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In deep submicron (DSM) integrated circuits (IC), coupling capacitors between interconnects become dominant over grounded capacitors. As a result, the dynamic power dissipation of one node is no longer only in relation to the signal on that node, and it also depends on signals on its neighbor nodes through coupling capacitors. Thus, for their limitation in dealing with ca-pacitively coupled nets, past jobs on power estimation are facing rigorous challenges and need to be ameliorated. This paper proposes and proves a simple and fast approach to predicting dynamic power dissipation of coupled interconnect networks: a coupling capacitor in dynamic CMOS logic circuits is decoupled and mapped into an equivalent cell containing an XOR gate and a grounded capacitor, and the whole circuit after mapping, consuming the same power as the original one, could be easily managed by generally-used gate-level power estimation tools. This paper also investigates the correlation coefficient method (CCM). Given the signal p
As a result, the dynamic power dissipation of one node is no longer only in relation to the signal on that node, and it also depends therefore, for their limitation in dealing with ca-pacitively coupled nets, past jobs on power estimation are facing rigorous challenges and need to be ameliorated. This paper proposes and proves a simple and fast approach to predicting dynamic power dissipation of coupled interconnect networks: a coupling capacitor in dynamic CMOS logic circuits is decoupled and mapped into an equivalent cell containing an XOR gate and a grounded capacitor, and the whole circuit after mapping, consuming the same power as the original one, could be easily managed by generally-used gate-level power estimation tools. This paper also investigates the correlation coefficient method (CCM). Given the signal p