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On-Chip Inductance Extraction - Concept & Formulae – 2002. 3 Hyungsuk Kim hyungsuk@cae.wisc

On-Chip Inductance Extraction - Concept & Formulae – 2002. 3 Hyungsuk Kim hyungsuk@cae.wisc.edu. OutLine. Introduction – On-Chip Inductance Loop Inductance and Partial Inductance Closed Forms of Inductance Formulae Self Inductance Formulae - Hoer, FastHenry, Ruehli, Grover

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On-Chip Inductance Extraction - Concept & Formulae – 2002. 3 Hyungsuk Kim hyungsuk@cae.wisc

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  1. On-Chip Inductance Extraction- Concept & Formulae –2002. 3Hyungsuk Kim hyungsuk@cae.wisc.edu

  2. OutLine • Introduction – On-Chip Inductance • Loop Inductance and Partial Inductance • Closed Forms of Inductance Formulae • Self Inductance Formulae - Hoer, FastHenry, Ruehli, Grover • Mutual Inductance Formulae - Hoer (FastHenry), Ruehli, Grover • Computational Results • Conclusion

  3. Introduction – On-Chip Inductance • As the clock frequency grows fast, the reactance becomes larger for on-chip interconnections Z= R + jwL • w is determined not by clock frequency itself but by clock edge w ~ 1/(rising time) • More layers are applied, wider conductors are used • Wide conductor => low resistance • Multiple layer interconnections make complex return loops • Inductance is defined in the closed loop in EM

  4. Loop Inductance • Loop inductance is defined as the induced magnetic flux in the loop by the unit current in other loop Ij Loop i Loop j where, represents the magnetic flux in loop i due to a current Ij in loop j • The average magnetic flux can be calculated by magnetic vector potential Aij where, ai represents a cross section of loop i

  5. Loop Inductance (cont’d) • The magnetic vector potential A, defined by B = A, has an integral form • So, loop inductance is

  6. 2 1 3 5 4 Partial Inductance • Problems of loop inductance • The loops (called return paths) are hardly defined explicitly in VLSI • In most cases, the return paths are multiple • Partial inductance • proposed by A. Ruehli • The return path is assumed at infinite for each conductor segment • It can be directly appliable to circuit simulator like SPICE

  7. Partial Inductance (cont’d) Loop inductance between loop i and j is (assume loop i consists of K segments and loop j does M segments) So, loop inductance is

  8. Partial Inductance (cont’d) • Definition of partial inductance • The sign of partial inductance is not considered • So, partial inductance is solely dependent of conductor geometry • Sign rule for partial inductance where, Skm = +1 or –1 • The sign depends on the direction of current flow in the conductors

  9. l T W Geometry and Formulae • Conductor Geometry • Inductance Formulae • Self Inductance :Grover(1962), Hoer(1965), Ruehli(1972), FastHenry(1994) • Mutual Inductance :Grover(1962), Hoer(FastHenry)(1965), Ruehli(1972) x z Conductor 1 Conductor 2 Dz Dx y Dy (a) Single Conductor (b) Two Parallel Conductors

  10. Self Inductance • Grover’s Formula Grover 2 (without table)

  11. Self Inductance (cont’d) • Hoer’s Formula where

  12. Self Inductance (cont’d) • Ruehli’s Formula where If T/W < 0.01

  13. Self Inductance (cont’d) • FastHenry’s Formula where

  14. Comparisons of Self Inductance

  15. Mutual Inductance • Ruehli’s Formula • Grover’s Formula (single filament) where where

  16. Mutual Inductance (cont’d) • Hoer’s Formula (multiple filaments) where

  17. Conclusion • On-Chip inductance becomes a troublemaker in high-performance VLSI design • Higher clock frequency, wide interconnections, complex return paths • The concept of partial inductance is useful in VLSI area • Not related to the return path • Only dependent of geometry • Several inductance formulae are in hand but they have • Different computational complexities • Different applicable ranges according to the geometry

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