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Lecture 21: Packaging, Power, & Clock

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 21: Packaging, Power, & Clock"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 21: Packaging, Power, & Clock

2 Outline Packaging Power Distribution Clock Distribution
21: Package, Power, and Clock

3 Packages Package functions
Electrical connection of signals and power from chip to board Little delay or distortion Mechanical connection of chip to board Removes heat produced on chip Protects chip from mechanical damage Compatible with thermal expansion Inexpensive to manufacture and test 21: Package, Power, and Clock

4 Package Types Through-hole vs. surface mount
21: Package, Power, and Clock

5 Chip-to-Package Bonding
Traditionally, chip is surrounded by pad frame Metal pads on 100 – 200 mm pitch Gold bond wires attach pads to package Lead frame distributes signals in package Metal heat spreader helps with cooling 21: Package, Power, and Clock

6 Advanced Packages Bond wires contribute parasitic inductance
Fancy packages have many signal, power layers Like tiny printed circuit boards Flip-chip places connections across surface of die rather than around periphery Top level metal pads covered with solder balls Chip flips upside down Carefully aligned to package (done blind!) Heated to melt balls Also called C4 (Controlled Collapse Chip Connection) 21: Package, Power, and Clock

7 LGA Package 1 1366 gold-plated pads 21: Package, Power, and Clock

8 Package Parasitics Use many VDD, GND in parallel Inductance, IDD
21: Package, Power, and Clock

9 Heat Dissipation 60 W light bulb has surface area of 120 cm2
Itanium 2 die dissipates 130 W over 4 cm2 Chips have enormous power densities Cooling is a serious challenge Package spreads heat to larger surface area Heat sinks may increase surface area further Fans increase airflow rate over surface area Liquid cooling used in extreme cases ($$$) 21: Package, Power, and Clock

10 Thermal Resistance DT = qjaP DT: temperature rise on chip
qja: thermal resistance of chip junction to ambient P: power dissipation on chip Thermal resistances combine like resistors Series and parallel qja = qjp + qpa Series combination 21: Package, Power, and Clock

11 Example Your chip has a heat sink with a thermal resistance to the package of 4.0° C/W. The resistance from chip to package is 1° C/W. The system box ambient temperature may reach 55° C. The chip temperature must not exceed 100° C. What is the maximum chip power dissipation? ( C) / (4 + 1 C/W) = 9 W 21: Package, Power, and Clock

12 Temperature Sensor Monitor die temperature and throttle performance if it gets too hot Use a pair of pnp bipolar transistors Vertical pnp available in CMOS Voltage difference is proportional to absolute temp Measure with on-chip A/D converter 21: Package, Power, and Clock

13 Power Distribution Power Distribution Network functions
Carry current from pads to transistors on chip Maintain stable voltage with low noise Provide average and peak power demands Provide current return paths for signals Avoid electromigration & self-heating wearout Consume little chip area and wire Easy to lay out 21: Package, Power, and Clock

14 Power Requirements VDD = VDDnominal – Vdroop
Want Vdroop < +/- 10% of VDD Sources of Vdroop IR drops L di/dt noise IDD changes on many time scales 21: Package, Power, and Clock

15 IR Drop A chip draws 24 W from a 1.2 V supply. The power supply impedance is 5 mW. What is the IR drop? IDD = 24 W / 1.2 V = 20 A IR drop = (20 A)(5 mW) = 100 mV 21: Package, Power, and Clock

16 IR Introduced Noise 21: Package, Power, and Clock

17 Power Distribution 21: Package, Power, and Clock

18 Power Distribution Low level distribution is in metal 1.
Power has to be strapped in higher layers of metal. The spacing is set by IR drop, electromigration, and inductive effects. Always use multiple contacts on straps. 21: Package, Power, and Clock

19 Power and Ground Distribution
21: Package, Power, and Clock

20 3 Metal Layers (EV4) 21: Package, Power, and Clock

21 4 Metal Layers (EV5) 21: Package, Power, and Clock

22 6 Metal Layers (EV6) 21: Package, Power, and Clock

23 Power Supply Droop 21: Package, Power, and Clock

24 L di/dt Noise 21: Package, Power, and Clock

25 L di/dt Noise A 1.2 V chip switches from an idle mode consuming 5W to a full-power mode consuming 53 W. The transition takes 10 clock cycles at 1 GHz. The supply inductance is 0.1 nH. What is the L di/dt droop? DI = (53 W – 5 W)/(1.2 V) = 40 A Dt = 10 cycles * (1 ns / cycle) = 10 ns L di/dt droop = (0.1 nH) * (40 A / 10 ns) = 0.4 V 21: Package, Power, and Clock

26 Dealing with L di/dt Separate power pins for I/O pads and chip core.
Multiple power and ground pins. Careful selection of positions of power and ground pins on package. Increase rise and fall times as much as possible. Schedule current consuming transitions. Use advanced packaging technologies. Use decoupling capacitances on the board. Use decoupling capacitances on chip. 21: Package, Power, and Clock

