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High Performance Interconnect and Packaging

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Presentation on theme: "High Performance Interconnect and Packaging"— Presentation transcript:

1 High Performance Interconnect and Packaging
Chung-Kuan Cheng CSE Department UC San Diego

2 Research Scope Scalable System: Power, Delay, Cost, Reliability
Interconnect-Driven Designs Wire Planning: Non-Manhattan Interconnect Networks: Topology, Physical Layout Clock & Power: Shunts + Trees (3) Interconnect Style: Surfliner (2) Datapath: Shifters, Adders, Mul. Div. Packaging: Pin Breakaway (1) Simulation Static Timing Analysis: Hierarchy, Incremental SPICE: Whole System Analysis

3 1. Pin Breakaway Interfaces of Chip and Package, Package and Board.
Breakaway of Array of Pins Patterns of Breakaway Obj: Cost= # Breakaway Layers

4 1. Pin Breakaway Row by Row Escape:
Escape interconnect row by row from outside toward inside.

5 1. Pin Breakaway (Cont.) Parallel Triangular Escape:
This method divides the objects into groups and escape each group with a triangular outline.

6 1. Pin Breakaway (Cont.) Central Triangular Escape:
Escape objects from the center of the outside row and expands the indent with a single triangular outline.

7 1. Pin Breakaway (Cont.) Two-Sided Escape:
Escape objects from the inside as well as from the outside. The outline shrinks slowly and also follow zigzag shape.

8 The movement of area array contour
1. Pin Breakaway (Cont.) Row by Row Parallel Triangles Central Triangle Two-Sided The movement of area array contour

9 1. Pin Breakaway: Design Rules
Parameters used: the pad pitch = 150m the pad diameter = 75m the line width = 20m the spacing = 20m

10 1. Pin Breakaway: Results
40 x 40 Layer Row by row Parallel triangular Central triangular Two sided 1 304 276 100 312 2 272 340 156 328 3 240 292 228 308 4 208 300 324 5 176 164 372 6 144 124 444 7 112 8 80 9 48 10 16

11 1. Pin Breakaway: Results
20 x 20 Layer Row by row Parallel triangular Central triangular Two sided 1 144 132 92 140 2 112 116 160 3 80 96 100 4 48 28 52 5 16

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28 2. Interconnect Style: Surfliner
Global Interconnect trend Scalability

29 2. Surfliner - Features Speed of light Low Power Consumption
< 1/5 Delay of Traditional Wires Low Power Consumption < 1/5 Power Consumption Robust against process variations Short Latency Insensitive to Feature Size Differential Signaling Shield for low swing signals

30 2. Surfliner:Transmission Line Model
Differential Lossy Transmission Line Surfliner Shunt conductance G= 0 for wires of IC Add shunt conductance G= RC/L Flat response from DC to Giga Hz Telegraph Cable: O. Heaviside in 1887.

31 2. Surfliner: Distortionless Line
Telegrapher’s equation: Propagation Constant: Wave Propagation: Alpha and Beta corresponds to speed and phase velocity.

32 2. Surfliner: Distortionless Lines
Set G=RC/L Attenuation and Beta Characteristic impedance: (pure resistive) Phase Velocity (Speed of light in the media) Attenuation:

33 2. Surfliner: Distortionless Lines

34 2. Surfliner: Performance
Speed of Light: 5ps/mm or 50ps/cm Power: 10mW at GHz Conductance variation = 10%, f=10MHz~10GHz Attenuation and velocity variation < 1%

35 2. Surfliner: Implementation
Add shunt conductance Resistors realized by serpentine unsilicided poly, diffusion resistors, or high resistive metal

36 2. Surfliner: Simulation Results
Characteristic Impedance (at 10GHz) : Ohm Inductance: 0.22nH/mm Capacitance: 141fF/mm Attenuation: 253mv magnitude at receiver’s end (assuming 1V at sender’s end) Using Microstrip (free space above the wires): impedance can be improved to 52.8Ohm

37 2. Surfliner: Settings Agilent ADS Momentum extract 4-port S-parameters HSpice: Transient analysis Assume 1023 bit pseudo random bit sequence (PRBS) 15GHz clock 10% of clock period transition slope for each rising and falling edge

38 2. Surfliner: Simulation Results
120 Stages 4 Stages

39 2. Surfliner: Simulation
Jitter and silicon area usage #Stages 4 10 20 40 80 120 160 Jitter (ps) 27 9.5 5.4 4.2 3.9 2.1 2.08 Area (um2) 0.52 3.25 13 52 208 468 832 Power w/ different width and separation (w, s) (um) (3,3) (4,4) (5,4) (10,5) Power (mW) 4.98 3.62 3.02 2.13 Attenuation 0.307 0.415 0.496 0.60

40 2. Applications of Surfliner
1.Clock distributions 2. Data communications: Buses Between CPUs, DSPs, Memory Banks

41 2. Application of Surfliner
3. High Performance Low Power Wafer Packaging

42 2. Surfliner: Current Status
What we have done Derived a conservative design Performed simulation We are looking forward to Design and fabricate the test chip Explore architectures to exploit the advantages of Surfliner

