-SOI library. Compared to the reference min-sum decoder, this corresponds to 3.3 times smaller area and 2 times better energy efficiency.
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