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Power–delay product

In digital electronics, the power–delay product (PDP) is a figure of merit correlated with the energy efficiency of a logic gate or logic family. Also known as switching energy, it is the product of power consumption P (averaged over a switching event) times the input–output delay or duration of the switching event D. It has the dimension of energy and measures the energy consumed per switching event.

In a CMOS circuit the switching energy and thus the PDP for a 0-to-1-to-0 computation cycle is C<sub>L</sub>·V<sub>DD</sub><sup>2</sup>. Therefore, lowering the supply voltage V<sub>DD</sub> lowers the PDP.

Energy-efficient circuits with a low PDP may also be performing very slowly, thus energy–delay product (EDP), the product of E and D (or P and D<sup>2</sup>), is sometimes a preferable metric.

In CMOS circuits the delay is inversely proportional to the supply voltage V<sub>DD</sub> and hence EDP is proportional to V<sub>DD</sub>. Consequently, lowering V<sub>DD</sub> also benefits EDP.

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