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VLSI System Design – ECES 681

VLSI System Design – ECES 681. Lecture: Interconnect -1 Prashant Bhadri pbhadri@ececs.uc.edu Office: Rhodes Hall - 933C Department of ECECS, College of Engineering, University of Cincinnati. Noise. What is noise?

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VLSI System Design – ECES 681

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  1. VLSI System Design – ECES 681 Lecture: Interconnect -1 Prashant Bhadri pbhadri@ececs.uc.edu Office: Rhodes Hall - 933C Department of ECECS, College of Engineering, University of Cincinnati

  2. Noise • What is noise? • auditoryexperienceofsoundthatlacksmusicalquality; soundofanykind (especiallyunintelligibleordissonantsound) • Electrical noise may be said to be the introduction of any unwanted energy, which tend to interfere with the proper reception and reproduction of transmitted signals.

  3. External Sources • Atmospheric • Industrial • Extraterrestrial • Solar noise • Cosmic noise • Internal Noise • This is the noise generated by any of the active or passive devices found in the receiver. • Can it be a transmitter? • How about on chip, in a system design, board design etc.

  4. Chip Noise • Circuit noise includes all the disturbances induced by the circuit’s topology. • Interconnect noise includes noise coming from capacitive or inductive coupling between interconnects. • Power supply noise, which refers to deviations of the supply and ground voltages from their nominal values. • Substrate noise in mixed-signal integrated circuits: the charge injected in the substrate by the logic gates during the transitions may interfere severely with the operation of sensitive analog circuits. Reference: Bartolo’s Thesis, Chapter 1

  5. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  6. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  7. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  8. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  9. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  10. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  11. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  12. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  13. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  14. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  15. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  16. Shot Noise • In a transistor the major contributor to noise is called shot noise. • The formula for shot noise in a diode is given as:

  17. Thermal Noise • The noise generated by the agitation and interaction of electrons is called thermal noise. The internal kinetic energy of a particle can be expressed through its temperature. • The kinetic energy of a body is zero at a temperature of absolute zero. • The noise generated by a resistor, for example, is proportional to its absolute temperature as well as the bandwidth over which the noise is to be measured.

  18. Any ordinary resistor not connected to a voltage source will have a voltage associated with it. • If the load is noiseless and is receiving the maximum noise power generated by our noisy resistor then:

  19. Flicker Noise • Flicker noise dominates the noise spectrum at low frequency. Reference: Noise Sources in Bulk CMOS, paper by Kent H. Lundberg

  20. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  21. Other Issues • Charge Injection • Capacitive Feed-through

  22. Charge Injection Solution Problem • When the switch is on, the voltage across the sampling capacitor tracks the time-varying input signal within the bandwidth. • Some charges are present in the MOS channel, this is a result of forming a conducting channel under the MOS gate. • When the switch is turned off, charges either flow to the input source or to the sampling capacitor and create a small voltage which . is a function of several parameters which include input impedance, source impedance, clock falling edge, etc. Reference: http://kabuki.eecs.berkeley.edu/~gchien/thesis/Masters/appB/appendixB.pdf

  23. Clock Feed-through • When the clock voltage on the gate switches between high and low, this voltage. • drop is coupled into the signal via the capacitor divider. • The clock feed-through can be corrected to the first order by using a differential signal path. • As long as the error is present on both signal inputs and the same magnitude, it can be cancelled by taking the input differentially. • This technique, once again, depends on the absolute matching of transistors. Reference: http://kabuki.eecs.berkeley.edu/~gchien/thesis/Masters/appB/appendixB.pdf

  24. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  25. Reference: Digital System Engineeringhttp://eeclass.stanford.edu/ee273/

  26. How will you remove noise during the chip design phase?   Any Ideas ??

  27. Noise Figure • Used to assess the performance. • Additionally compares two devices in order to evaluate their performance + compares the signal and the noise at the same point to ensure that noise is not excess. • This term is used to describe how noisy a device is. • It is a ratio of the signal to ratio at the input to the signal to noise ratio at the output.

  28. Reading Assignment • Paper Name : Design Methodologies for Noise in Digital Integrated Circuits • Author: Kenneth L. Shepard • Department of Electrical Engineering • Columbia University, New York, NY 10027 • Website: http://www.cisl.columbia.edu/faculty/shepard/group/dac_noise.pdf

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