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Introduction to Integrated Systems Design Automation

Outline • Why Do You Care? • Technology Trends • Process and Device Technology • Logic Technology • Memory Technology • Packaging Technology • Effect on Processor Design. Introduction to Integrated Systems Design Automation. Hank Walker http://courses.cs.tamu.edu/cpsc661/walker.

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Introduction to Integrated Systems Design Automation

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  1. Outline • Why Do You Care? • Technology Trends • Process and Device Technology • Logic Technology • Memory Technology • Packaging Technology • Effect on Processor Design Introduction toIntegrated Systems Design Automation Hank Walker http://courses.cs.tamu.edu/cpsc661/walker

  2. IC design is often technology driven • try building a 1 GHz, low-power uP with vacuum tubes • designers say what they need • but technologists tell them what they get Competitive designs must balance utility and cost • use available technology to balance: - speed - standards - weight - form factor - power consumption - now the most critical issue - reliability - cost You usually have to shove 10 lb. into a 5 lb. bag Why Do You Care About Technology?

  3. More Transistors at Lower Cost • bigger chips - at introduction • smaller geometries • ~250M transistors common in 2005 Higher Speed • faster transistors • shorter distances Smaller Size and Weight • higher packing densities • packaging advances Merger of IC and Packaging Technology • chip is the package Good Technology Trends

  4. Abstractions Break Down • must “listen to the silicon” to achieve optimal designs • concurrent circuit-layout-device design • concurrent electrical-packaging design • technology-dependent architectural, RTL, logic design => except when design is simple and slow and boring Law of Large Numbers Stops Working • number of atoms now matters • transistors don’t shut off - lots of wasted leakage power • you've got to remember your quantum mechanics Diverging Requirements • desktop - high speed, low cost, power limits • portable - low power, low weight, small size, low voltage, low cost • embedded - low cost, harsh environment, high reliability Bad Technology Trends

  5. Geometries • lateral: ~65 nm today, ~4 nm demonstrated • vertical: ~15 nm today, ~ 3 atoms demonstrated • shrinking ~15%/year • limited by deposition, etch, implant, lithography equipment • limited by $$$ - new fab cost $3B+ Die Size (big chips) • ~2 cm2 at introduction, ~1 cm2 in volume • growing ~20%/year • limited by yield => ~2x transistors/chip every 1.5 years Process Technology

  6. System on a Chip (SoC) Blade server Intro Volume 2005

  7. Interconnect • TiN, poly, 8-9 layers of copper • more metal layers in future • minimum resistance - copper is it, silver no good • lower capacitance - low-K dielectrics • on-chip transmission lines - controlled impedance - crosstalk elimination • optical waveguides? • superconductors don’t help much - still LC Process Technology Interconnect delays not scaling with technology

  8. Current • CMOS - strained Si channel - elevated source/drain soon • BiCMOS - CMOS + NPN, maybe PNP • thin-film MOS transistors - replace resistors as SRAM pullups - LCD displays • GaAs MESFETs RF, high temperature applications • SiGE BJTs, MOSFETs RF Future • 3D devices - FinFET, trigate Device Technology metal field oxide metal field oxide

  9. Must scale VTH and VDD to increase speed Causes more leakage P4 leaks ~20A, ~1/3 of its power! Systems are Getting Faster

  10. • 100 ps ECL gate delay • 0.5 µm channel length • 3 layer metal • silicides • dual well Motorola BiCMOS Technology Still used in RF, high power circuits

  11. BJT, MOSFET R.I.P.? • fundamental limits reached in ~10 years - but it has always been ~10 years away • delay some by going vertical Supply voltage -> 0V • limit electric fields • reduce hot carriers Increased variability • number of atoms in a region is now countable Technology CAD • process and device simulation • a key limit to progress Growing fabrication line cost • $3B+ for new Intel fabs Process and Device Issues

  12. Bipolar/BiCMOS Still used for analog circuits Fewer circuit compromises Does not scale well Still excellent for high power, high voltage CMOS Used for all logic Used for most analog due to lower cost Now increasing RF usage TI one-chip cell phone Logic Technology Z Z

  13. Design Styles • standard cells - library of functions • sea of gates - big bag of gates, routing on top • full custom - very high volume only • mixed custom/semi-custom – on all large chips • mixed analog/digital - common in consumer products Trends • time-to-market dominates over manufacturing cost - product life of 1-2 years • increasing percentage of designs are ASIC/FPGA - maybe volume too • semicustom logic surrounding standard core e.g µP with custom I/O interfaces Xilinx Virtex II Pro – PowerPC on FPGA Logic Technology

  14. Density 2x every 1.5 years Cost Declines 30%/year – most important metric SRAM Usually mixed with logic on same chip EEPROM (flash) Lower programming voltages for integration with logic Scaling problems ROM Declining importance Time to market, field programmability Memory

  15. I/O • asynchronous => synchronous • memory-interface bus => memory-CPU bus - DDR, RAMBUS Increasing Specialization • VRAM • cache RAM • mixed DRAM/SRAM • synchronous DRAM Memory

  16. Density Limits • traditional DRAM beyond ~Gb unlikely • electric fields • radiation • delayed some with deep trenches, new dielectrics • already close to area of two wires crossing • MRAM – SRAM w/magnet DRAM speed lagging logic - Must amplify small charge - More bits => longer I/O path - Higher speed => higher cost, lower density Memory Issues

