Stick-diagrams (2) VLSI
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Transcript of Stick-diagrams (2) VLSI
VLSI
BiCMOS Inverter
•
Two bipolar transistors (T3 and T4 One nMOS and one pMOS
transistor (both enhancement-type devices, OFF at Vin=0V)
Inverter has high input impedance, i.e., MOS gate input
Inverter has low output impedance Inverter has high drive capability
but occupies a relatively small area
However, this is not a good arrangement to implement since no discharge path exists for current from the base of either bipolar transistor when it is being turned off which results into slow down of the circuit transistion.
Conventional BiCMOS Inverter
Two additional enhancement-type nMOS devices have been added (T5 and T6).
These transistors provide discharge paths for transistor base currents during turn-off.
Without T5, the output low voltage cannot fall below the base to emitter voltage VBE of T3.
When Vin = 0 :
T1 is off. Therefore T3 is non-conducting
T2 ON - supplies current to base of T4
T4 base voltage set to Vdd.
T5 is turned on & clamps base of T3 to GND. T3 is turned off.
T4 conducts & acts as current source to charge load CL towards Vdd.
Vout rises to Vdd - Vbe (of T4) ·
When Vin = Vd :
T2 is off
T1 is on and supplies current to the base of T3
T6 is turned on and clamps the base of T4 to GND. T4 is turned off.
T3 conducts & acts as a current sink to discharge load CL towards 0V
Vout falls to 0V+ VCEsat (of T3)
Again, this BiCMOS gate does not swing rail to rail. Hence some finite power is dissipated when driving another CMOS or BiCMOS gate. The leakage component of power dissipation can be reduced by varying the BiCMOS device parameters
LATCHUP • Latchup is defined as the generation of a low
impedance path in CMOS chips between power
supply rail and the ground rail due to the interaction of parasitic pnp and npn bipolar transistors.
These BJTs form a (SCR) with positive feedback and virtually short circuit the power rail to ground, thus causing excessive current flows and even permanent device damage
CMOS Latchup
n+
p-type substrate
n+ p+ p+
V (5 V)DD
n+p+
V (0 V)SS
BSDDSB
n-well
Rsub
Rwell
vO
pnp transistor
npn transistor
If VRwell is 0.7V
If VRsub is 0.7V
Formation of SCR from BJT
Latch up triggering
• For latch up to occur the parasitic npn-pnp circuit has to be triggered and the holding state has to be maintained.
• Latchup can be triggered by transient current or voltages that may occur internally to a chip during power-up or externally due to voltages or currents beyond normal operating ranges.
• Two possible triggering mechanisms are
1)lateral triggering
2)vertical triggering
Lateral and vertical triggering
• Current has to be injected into either the npn- or pnp- emitter to initiate latch up.
• Lateral triggering occurs when a current flows in the emitter of the lateral npn-transistor .
• Vertical triggering occurs when a sufficient current is injected into the emitter of the vertical- pnp transistor.
Necessary conditions for latch up
• Both PNP and NPN bi polars must be biased into the active state.
• The product of the parasitic bipolar transistor current gains (ßnpn*ßpnp) is greater than or equal to one
• The terminal network must be capable of supplying a current greater than the holding current required by the PNPN path
12
Latchup prevention techniques• Reducing the value of resistors and reducing
the gain of the parasitic transistors are the basis for eliminating latch up Reduce the BJT gains by lowering the minority carrier lifetime through Gold doping of the substrate (solution might cause excessive leakage currents).
• Substrate resistance : It can be reduced by the use of silicon starting- material with a thin epitaxial layer on top of highly doped substrate .
• Well resistance:
It can be reduced by having retrograde well structure is also used. This well has a highly doped area at the bottom of the well, whereas the top of the well is more lightly doped.
I/O latch up prevention
• Reducing the gain of parasitic transistors is achieved through the use of guard rings.
• Guard rings are that p+ diffusions in the p substrate and n+ diffusions in the n-well to collect injected minority carriers
p+ guard ring
Use p+ guardband rings connected to ground around nMOS transistors and n+ guard rings connected to VDD around pMOS transistors to reduce Rw and Rsub and to capture injected minority carriers before they reach the base of the parasitic BJT.
