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Circuit characterization and Performance Estimation 1 Introduction Need simple models to estimate system performance in terms of signal delay and power dissipation. Each layer in an MOS transistor has both resistance and capacitance that are fundamental components in estimating the performance of a circuit or system. They also have inductance characteristics that is assumed to be negligible. 2 Introduction • Issues include: Resistance, capacitance and inductance calculations. Delay estimations. Determination of conductor size for power and clock distribution. Power consumption. Charge sharing mechanisms. Design Margining. Reliability. Effects of scaling. 3 Resistance Estimation The resistance of a uniform slab of conducting material may be expressed as: l l R ( )( ) where =resistivity, t=thickness, =length/width t w w l Alternatively as R Rs ( ) (ohms) where R s sheet resistance=R w w w l w l t l t 1 Rectangular Block R = R (L/W) 4 Rectangular Blocks R = R (2L/2W) = R (L/W) 4 Choice of Metals • Until 180 nm generation, most wires were aluminum • Modern processes often use copper – Cu atoms diffuse into silicon and damage FETs – Must be surrounded by a diffusion barrier Metal Bulk resistivity (m*cm) Silver (Ag) 1.6 Copper (Cu) 1.7 Gold (Au) 2.2 Aluminum (Al) 2.8 Tungsten (W) 5.3 Molybdenum (Mo) 5.3 5 Sheet Resistance Typical sheet resistance values for materials are very well characterized Typical Sheet Resistances for 5µm Technology Layer Rs (Ohm / Sq) Aluminium 0.03 N Diffusion 10 – 50 Silicide 2–4 Polysilicon 15 - 100 N-transistor Channel 104 P-transistor Channel 2.5 x 104 6 Sheet Resistance Note: L defined parallel to current and W defined perpendicular to current. 7 Sheet Resistance 8 Rs for poly is 4 /square in 1micron tech. Rpoly = 4 /square x (19/3 + 11/4 + 19/3) squares = 61.6 . A note: A corner square has a sheet resistance of ~0.5 Rs. 9 Example Example: R = Rs(poly) * 13 + 2*(1/2) + 3*(1/2) squares R = 4Ω/sq * 15.5 squares = 62Ω Corner (1/2 Square) 1/2 Square 1/2 Square Corner (1/2 Square) Corner (1/2 Square) 10 Resistance Estimation Channel resistance can be estimated in the linear region as: 1 1 L Rc ohms mCox (VGS Vt ) W K (VGS Vt ) A range of 1,000 to 30,000 ohms/square are possible for n-channel and p-channel devices. Temperature changes both m (mobility) and Vt (threshold voltage) and therefore channel resistance. Channel resistance increases with temperature, approximately +0.25% per degree C above 25 degrees. Metal and poly resistance change about 0.3% and well diffusions about 1% per degree C. 11 Capacitance Estimation Switching speed of MOS systems strongly dependent: Parasitic capacitances associated with the MOS transistor. Interconnect capacitance of "wires". Resistance of transistors and wires. Total load capacitance on the output of a CMOS gate is sum of: Gate capacitance (of receiver logic gates downstream). Driver diffusion (source/drain) capacitance. Routing ( line ) capacitance of substrate and other wires. 12 MOS Capacitor Characteristics The capacitance-voltage characteristics of an MOS structure depend on the state of the semiconductor surface. Depending on gate voltage, the surface may be in : accumulation depletion inversion 13 MOS Capacitor Characteristics In accumulation: In deletion mode 14 MOS Capacitor Characteristics In inversion mode: 15 Diagrammatic representation of parasitic Capacitances of MOS The capacitance of a MOS transistor can be modeled using 5 capacitors The overlap of gate over the drain and source is assumed to be zero. An approximation of gate capacitance (Cgs , Cgd and Cgb ) is given as: Cox K SiO 2 ox tox 16 Estimating Gate Capacitance For example, for thin-oxide thickness of 15 nm In = 0.5 technology, W = 2 and L = 1 This is a conservative estimate of gate capacitance that does not include fringing fields (extrinsic) gate capacitance. Gate capacitance increases as the thin-oxide thins. 