27 Choosing the Right Pin 21: Package, Power, and Clock

28 Decoupling Capacitance
21: Package, Power, and Clock

29 Bypass Capacitors Need low supply impedance at all frequencies
Ideal capacitors have impedance decreasing with w Real capacitors have parasitic R and L Leads to resonant frequency of capacitor 21: Package, Power, and Clock

30 De-coupling Capacitor Ratios
EV4 total effective switching capacitance = 12.5nF 128nF of de-coupling capacitance de-coupling/switching capacitance ~ 10x EV5 13.9nF of switching capacitance 160nF of de-coupling capacitance EV6 34nF of effective switching capacitance 320nF of de-coupling capacitance -- not enough! Source: B. Herrick (Compaq)

31 EV6 De-coupling Capacitance
Design for Idd= 25 Vdd = 2.2 V, f = 600 MHz 0.32-µF of on-chip de-coupling capacitance was added Under major busses and around major gridded clock drivers Occupies 15-20% of die area 1-µF 2-cm2 Wirebond Attached Chip Capacitor (WACC) significantly increases “Near-Chip” de-coupling 160 Vdd/Vss bondwire pairs on the WACC minimize inductance Source: B. Herrick (Compaq)

32 EV6 WACC Source: B. Herrick (Compaq)

33 Power System Model Power comes from regulator on system board
Board and package add parasitic R and L Bypass capacitors help stabilize supply voltage But capacitors also have parasitic R and L Simulate system for time and frequency responses 21: Package, Power, and Clock

34 Frequency Response Multiple capacitors in parallel
Large capacitor near regulator has low impedance at low frequencies But also has a low self-resonant frequency Small capacitors near chip and on chip have low impedance at high frequencies Choose caps to get low impedance at all frequencies 21: Package, Power, and Clock

35 Example: Pentium 4 Power supply impedance for Pentium 4
Spike near 100 MHz caused by package L Step response to sudden supply current chain 1st droop: on-chip bypass caps 2nd droop: package capacitance 3rd droop: board capacitance [Xu08] [Wong06] 21: Package, Power, and Clock

36 Distributed Model 21: Package, Power, and Clock

37 Charge Pumps Sometimes a different supply voltage is needed but little current is required 20 V for Flash memory programming Negative body bias for leakage control during sleep Generate the voltage on-chip with a charge pump 21: Package, Power, and Clock

38 Energy Scavenging Ultra-low power systems can scavenge their energy from the environment rather than needing batteries Solar calculator (solar cells) RFID tags (antenna) Tire pressure monitors powered by vibrational energy of tires (piezoelectric generator) Thin film microbatteries deposited on the chip can store energy for times of peak demand 21: Package, Power, and Clock

39 Capacitive Cross Talk

40 Capacitive Cross Talk Dynamic Node
DD CLK C XY Y C Y In 1 X In PDN 2 In 2.5 V 3 0 V CLK 3 x 1 mm overlap: 0.19 V disturbance

41 Capacitive Cross Talk Driven Node
0.5 0.45 0.4 tr↑ X 0.35 C R XY Y 0.3 V X Y tXY = RY(CXY+CY) 0.25 C Y 0.2 V (Volt) 0.15 0.1 0.05 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 t (nsec) Keep time-constant smaller than rise time

42 Dealing with Capacitive Cross Talk
Avoid floating nodes Protect sensitive nodes Make rise and fall times as large as possible Differential signaling Do not run wires together for a long distance Use shielding wires Use shielding layers

43 Shielding Shielding wire GND Shielding V layer GND Substrate ( GND )
DD layer GND Substrate ( GND )

44 Cross Talk and Performance
- When neighboring lines switch in opposite direction of victim line, delay increases DELAY DEPENDENT UPON ACTIVITY IN NEIGHBORING WIRES Cc Miller Effect - Both terminals of capacitor are switched in opposite directions (0  Vdd, Vdd  0) - Effective voltage is doubled and additional charge is needed (from Q=CV)

45 Impact of Cross Talk on Delay
r is ratio between capacitance to GND and to neighbor

46 Dealing with Cross-Talk
Evaluate and improve Constructive layout generation Predictable structures Avoid worst case patterns 21: Package, Power, and Clock

47 Structured Predictable Interconnect
Example: Dense Wire Fabric ([Sunil Kathri]) Trade-off: Cross-coupling capacitance 40x lower, 2% delay variation Increase in area and overall capacitance Also: FPGAs, VPGAs

48 Clock Distribution On a small chip, the clock distribution network is just a wire And possibly an inverter for clkb On practical chips, the RC delay of the wire resistance and gate load is very long Variations in this delay cause clock to get to different elements at different times This is called clock skew Most chips use repeaters to buffer the clock and equalize the delay Reduces but doesn’t eliminate skew 21: Package, Power, and Clock