N+ Guard ring
Latchup Prevention summary• Use p+ guard rings to ground around nMOS transistors and n+ guard rings connected to
VDD around pMOS transistors to reduce Rwell and Rsub and to capture injected minority carriers before they reach the base of the parasitic BJTs
• Place substrate and well contacts as close as possible to the source connections• Use minimum area p-wells (in case of twin-tub technology or n-type substrate) so that the
p-well photocurrent can be minimized during transient pulses• Source diffusion regions of pMOS transistors should be placed so that they lie along
equipotential lines when currents flow between VDD and p-wells. In some n-well I/O circuits, wells are eliminated by using only nMOS transistors.
• Avoid the forward biasing of source/drain junctions so as not to inject high currents; the use of a lightly doped epitaxial layer on top of a heavily doped substrate has the effect of shunting lateral currents from the vertical transistor through the low-resistance substrate.
• Layout n- and p-channel transistors such that all nMOS transistors are placed close to GND and pMOS transistors are placed close to VDD rails. Also maintain sufficient spacings between pMOS and nMOS transistors.
Stick Diagrams
• Cartoon of a layout.
• Shows all components.
• Does not show exact placement, transistor sizes, wire lengths, wire widths, boundaries, or any other form of compliance with layout or design rules.
• Useful for interconnect visualization, preliminary layout layout compaction, power/ground routing, etc.
Stick Diagrams
Metal
poly
ndiff
pdiffCan also drawin shades of
gray/line style.Buried Contact
Contact Cut
Stick Diagrams – Some rules
Rule 1.
When two or more ‘sticks’ of the same type cross or touch each other that represents electrical contact.
Stick Diagrams – Some rulesRule 2.
When two or more ‘sticks’ of different type cross or touch each other there is no electrical contact. (If electrical contact is needed we have to show the connection explicitly).
Stick Diagrams – Some rules
Rule 3.
When a poly crosses diffusion it represents a transistor.
Note: If a contact is shown then it is not a transistor.
Stick Diagrams – Some rulesRule 4. In CMOS a demarcation line is drawn to
avoid touching of p-diff with n-diff. All pMOS must lie on one side of the line and all nMOS will have to be on the other side.
5 V
Dep
Vout
Enh
0V
Vin
5 v
0 V
Vin
5 v
Alternate Layout Strategy
Mask Layout Encoding
A B
x
y
X X
X X
x
A B
y
Parallel Connected MOS Patterning
x
y
A B
X X X
A B
x
y
General Layout Geometry
IndividualTransistors
Shared Gates
Shared drain/source
Vp
Gnd
Designing MOS ArraysA B C
yx
y
x
A B C
CMOS STICK DIAGRAMS
Layer Types
• p-substrate• n-well• n+• p+• Gate oxide (thin oxide)• Gate (polycilicon)• Field Oxide
– Insulated glass– Provide electrical isolation
Demarcation line Only metal and polysilicon can cross the demarcation line
Top view of the FET pattern
n+ n+ n+ n+ p+ p+ p+ p+
NMOS NMOS PMOS PMOS
n-well
The CMOS NOT Gate
X
X
X
X
Vp
Gnd
x
Gnd
n-well
Vp
x xx
Contact Cut
Alternate Layout of NOT Gate
Gnd
Vp
x
x
X
x
Vp
Gnd
X
x
X
X
Example - Stick Diagrams (1/2)
A B
A
B
Circuit Diagram. Pull-Down Network(The easy part!)
Alternatives - Pull-up Network
Complete Stick Diagram
Stick Diagram - Example
NOR Gate
OUT
B
A
Stick Diagram - Example
Power
Ground
B
C
OutA
NAND Layout
Gnd
Vp
ba.
a b
X
Vp
Gnd
X X
X X
a b
ba.
NOR Layout
Gnd
Vp
ba
a bX
Vp
Gnd
X X
X X
a b
ba
Stick Diagram XOR Gate Examples
Exclusive OR Gate
Vdd
A
Out
GndB
A’ B’
A’
B’
BA’
Out
A A’
B B’
A
B’
A
B
A’
B’
A’
B
Why Design Rules???????Acts as an interface or communication link between the circuit designer and the process engineer during the manufacturing phase
Manufacturing problems
Photo resist shrinkage tearing.Variations in material deposition.Temperature and oxide thickness.Impurities.Variations across a wafer.
Difference between Via and metal
• Contact is connection to source, drain or poly. While Vias is used to make connection between two metal layers.
• Both vias and contact are formed using metals.
• Vias are generally made of tungsten while contact is made using aluminium.
Transistor problems:
Variations in threshold voltage: This may occur due to variations in oxide thickness, ion-implantation and poly layer. Changes in source/drain diffusion overlap. Variations in substrate.
Wiring problems:
Diffusion: There is variation in doping which results in variations in resistance, capacitance. Poly, metal: Variations in height, width resulting in variations in resistance,capacitance. Shorts and opens.
Oxide problems
Variations in height. Lack of planarity.
Via problems:
Via may not be cut all the way through. Undersize via has too much resistance. Via may be too large and create short.
Types of Design Rules
The design rules primary address two issues:
1. The geometrical reproduction of features that can be reproduced by the mask- making and lithographical process ,and
2. The interaction between different layers.
Two approaches in describing the design rules
Scalable Design Rules (e.g. SCMOS, λ-based design rules)
• In this approach, all rules are defined in terms of a single parameter λ. The rules are so chosen that a design can be easily ported over a cross section of industrial process ,making the layout portable .Scaling can be easily done by simply changing the value of λ.
Absolute Design Rules (e.g. µ-based design rules ) :
• In this approach, the design rules are expressed in absolute dimensions (e.g. 0.75µm) and therefore can exploit the features of a given process to a maximum degree. Here, scaling and porting is more demanding, and has to be performed either manually or using CAD tools .Also, these rules tend to be more complex especially for deep submicron.
µ-based design rules
• The fundamental unity in the definition of a set of design rules is the minimum line width .It stands for the minimum mask dimension that can be safely transferred to the semiconductor material .Even for the same minimum dimension, design rules tend to differ from company to company, and from process to process. Now, CAD tools allow designs to migrate between compatible processes.
Lambda rules
• Feature Size: minimum distance between source and drain of transistor
• Feature size = 2λ (@ 90nm feature size λ=45)
• According to Moore’s Law, how much does the feature size scale by every ~2 years?
• Design rules specify line widths, separations and extensions in terms of λ.
Lambda-based Rules
One lambda
(λ)= one half of the “minimum”mask dimension, typically the length of a transistor channel. This can be used to derive design rules and to estimate minimum dimensions of a junction area and perimeter before a transistor has to be laid out.
Lambda-based Rules(Cont…)
• Design rules based on single parameter, λ• Most foundry allows submission of designs using simpler
set of design rules that can be easily scaled to different processes.
• These are called “lambda design rules” λ that has units of μm.
• All distance and widths and spacing are written as value = mλ where m is scaling multiplier.for ex.: w =3 λ, s = 4 λ
• If the factory will use technology λ=0.15 μm• w =0.45 μm, s = 0.6 μm
Guidelines for using λ-based Design Rules:
Minimum line width of poly is 2λ & Minimum line width of diffusion is 2λ
Minimum distance between two diffusion layers 3λ
Design Rules Classified into four main types
• Min. width to avoid breaks
• Min. spacing to avoid shorts
• Min. surround
• Min. extension
Minimum extension to ensure complete overlaps
dpo= min. extension of poly beyond Active
Design Rule for Active Areas
Silicon devices are built on active areas of the substrate
Wa= min width of active feature
Sa-a= min. edge-to-edge spacing of active mask polygon
Design Rule for Doped silicon (n+)
Wa = min width of an active area
Sa-n = min. active-to-nSelect spacing
Design Rule for Doped silicon (p+)
Wa = min width of an active area
sa-p = min. active-to-nSelect spacing
Sp-nw= min. p+ to nWell spacing
Design Rule
•
MOSFET structure exists every time a poly gate line completely crosses an n+ or p+ region
Design Rule for poly features areWp= min. poly width of a poly linedpo= min. extension of poly beyond Active
Design rule for Active contact
Active contact is a cut in the oxide that allows the first layer of metal to contact as active n+ or p+ region.
Sa-ac= min. spacing between active and active contact
dac,v = vertical size of the contact
dac,h = horizontal size of the contact
Design rule for Metal1
Metal1 is applied to the wafer after oxide. It is used as interconnect for signals and also for power supply distribution.
Wm1= min. width of Metal1 line
Sm1-ac= min. spacing from Metal1 to Active Contact
Metal Contact
• Two metal wires have 3λ distance between them to overcome capacitance coupling and high frequency coupling. Metal wires width can be as large as possible to decrease resistance.
Butting Contact
• Buttering contact is used to make poly and silicon contact.Window's original width is 4λ, but on overlapping width is 2λ.So actual contact area is 6λ by 4λ.
Vias is a cut in the oxide layers to contact between two metals.
• Distance between two wells depends on the well potentials as shown above. The reason for 8λ is that if both wells are at same high potential then the depletion region between them may touch each other causing punch-through. The reason for 6λ is that if both wells are at different potentials then depletion region of one well will be smaller, so both depletion region will not touch each other so 6λ will be good enough.
Active region has length 10λ which is distributed over the followings
•2λ for source diffusion
• 2λ for drain diffusion
• 2λ for channel length
• 2λ for source side encroachment
• 2λ for drain side encroachment
Layout Design Rules summary
SCMOS Design Rule Summary• Line size and spacing:
– metal1: Minimum width=3, Minimum Spacing=3– metal2: Minimum width=3, Minimum Spacing=4– poly: Minimum width= 2, Minimum Spacing=2– ndiff/pdiff: Minimum width= 3, Minimum Spacing=3
minimum ndiff/pdiff seperation=10– wells: minimum width=10,
min distance form well edge to source/drain=5• Transistors:
– Min width=3– Min length=2– Min poly overhang=2
SCMOS Design Rule Summary• Contacts (Vias)
– Cut size: exactly 2 X 2– Cut separation: minimum 2– Overlap: min 1 in all directions– Magic approach: Symbolic contact layer min. size 4 X
4– Contacts cannot stack (i.e., metal2/metal1/poly)
• Other rules– cut to poly must be 3 from other poly– cut to diff must be 3 from other diff– metal2/metal1 contact cannot be directly over poly– negative features must be at least 2 in size– CMP Density rules (AMI/HP subm): 15% Poly, 30% Metal
Spacings• Diffusion/diffusion: 3• Poly/poly: 2• Poly/diffusion: 1• Via/via: 2• Metal1/metal1: 3• Metal2/metal2: 4• Metal3/metal3: 4
Disadvantages of Lambda rules
1. Linear scaling is possible only over a limited range of dimensions. 2. Scalable design rules are conservative This results in over dimensioned and less dense design. 3. This rule is not used in real life.
CMOS R and C
GateCapacitance
InterconnectCapacitanceand Resistance
ChannelOn-Resistance
Source/DrainCapacitance
Sources of Resistance
• Wiring resistance
• MOS structure resistance - Ron
• Source and drain resistance• Contact (via) resistance
Top view
Drain n+ Source n+
W
L
Poly Gate
Wire Resistance
L
W
H
R = L
H WSheet Resistance R
R1 R2=
=
L
A=
Material (-m)
Silver (Ag) 1.6 x 10-8
Copper (Cu) 1.7 x 10-8
Gold (Au) 2.2 x 10-8
Aluminum (Al) 2.7 x 10-8
Tungsten (W) 5.5 x 10-8
Material Sheet Res. (/)
n, p well diffusion 1000 to 1500
n+, p+ diffusion 50 to 150
n+, p+ diffusion with silicide
3 to 5
polysilicon 150 to 200
polysilicon with silicide
4 to 5
Aluminum 0.05 to 0.1
Sheet Resistance
• Sheet resistance is a measure of resistance of thin films that are nominally uniform in thickness. It is commonly used to characterize materials made by semiconductor doping, metal deposition, resistive paste printing, and glass coating
MOS Structure Resistance• The simplest model assumes the transistor
is a switch with an infinite “off” resistance and a finite “on” resistance Ron
S DRon
VGS VT
Source and Drain Resistance
• More pronounced with scaling since junctions are shallower
• With silicidation R is reduced to the range 1 to 4 /
RS RD
S
G
D
RS,D = (LS,D/W)R
where LS,D is the length of the source or drain diffusion R is the sheet resistance of the source or drain diffusion (20 to 100 /)
Contact Resistance
• Transitions between routing layers (contacts through via’s) add extra resistance to a wire– keep signals wires on a single layer whenever possible– avoid excess contacts– reduce contact resistance by making vias larger (beware of
