International audienceIn the context of embedded systems development, two important challenges are the efficient use of silicon area and the energy consumption minimization. Hardware accelerated tasks allow to reduce energy consumption of several orders of magnitude, compared to software execution, but these tasks require silicon area and consume power even when they are unused (idle power). Dynamic and Partial Reconfiguration (DPR) brings, to System-on-Chip architectures, an interesting answer by allowing to share a piece of silicon surface between different dedicated accelerators and thus brings the opportunity to reduce power consumption. Nevertheless, many parameters like reconfiguration overhead, accelerator area and performance tradeo...