17 The total gate Capacitance 18 The total gate Capacitance The total gate Capacitance as a function of Vgs The overall gate capacitance (for an n-device) is approximately equal to the intrinsic “gate-oxide” capacitance for all values of gate voltage except for voltages around the threshold voltage of the transistor, Vt 19 Circuit symbol for parasitic Capacitance 20 Estimating Source/Drain Capacitance This model assumes a zero DC bias across the junction. 21 Estimating Source/Drain Capacitance 22 Estimating Source/Drain Capacitance For example: Typical values for 0.5 micron process n-channel device Because of fan-out, gate capacitance usually dominates the loading. 23 Estimating Routing Capacitance Routing capacitance between metal and poly can be approximated using a parallel-plate model. The parallel-plate model approximation ignores fringing fields. The effect of the fringing fields is to increase the effective area of the plates. Consequently, poly and metal lines will actually have a higher capacitance than that predicted by the model. As line widths are scaled, the width (w) and heights of wires tend to reduce less than their separations. 24 Accordingly, this fringing effect increases in importance. Estimating Routing Capacitance C=Cplate*area+CFringe*peripheral Example: Poly: Cplate-poly*12*4+Cfringe-poly*2*(12+4) Metal:Cplate-metal1*12*4+Cfringe-metal1*2*(12+4) 25 Estimating Capacitance Example: Cg=4 * 2 Cox CPoly=2* (2 * 2 ) Cpoly (plate) + 2* (2 + 2 + 2) Cpoly (fringe) 26 Estimating Capacitance Example: C[=نفوذ12 *3 + 4 *4 ]* C(نفوذplate) + (3 +12 + 1 + 4 +4+16 ) * c نفوذ-جانبی C=فلز6 * 10 * C(plate)+ 2*(6 + 10) * C (fringe) C =کلC نفوذ+ Cفلز 27 Multilayer capacitance calculations Example: given the layout shown in the figure calculate the total capacitance at source and gate given that: Ignore Fringing Capacitance 28 Solution 29 Example 30 Example 31 Example What are the parasitic capacitances visible from point “A”? 32 Example 33 Diffusion Parasitics Capacitance 34 Parasitics on 2-input NAND • How can we estimate Cpdiff and Cndiff? 35 NAND Layout C ndiff1 (4 4 1 3) 0.0625mm / 2 0.6fF / mm 2 (5 4 4 1 1 3) 0.25mm / 0.2fF / mm 0.7125fF 0.9fF 1.625fF C ndiff 2 3 2 0.0625mm / 2 0.6fF / mm 2 (3 2 3 2) 0.25mm / 0.2fF / mm 0.225fF 0.5fF 0.725fF 36 NAND Layout C pdiff1 (4 4 1 3) 0.0625mm / 2 0.9fF / mm 2 (5 4 4 1 1 3) 0.25mm / 0.3fF / mm 1.07fF 1.35fF 2.42fF C pdiff 2 C pdiff 1 37 Diffusion Parasitics - Summing Up W=3 L=2 A W=3 L=2 B A W=3 L=2 B W=3 L=2 Cndiff1 + Cpdiff1 + Cpdiff2 = 6.465fF Cndiff2 = 0.725fF 38 Delay in Long Wires - Lumped RC Model • What is the delay in a long wire? in L out • Lumped RC Model: R = Rs * L / W = r*L (r = Rs / W - resistance per unit length ) C = L * W * Cplate = c*L (c = W * Cplate - capacitance per unit length) • Delay time constant (ignoring driving gate) t = R * C = (Rs * L / W) * (L * W * Cplate ) = r * c * L2 39 Wire Delay Models – Lumped RC Model • Total wire resistance is lumped into a single R and total capacitance into a single C • Good for short wires; pessimistic and inaccurate for long wires R Vout Vin C Vout(t) = VDD(1-exp(-t/RC)) V50%(t) = VDD(1-exp(-tPLH/RC)) τPLH ≈ 0.69RC 40 Wire Delay Models T-Model The above simple lumped RC model can be significantly improved by the T-model as R/2 R/2 Vin Vout C model This model is used in Elmore Model 41 Delay in Long Wires -Distributed RC Model • Alternative: Break wire into small segments • Approx. Solution - 1st moment of impulse response t(Vout ) rcL 2 rcL2 t(Vout ) 2 NN 1 2 for N • Important: delay still grows as square of length 42 Example • Metal2 wire in 180 nm process – 5 mm long – 0.32 mm wide – R = 0.05 /, Cpermicron = 0.2 fF/mm • Construct a 3-segment -model – R = 0.05 / R= R *(5x10-3/0.32 mm ) => R = 781 – Cpermicron = 0.2 fF/mm C= 0.2 fF/mm x 5x10-3 => C = 1 pF 260 260 260 167 fF 167 fF 167 fF 167 fF 167 fF 167 fF 43 44 45 46 Elmore Delay Model 47 Elmore Delay • ON transistors look like resistors • Pullup or pulldown network modeled as RC ladder • Elmore delay of RC ladder t pd Ri to sourceCi nodes i R1C1 R1 R2 C2 ... R1 R2 ... RN CN R1 R2 R3 C1 C2 RN C3 CN 48 The Elmore Delay Estimation Technique D5 tD4: delay from src to D4 src a b D4 D2 MUX tD5 ≠ tD4 ≠ tD2 r5 src r1 C5 r3 r4 C1 r2 C3 C4 C2 49 50 51 Parasitic Diodes for CMOS Inverter D1: between p-well and n-substrate 52 53 Switching Power Dissipation of CMOS inverters Vdsn Vdsp 54