current crowding that puts a practical limit on the size of vias) or by using multiple minimum-size vias to make the contact
• Typical contact resistances, RC,(minimum-size)
– 5 to 20 for metal or poly to n+, p+ diffusion and metal to poly
– 1 to 5 for metal to metal contacts• More pronounced with scaling since contact openings are
smaller
Capacitance Estimation
• Gate Capacitance
• Diffusion capacitance
• Routing capacitance(O/p--------- I/p)
MOS Capacitor characteristics
MOS Capacitor characteristics
Sources of Capacitance
Cw
CDB2
CDB1
CGD12
CG4
CG3
wiring (interconnect) capacitance
intrinsic MOS transistor capacitances
Vout2Vin
extrinsic MOS transistor (fanout) capacitances
Vout
VoutVin
M2
M1
M4
M3
Vout2
CL
MOS Intrinsic Capacitances
• Structure capacitances• Channel capacitances• Depletion regions of the reverse-
biased pn-junctions of the drain and source
Intrinsic MOS Capacitances
• Structure capacitances
• Channel capacitances
• Diffusion capacitances from the depletion regions of the reverse-biased pn-junctions
CGS
CSB CDB
CGD
CGB
S
G
B
D
CGS = CGCS + CGSO CGD = CGCD + CGDO
CGB = CGCB
CSB = CSdiff CDB = CDdiff
MOS Structure Capacitances
xd
Sourcen+
Drainn+W
Ldrawn
xd
Poly Gate
n+n+
tox
Leff
Top view
lateral diffusion
CGSO = CGDO = Cox xd W = Co W
Where Cox (gate capacitance per unit area)
Overlap capacitance (linear)
MOS Channel Capacitances
S D
p substrate
B
G VGS +
-
n+n+
depletion region
n channel
CGS = CGCS + CGSO CGD = CGCD + CGDO
CGB = CGCB
The gate-to-channel capacitance depends upon the operating region and the terminal voltages
MOS Diffusion Capacitances
S D
p substrate
B
G VGS +
-
n+n+
depletion region
n channel
CSB = CSdiff CDB = CDdiff
The junction (or diffusion) capacitance is from the reverse-biased source-body and drain-body pn-junctions.
Review: Reverse Bias Diode• All diodes in MOS digital circuits are reverse biased; the
dynamic response of the diode is determined by depletion-region charge or junction capacitance
Cj = Cj0/((1 – VD)/0)m
where Cj0 is the capacitance under zero-bias conditions (a function of physical parameters), 0 is the built-in potential (a function of physical parameters and temperature)and m is the grading coefficient– m = ½ for an abrupt junction (transition from n to p-
material is instantaneous)– m = 1/3 for a linear (or graded) junction (transition is
gradual)• Nonlinear dependence (that decreases with increasing
reverse bias)
+
-
VD
Junction Capacitance
Extrinsic (Fan-Out) Capacitance
• The extrinsic, or fan-out, capacitance is the total gate capacitance of the loading gates M3 and M4.
Cfan-out = Cgate (NMOS) + Cgate (PMOS)
= (CGSOn+ CGDOn+ WnLnCox) +
(CGSOp+ CGDOp+ WpLpCox)
• Simplification of the actual situation– Assumes all the components of Cgate are between Vout and
GND (or VDD)
– Assumes the channel capacitances of the loading gates are constant
Wiring Capacitance
• The wiring capacitance depends upon the length and width of the connecting wires and is a function of the fan-out from the driving gate and the number of fan-out gates.
• Wiring capacitance is growing in importance with the scaling of technology.
Parallel Plate Wiring Capacitance
Cpp = (di/tdi) WLpermittivityconstant(SiO2= 3.9)
Dielectric
Substrate
L
W
H
tdi
Electrical-field lines
Current flow
Sources of Interwire Capacitance
interwire
fringe
pp
Cwire = Cpp +Cfringe +Cinterwire
= (di/tdi)WL + (2di)/log(tdi/H) + (di/tdi)HL
W - H/2H
+
(a)
(b)
Fringing Capacitance
Interconnect
Insights
• For W/H < 1.5, the fringe component dominates the parallel-plate component. Fringing capacitance can increase the overall capacitance by a factor of 10 or more.
