Modeling, Analysis and Optimization of Interconnects in Deep Submicron Regime
Date
2013
Authors
Soorya Krishna, K.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Integrated circuit technology is the base for all modern electronic systems. The development of modern integration technologies is normally driven by the needs of digital
CMOS circuit design. Rapid progress in silicon VLSI technologies has made it possible to implement multi-function and high performance electronic circuits on a single
die. This has led to the tremendous growth in integrated circuits technology resulting in
highly complex circuits with increasing number of components and on-chip interconnects.
In digital domain, aggressive technology scaling redefines, in many ways, the role
of interconnects vis-a-vis the logic in determining the overall performance. Alt ` hough
active devices mostly benefited from scaling, intermediate and global interconnects performance has degraded with scaling. Prominent reason being long interconnects do not
scale with the technology. Apart from signal integrity, power dissipation and reliability
issues, delays over long interconnects far exceeding the logic delay becomes a bottleneck in high speed operation. Moreover, with an increasing density of chips, the number
of interchip connections is greatly increased as more and more functions are put on the
same chip; thus, the size and performance of the chip are mostly dominated by wiring
rather than devices.
This thesis addresses the issues associated with the on-chip long interconnects,
namely, modeling, delay reduction , minimization of signal reflection at high frequencies at the interconnect-via junction and reducing the skew in clock signals. Design and
analysis methodologies presented in this work focus on improving the performance of
the interconnects in DSM regime.
Interconnects are represented by distributed RLGC networks and modeled using
state space approach. Generalized state space matrices are derived for Single, Coupled,
iiiL and T type of interconnects and these models are used to estimate interconnect metrics. Using the coupled interconnect models, crosstalk noise in the victim lines of the
multi-coupled interconnects is estimated. Further, model order reduction using moment
matching is employed to reduce the large order of the RLGC network to lower order for
reducing the complexity of the network.
As an alternative to traditional repeater insertion method to reduce the intermediate/global interconnect delay, exploiting the resonant characteristics of the interconnects
is gaining popularity. The idea of this method is to make a resonating interconnect by
inserting an inductor of appropriate value along the interconnect to nullify the effect
of interconnect parasitic capacitance. This scheme can be effectively used for clock
signals as well as signal modulated data networks.
At high frequencies, impedance discontinuities at interconnect-via junction results
in signal reflections and give rise to signal integrity problems. A methodology to minimize the via-induced signal reflections by the inclusion of an appropriate capacitive
load is presented.
Clocks being the highest frequency signals in any IC, delay and skew of a few pico
seconds in the transmitted clock signals is detrimental for the proper functioning of
the circuit. Traditionally, metamaterial structures are used to introduce desired phase
shifts in microwave circuit applications. The Composite Right/Left Handed (CRLH)
metamaterial structure has a unique feature of supporting an infinite wavelength at a
nonzero frequency. This property of CRLH is leveraged to reduce the skew in the
transmission of high speed clock signals over long
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Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering