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@@ -260,8 +260,8 @@ For both systems, we set architectural parameters to make operation time around
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Fig.~\ref{fig:other_architectures} shows the results in different power-off voltage.
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The bar in the left side shows the energy breakdown in one power cycle, and the one in the right side represents the ratio of the execution time operated at sub-voltage.
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The most noticeable difference is ratio of energy consumed for ramp-up and init.
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-While A1 consumes xx\% power at this stage on average, A2 consumes only xx\%.
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+While A1 consumes 63.4\% power at this stage on average, A2 consumes only 5.6\%.
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This is because A1 shows larger leakage current due to external MRAM, which consumes more current than FRAM in our case.
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-However, both architectures show high sub-voltage execution rates, up to xx\% in A2.
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-In addition, discharged energy takes considerable portion both in A1 (xx\%) A2 (xx\%) at 3.3V configuration, which represents the techniques based on the traditional model.
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+However, both architectures show high sub-voltage execution rates, up to 70.1\% in A2.
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+In addition, discharged energy takes considerable portion both in A1 (31.4\%) and A2 (52.0\%) at 3.3V configuration, which represents the techniques based on the traditional model.
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In summary, the evaluation reveals that the buffering effect of system's capacitance and its implications are general in other systems.
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