  17. Memory vs. Logic Speed

  18. Power • distribute power with low IR drop • constant power, lower supply voltage => higher current • large numbers of pins to supply current – 1000s of pins Signal Delay and Integrity • controlled impedance to control delays • shielding to reduce cross-talk => transmission lines I/Os • Rent's Rule: I/O count ~ • 64-bit addr, 64-bit data, instr and data caches => 256 pins • TAB or flip-chip on glass for flat panel displays Packaging

  19. Cooling • fin tower and low-speed fan near its limit - ~130W for P4, check heat sinks on Apple desktop • higher fan speed too noisy for office environment => air impingement – manifolds in current PCs => heat pipe to larger heat sink – some laptops • chilled air - requires A/C in cabinet • liquid impingement - plumbing, big package => liquid microchannels - small, low flow, 800-1000W/cm2! • portables limited to conduction, some natural convection LAPTOP TOO HOT FOR YOUR LAP! Size, Weight • eliminate pins • eliminate package - glop of epoxy covering chip Packaging

  20. Multi-Chip Modules (MCMs) • IC processing to pattern interconnect layers on substrate • Put L3 cache close to processor Pin Grid Arrays (PGAs) • fallen from favor - area, lead length Leadless Chip Carriers (LCCs) • continues as mainline solution • multiple rows to increase pinouts without area increase Dual In-line Package (DIP) • only for small chips Packaging

  21. Process and Device • HEMT (high electron mobility transistor) • high Tc superconductors - interconnect and devices • quantum well devices (particle in a box) Packaging • LN2 cooling - 2x speed improvement with optimized process - small geometry devices require it to work - refrigeration is expensive, noisy, unreliable - thermoelectric cooling might be solution • wafer scale integration - system on monolithic substrate - Cost competition w/regular ICs May see specialized use over next 10 years Exotica

  22. Problems • isochronic regions shrinking rapidly - speed < c, it's the law • takes multiple clock cycles to go across chip • global knowledge is expensive, or stale • memory speeds not keeping up with logic speeds A return to the bad old days of core? Do memory fetch, then go get a cup of coffee • portable systems - maybe no power or disk Solutions • small memories close to logic – cache hierarchy • loosely coupled components – multiple cores on a chip • yesterday's supercomputer problems in today’s desktops • (flash) EEPROM for nonvolatile programmability w/o battery or disk Effect on Architectural Design

  23. Problems • delays across packages and boards • limited I/O count • power dissipation balance • clocking Solutions • simultaneous partitioning across package levels • more knowledge of circuit-layout-package • iterate if necessary - possible with automatic synthesis • self-timed logic? Effect on Logic Design

  24. More device options • bipolar, CMOS, thin-film devices • optimized for both logic and memory Everything is sort of analog • I-V curves and logic transitions degrade • more current-mode operation Device variability increases • simpler circuits • fewer matched timing chains => must use physically-based statistical design => self-timed logic? More complex simulation • mixed circuit/device • interconnect parasitics => use characterized cell library as much as possible Effect on Circuit Design

  25. Global routing • critical to performance • simultaneous place and route Delay and Crosstalk Control • selective use of on-chip transmission lines 2.5D => 3D topology • complex design rules • parasitic extraction • tight loop back to circuit design Effect on Layout Design

  26. Packaging as important to uPs as supercomputers • system cost • system performance • system weight • system form factor • environmental limitations Can't throw design over wall to MechEs • concurrent package and electrical design • constraints of packaging on electrical design • electrical and thermal behavior of packaging on circuit - within package as well as on MCM or board => ECEs must learn some ME Effect on Package Design package dominates in portables

  27. Competitive pressure decreasing time to market decreasing market window falling system price Result build more complex systems in less time with fewer people shove 10 lb into a 5 lb bag Bad Market Trends System Price Time to Market Time Time

  28. Electronic systems are most complex artifacts built ~1B transistors in dual-core Itanium ~25M transistors in Power4 CPU core – now a “commodity” We’re only human best humans can design 10s of transistors per day by hand 1000 person-years for original Pentium $100M design cost (~$200M in today’s dollars) 2-3 year design time => 300-500 designers - barely doable cannot keep on that trend Product failure == corporate death IC fab cost $3B in 2003 (TI Richardson fab) $493k/day interest @ 6% interest rate chip-in-product sales >$20M/day delay == death The Problem

  29. Design automation is crucial for economic survival Design automation must: improve our productivity faster than technology curve achieve greater optimality achieve higher-quality results handle additional physical effects and do it all on larger designs DA tools are primary limiting factor in IC design a race between EDA and technology “solving yesterday’s problem tomorrow” - Mark Pinto Conclusion

  30. Product-Level Design • synthesis across boards and chips • multi-level optimization • focus on meeting user-level specs • humans mostly out of tool loop Product engineers are primary tool users • other engineers act as consultants • tool users and developers in same location Design for Manufacturability/Profitability • CAD tools will know manufacturing process • statistical design • merger of design and manufacturing engineering EDA Tools

  31. 1. Team of design experts aided by CAD tool gurus. - gurus fix tools when they break 2. Team of CAD tool gurus aided by design experts. - experts supply knowledge tools don't have Two Visions of Computer Design* * Dave Ditzel, then at Sun

  32. Skim the Semiconductor Industry Association International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) http://public.itrs.net The industry consensus on technology needs to stay on technology trends Read chapters on design and test Homework

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