Litcius/Paper detail

SLAM-CIM: A Visual SLAM Backend Processor With Dynamic-Range-Driven-Skipping Linear-Solving FP-CIM Macros

Mengjie Li, Haozhe Zhu, Siqi He, Hongyi Zhang, Jie Liao, Danfeng Zhai, Chixiao Chen, Qi Liu, Xiaoyang Zeng, Ninghui Sun, Ming Liu

2024IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM), a pivotal technology in robotics, autonomous vehicles, and surveillance, has gained prominence with the emergence of edge intelligence. Developing energy-efficient, low-latency SLAM systems is essential due to resource constraints and real-time demands. Compute-in-memory (CIM) architectures have been proven to be efficient for matrix multiplications. However, applications for SLAM raise new challenges in memory access and computation aspects: the linear system solving (LS) requires row transformation and causes frequent CIM updates, while the backend optimization causes redundant memory access; back-end optimization dominates SLAM’s computation and requires high precision and high dynamic range. Thus, we propose SLAM-CIM, a visual SLAM backend processor for edge robotics. A dynamic-range-driven-skipping CIM macro is designed to realize energy-efficient floating point (FP)-multiply-and-accumulate (MAC) operations. A preconditional-conjugate-gradient-based in-memory linear solver (PILARS) is designed to achieve LS without additional row transformations. This reduces memory access by 2.08 <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$\times$</tex-math> </inline-formula> and linear-system-solving latency by 3.84 <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$\times$</tex-math> </inline-formula> . SLAM-CIM further minimizes CIM weight updates through incremental bundle adjustment (BA), increasing average CIM utilization by 2.8 <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$\times$</tex-math> </inline-formula> . A silicon prototype is fabricated using 28-nm CMOS technology. The measurements show that SLAM-CIM achieves accurate and efficient SLAM operations with an average energy efficiency of 31.53 TFLOPS/W.

Topics & Concepts

MacroRange (aeronautics)Computer scienceEngineeringProgramming languageAerospace engineeringModular Robots and Swarm IntelligenceRobotics and Sensor-Based LocalizationOptimization and Search Problems