• When W < 1.75H interwire capacitance starts to dominate• Interwire capacitance is more pronounced for wires in the
higher interconnect layers (further from the substrate)• Rules of thumb
– Never run wires in diffusion– Use poly only for short runs– Shorter wires – lower R and C– Thinner wires – lower C but higher R
Gate-level Delay Estimation
Three common measurements of gate performance:• Delay time (td or tpd) -- Delay between when the input signal to a gate reaches the 50% point and when the output signal reaches the 50% point.•Rise time (tr) -- time it takes for a signal to go from 10% to 90% of its output range• Fall time (tf) -- time it takes for a signal to go from 90% to 10% of its output range
Rise/fall times matter for a number of reasons
• They are a component of total gate delay• While the inputs to a gate are rising or falling, a
conductive path exists between power and ground
1) Power dissipation
2)Can potentially harm the chip if too much current flows
• For signals that have high inductance, overly short
rise/fall times can lead to di/dt-induced swings• Mostly relevant on chip I/O pins
Estimating Delay
• Gate delays are determined by how quickly the driving gate can charge/discharge its load capacitance
Gate delay may vary depending on which inputs are changing -- generally use the worst case
Fall Time Analysis
• During the fall time one or more nMOS transistors discharge the energy stored in the output capacitance
During the fall time, the nMOS transistor starts in the saturated region and passes into the linear region
Divide fall time into two components: tf,sat and tf,linear.In saturation, current through the transistor is constant
This becomes
• Define t1, t2 such that Vo(t1) = 0.9Vdd and Vo(t2) = Vdd - Vt. Then
• And tf,sat is:
Integrating, we get tf,linear
• For many processes, Vt ~= 0.2Vdd, allowing us to approximate
Rise Time
• Redoing the same analysis for the pMOS transistor in pullup gives
• Note that beta for pMOS tends to be about 1/2 beta for nMOS given equivalent size devices, so typically want pMOS about twice as wide as nMOS to get equivalent rise and fall times
• For equally sized N and P transistors where βn= 2βp
Hence,
Gate Delay Estimation
• Depends on rise and fall times of the input signals.
• Assuming (unrealistically) that the input rises or falls in zero time, then the gate delay can be approximated as half of the rise or fall time for the gate, and averaged to
Circuit Delay Estimation1. Divide circuit into DC-connected blocks
2. Compute a simple delay model for each block
3. Add the delays for each block to get overall delay.
In CMOS, a DC-connected block (stage) will be either:
1. A single logic gate
2. A transmission-gate network and the gates driving it
General Approach- Divide circuit into DC-connected components, solve for each component
Scaling of MOS Circuits• VLSI technology is
constantly evolving towards smaller line widths
• Reduced feature size generally leads to
– better / faster performance
– More gate / chip
• MOSFET performance improves as size is decreased: shorter switching time, lower power consumption.
Scaling Factors• In our discussions we will consider 2 scaling factors, α and β
• 1/ β is the scaling factor for VDD and oxide
thickness D
• 1/ α is scaling factor for all other linear dimensions
• We will assume electric field is kept constant
Simple derivations showing the effects of scaling are derived in Pucknell and Eshraghian pages 125 - 129
Technological Background of the
Moore’s Law• To accommodate this change, the size of the silicon wafers on which the integrated circuits are fabricated have also increased by a very significant factor – from the 2 and 3 in diameter wafers to the 8 in (200 mm) and 12 in (300 mm) diameter wafers
• The latest catch phrase in semiconductor technology (as well as in other material science) is nanotechnology – usually referring to GaAs devices based on quantum mechanical phenomena
• These devices have feature size (such as film thickness, line width etc) measured in nanometres or 10-9 metres
Recurring Costs cost of die + cost of die test + cost of packaging variable cost = ----------------------------------------------------------------
final test yield
cost of wafer cost of die = ----------------------------------- dies per wafer × die yield
× (wafer diameter/2)2 × wafer diameterdies per wafer = ---------------------------------- --------------------------- die area 2 × die area
die yield = (1 + (defects per unit area × die area)/)-
Yield Example Example
wafer size of 12 inches, die size of 2.5 cm2, 1 defects/cm2, = 3 (measure of manufacturing process complexity)
252 dies/wafer (remember, wafers round & dies square) die yield of 16% 252 x 16% = only 40 dies/wafer die yield !
Die cost is strong function of die area
proportional to the third or fourth power of the die area
Transistor Scaling Issues• High gate leakage :static power dissipation• Poly depletion in gate electrode increased effective Tox,
reduced Ion• Need for enhanced channel mobility
Will Moore’s Law run out of steam?
–Can’t build transistors smaller than an atom…
Many reasons have been predicted for end of scaling
– Dynamic power
– Subthreshold leakage, tunneling
– Short channel effects
– Fabrication costs
– Interconnect delay
Limitations of Scaling
• Substrate Doping scaling factors
• Depletion width
• Interconnect and contact resistances
• Subthreshold currents
• Logic levels and supply voltage due to noise
• Current density
• Short Channel Effects
• Hot Electron Effects
• Time Dependent Dielectric Breakdown
CMOS and NMOS nand Gates
•
CMOS and NMOS NOR Gates