How Network-on-Chip Architectures Are Powering the Future of Microcontroller Design
Microcontrollers (MCUs) are no longer the humble workhorses of embedded systems. Today’s MCUs rapidly evolve into compact, high-performance computing platforms, integrating artificial intelligence (AI), advanced security features, and real-time processing into power-constrained environments. As the demands on MCUs increase, one foundational component is being reimagined to keep pace: the on-chip interconnect.
At the heart of this transformation lies the Network-on-Chip (NoC) architecture — an increasingly essential innovation that replaces outdated interconnects with a packetized, scalable communication framework.
NoCs enable MCU designers to manage performance bottlenecks, improve power efficiency, and future-proof designs against the escalating complexity of embedded applications.
The interconnect bottleneck in modern MCUs
While sufficient for basic designs, the traditional interconnect approach hits a wall when systems scale. Bus contention, increased routing complexity, and non-deterministic latency introduce inefficiencies and design headaches.
NoC architectures provide an alternative that brings a packet-based, structured communication model to integrated circuits.
In the MCU world, this translates into real advantages:
- Scalability: NoCs support many cores and accelerators without redesigning the communication fabric.
- Power Efficiency: Using configurable packetized data and serialization, NoCs reduce wire counts, dynamic power, and routing complexity.
- Latency Management: Deterministic traffic handling and quality-of-service features improve real-time responsiveness.
- Modularity: Engineers can integrate new IP blocks (e.g., AI engines, security modules) without disrupting existing traffic paths.
To read the full article on Power Electronics Magazine, click here.
Related Semiconductor IP
- Smart Network-on-Chip (NoC) IP
- FlexNoC 5 Interconnect IP
- FlexNoC Functional Safety (FuSa) Option helps meet up to ISO 26262 ASIL B and D requirements against random hardware faults.
- Network-on-Chip (NoC)
- NoC Verification IP
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