43 3. Clock Distribution: Shunts + Trees
3.1 RC Shunts 3.2 Inductive Effects Contribution: Analytical skew expression Formulation of Multilevel Optimization Empirical Observation

44 3. Clock: Linear Variations Model
Process variation model Transistor length Wire width Linear variation model Power variation model Supply voltage varies randomly (10%)

45 3.1 Clock: RC Model Input: an n level meshes and h-trees
Constraint: routing area, parameter variations Objective: skew

46 Simplified Circuit Model

47 Transient Response when t<T
VS1=u(t) Vs2=0 Let Then V1 = A + B V2 = A - B

48 Skew Expression Assumptions: T<<RsC Rs /R <<RsC/T
Using first order Taylor’s expansion

49 Spice Validation of Skew Function

50 Skew on mesh Conjectured skew expression Using regression to get k

51 K values for n by n meshes

52 Optimization Skew function Multi level skew function

53 Experimental Settings
Die size 1cm by 1cm 100nm copper technology Ground Shielded Differential Signal Wires for Global Clock Distribution Routing area is normalized to the area of a 16 by 16 mesh with minimal wire width + - GND

54 Experimental Results Optimized wire width

55 Optimal Routing Resources Allocation
level-1 level-2 level-3 level-4 total area

56 Skew reduction V.S. Mesh Area

57 Experiments—Optimized Skew

58 Robustness Against Supply Voltage Variations

59 3.2 Clock: RLC Model Motivation: RLC shunt effect diminishes in multiple-GHz range Model of Transmission line Formulation of Multilevel Optimization Empirical Observation

60 3.2 Motivation: Inductance Diminishes Shunt Effects
0.5um wide 1.2 cm long copper wire Input skew 20ps f(GHz) 0.5 1 1.5 2 3 3.5 4 5 skew(ps) 3.9 4.2 5.8 7.5 9.9 13 17 26

61 3.2 Motivation: Synchronization at wavelength distance

62 3.2 Motivation: Multilevel Transmission Line Spiral Network

63 3.2 Model of Transmission Line: Shunt with Two Sources
Transmission Line with exact multiple wave length long Large driving resistance to increase reflection

64 Spice Validation of Skew Equation

65 3.2 Model of Transmission Line: Multiple Sources Case
Random model: Infinity long wire Input phases uniformly distribution on [0, Φ]

66 Configuration of Wires
Coplanar copper transmission line height: 240nm, separation: 2um, distance to ground: 3.5um, width(w): 0.5 ~ 40um Use Fasthenry to extract R,L Linear R/L~w Relation R/L = a/w+b

67 3.2 Formulation of Multilevel Distribution
Min: S.t.:

68 Experimental Results Set chip size to 2cm x 2cm
Clock frequency GHz Synthesize H-tree using P-tree algorithm Set the initial skew at each level using SPICE simulation results under our variation model Use FastHenry and FastCap to extract R,L,C value Use W-elements in HSpice to simulate the transmissionlin

69 Optimized Wire Width Total Area W1 (um) W2 (um) W3 (um) Skew M (ps)
Skew S (ps) Impr.(%) 23.15 0% 0.5 1.7 17.796 20.50 13% 1 1.9308 1.0501 12.838 14.764 3 2.5751 1.3104 1.3294 8.6087 8.7309 15% 5 2.9043 3.7559 2.3295 6.2015 6.3169 16% 10 3.1919 4.5029 6.8651 4.2755 5.2131 18% 15 3.6722 6.1303 10.891 2.4917 3.5182 29% 20 4.0704 7.5001 15.072 1.7070 2.6501 37% 25 4.4040 8.6979 19.359 1.2804 2.1243 40%

70 Simulated Output Voltages
Transient response of 16 nodes on transmission line Signals synchronized in 10 clock cycles

71 Simulated Output voltages
Steady state response: skew reduced from 8.4ps to 1.2ps

72 Power Consumption Area 3 4 5 7 10 15 20 25 PM(mw) 0.4 0.5 0.7 0.9 1.0
1.4 1.5 1.6 PS(mw) 0.83 2.1 2.64 3.04 4.7 7.2 8.3 reduce(%) 48 67 66 70 79 81 PM: power consumption of multilevel mesh PS: power consumption of single level mesh

73 Skew with supply fluctuation
Area Skew-S Skew-M Ave. Worst Impr(%) 28.4 36.5 0% 3 9.75 12.33 8.75 9.07 11% 5 7.32 9.06 6.55 6.91 12% 10 6.31 805 4.41 5.41 30% 15 5.03 7.33 2.81 4.93 44% 25 3.83 4.61 1.72 3.06 55%

74 3.2 Future Directions Exploring innovative topologies of transmission line shunts Design clock repeaters and generators Actual layout and fabrication of test chip

75 Conclusion 1 Post Doc., 10 Ph.D. students work on interconnect, packaging, and simulation Plan to release packages on interconnect planning (topology and design style) Need help on fabrication and measurement


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