49 Example 21: Package, Power, and Clock

50 Example Skew comes from differences in gate and wire delay
With right buffer sizing, clk1 and clk2 could ideally arrive at the same time. But power supply noise changes buffer delays clk2 and clk3 will always see RC skew 21: Package, Power, and Clock

51 Clock Uncertainties 21: Package, Power, and Clock

52 Clock Nonidealities Clock skew Clock jitter
Spatial variation in temporally equivalent clock edges; deterministic + random, tSK Clock jitter Temporal variations in consecutive edges of the clock signal; modulation + random noise Cycle-to-cycle (short-term) tJS Long term tJL Variation of the pulse width Important for level sensitive clocking

53 Review: Skew Impact Ideally full cycle is available for work
Skew adds sequencing overhead Increases hold time too 21: Package, Power, and Clock

54 Solutions Reduce clock skew Careful clock distribution network design
Plenty of metal wiring resources Analyze clock skew Only budget actual, not worst case skews Local vs. global skew budgets Tolerate clock skew Choose circuit structures insensitive to skew 21: Package, Power, and Clock

55 Clock Dist. Networks Ad hoc Grids H-tree Hybrid
21: Package, Power, and Clock

56 H-Trees Fractal structure Gets clock arbitrarily close to any point
Matched delay along all paths Delay variations cause skew A and B might see big skew 21: Package, Power, and Clock

57 More realistic H-tree [Restle98]

58 Itanium 2 H-Tree Four levels of buffering: Primary driver Repeater
Second-level clock buffer Gater Route around obstructions 21: Package, Power, and Clock

59 Itanium 2 Repeaters 21: Package, Power, and Clock

60 Spines 21: Package, Power, and Clock

61 Pentium IV Clock Spines
21: Package, Power, and Clock

62 Pentium IV Clock Spines
21: Package, Power, and Clock

63 Clock Grids Use grid on two or more levels to carry clock
Make wires wide to reduce RC delay Ensures low skew between nearby points But possibly large skew across die 21: Package, Power, and Clock

64 The Grid System No rc-matching Large power

65 Alpha Clock Grids 21: Package, Power, and Clock

66 Example: DEC Alpha 21164

67 21164 Clocking Clock waveform Location of clock driver on die
EE141 21164 Clocking tcycle= 3.3ns 2 phase single wire clock, distributed globally 2 distributed driver channels Reduced RC delay/skew Improved thermal distribution 3.75nF clock load 58 cm final driver width Local inverters for latching Conditional clocks in caches to reduce power More complex race checking Device variation trise = 0.35ns tskew = 150ps Clock waveform pre-driver final drivers Location of clock driver on die

68

69 Clock Skew in Alpha Processor

70 EV6 (Alpha 21264) Clocking 600 MHz – 0.35 micron CMOS
EE141 EV6 (Alpha 21264) Clocking 600 MHz – 0.35 micron CMOS trise = 0.35ns tskew = 50ps tcycle= 1.67ns Global clock waveform 2 Phase, with multiple conditional buffered clocks 2.8 nF clock load 40 cm final driver width Local clocks can be gated “off” to save power Reduced load/skew Reduced thermal issues Multiple clocks complicate race checking

71 21264 Clocking

72 (20% to 80% Extrapolated to 0% to 100%)
EE141 EV6 Clock Results ps 300 305 310 315 320 325 330 335 340 345 ps 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 GCLK Skew (at Vdd/2 Crossings) GCLK Rise Times (20% to 80% Extrapolated to 0% to 100%)

73 EV7 Clock Hierarchy Active Skew Management and Multiple Clock Domains
EE141 EV7 Clock Hierarchy Active Skew Management and Multiple Clock Domains + widely dispersed drivers + DLLs compensate static and low-frequency variation + divides design and verification effort - DLL design and verification is added work + tailored clocks

74 Hybrid Networks Use H-tree to distribute clock to many points
Tie these points together with a grid Ex: IBM Power4, PowerPC H-tree drives sector buffers Buffers drive total of 1024 points All points shorted together with grid 21: Package, Power, and Clock

75 Clock Gaters 21: Package, Power, and Clock

76 Adaptive Deskewing 21: Package, Power, and Clock

77 Self-timed and Asynchronous Design
Functions of clock in synchronous design 1) Acts as completion signal 2) Ensures the correct ordering of events Truly asynchronous design 1) Completion is ensured by careful timing analysis 2) Ordering of events is implicit in logic Self-timed design 1) Completion ensured by completion signal 2) Ordering imposed by handshaking protocol

78 Self-Timed Pipelined Datapath

79 Completion Signal Generation

80 Completion Signal Generation

81 Completion Signal in DCVSL
21: Package, Power, and Clock

82 Self-Timed Adder

83 Completion Signal Using Current Sensing
21: Package, Power, and Clock


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