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VLSI Design MOSFET Scaling and CMOS Latch Up

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Presentation on theme: "VLSI Design MOSFET Scaling and CMOS Latch Up"— Presentation transcript:

1 VLSI Design MOSFET Scaling and CMOS Latch Up
UNIT III : VLSI CIRCUIT DESIGN PROCESSES 01/02/2009 VLSI Design VLSI Design

2 Out Line MOSFET Scaling CMOS Latch Up VLSI Design

3 Why Scaling? Die cost decreases Operation speed increases But …
How to design chips with more and more functions? Design engineering population does not double every two years… Hence, a need for more efficient design methods Exploit different levels of abstraction VLSI Design

4 Technology has scaled well, will it in the future?
Technology Scaling GATE GATE SOURCE BODY DRAIN Xj DRAIN SOURCE D Tox BODY Leff Dimensions scale down by 30% Doubles transistor density Oxide thickness scales down Faster transistor, higher performance Vdd & Vt scaling Lower active power Technology has scaled well, will it in the future? VLSI Design

5 MOSFET scaling High density chip
The sizes of the transistors are as small as possible The operational characteristics of MOS transistor will change with the reduction of iys dimensions There are two basic types of size-reduction strategies Full scaling (constant-field scaling) Constant-voltage scaling A new generation of manufacturing technology replaces the previous one about every two or three years The down-scaling factor S about 1.2 to1.5 The scaling of all dimensions by a factor of S>1 leads to the reduction of the area occupied by the transistor by a factor of S2 VLSI Design

6 VLSI Design

7 Technology Evolution Currently, the feature size is 45 nm Technology.
VLSI Design

8 Technology Scaling Models
VLSI Design

9 1.constant-field scaling (Full scaling )
Two types of scaling methodologies 1.Constant Filed scaling (Full scaling) 2.Constant Voltage scaling 1.constant-field scaling (Full scaling ) VLSI Design

10 Constant Field Scaling
VLSI Design

11 Full scaling (constant-field scaling)
VLSI Design

12 Constant-voltage scaling
VLSI Design

13 Constant Voltage scaling
VLSI Design

14 Constant-voltage scaling
VLSI Design

15 Scaling challenges L, VDD, VT scaling  Increasing parameter variation
 Increasing sub-threshold leakage power  Increasing tunneling current Product life cycle reduced from 3.6 years to 2 years  Concurrent engineering  Better prediction models Things become smaller. Variation becomes larger. Worse S/N ratio. VLSI Design

16 . CMOS Latch UP VLSI Design

17 CMOS Latchup There is one major downfall to the CMOS logic gate – Latchup There are many safeguards that are done during fabrication to suppress this, but it can still occur under certain transient or fault conditions VLSI Design

18 CMOS Inverter Technology
The CMOS inverter consists of a PMOS stacked on top on a NMOS, but they need to be fabricated on the same wafer To accomplish this, the technique of “n-well” implantation is needed as shown in the figure which shows the cross-section of a CMOS inverter VLSI Design

19 Latch-up CMOS ICs have parastic silicon-controlled rectifiers (SCRs).
When powered up, SCRs can turn on, creating low-resistance path from power to ground. Current can destroy chip. Early CMOS problem. Can be solved with proper circuit/layout structures. VLSI Design

20 CMOS Latchup Latchup occurs due parasitic bipolar transistors that exist in the basic inverter as shown below VLSI Design

21 Latchup in CMOS Devices
VLSI Design 21

22 Parasitic SCR circuit I-V behavior VLSI Design

23 Parasitic Transistors
Parasitic bipolar transistors form at N/P junctions Latchup - when parasitic transistors turn on Preventing latchup: Add substrate contacts (“tub ties”) to reduce Rs, Rw (more about this later) OR Use Silicon-on-Insulator VLSI Design

24 Latch-Up Occurs when parasitic bipolar transistors are turned on
Shorts Vdd to GND Persists indefinitely Requires power cycle or causes component failure Avoidable if Rw and Rs are small V n + p out in dd GND R w s p-well N-substrate PNP NPN VLSI Design

25 Controlling Latchup - Substrate Contacts
Purpose: connect well/substrate to power supply Alternative term: tub tie (used by book) Recommendations (source: Weste & Eshraghian) Conservative: 1 substrate contact for every supply connection Less conservative: 1 substrate contact for every 5-10 transistors High-current circuits: use guard rings Substrate Contact Substrate Contact VLSI Design

26 Improving Latch-Up Immunity
Improve isolation Epitaxial layer grow single crystal silicon on wafer greatly reduces Rs Trench isolation deep trenches of SiO2 as insulators isolates well from substrate Add lots of substrate and well contacts Maximum distance between contact and FET No more than l One contact per 5-10 transistors Minimize distance from source to contact Direct metal contacts (no diffusion) VLSI Design

27 Solution to latch-up --Use tub ties to connect tub to power rail. --Use enough to create low-voltage connection. VLSI Design

28 Tub tie layout p+ metal (VDD) p-tub VLSI Design

29 References CMOS Digital Integrated Circuits Analysis And Design, Sung-mo Kang,Yusuf Leblebici CMOS VLSI design, Neil H.E.Weste,David Harris,Ayan Banerjee VLSI Design


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