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MICROELETTRONICA

MICROELETTRONICA. Design methodologies Lection 8. Design methodologies (general). Three domains Behavior Structural physic Three levels inside Architectural Logic/RTL Physic. Evaluation of an I.C:. Performance – speed, power, function, flexibility Size of the die

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MICROELETTRONICA

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  1. MICROELETTRONICA Design methodologies Lection 8

  2. Design methodologies (general) • Three domains • Behavior • Structural • physic • Three levels inside • Architectural • Logic/RTL • Physic

  3. Evaluation of an I.C: • Performance – speed, power, function, flexibility • Size of the die • Time to design – i.e cost of engineering • Easy of verification, test generation and testability BUT the system could be also realized by micro, FPGA, PAL, etc. ECONOMIC EVALUATION

  4. Design principles • Hierarchy • Regularity • Modularity • Locality

  5. Hierarchy • Divide and conquer • Divide in modules and repeating untill each submodule is comprehensible prebuilt component available • Virtual components IP

  6. Regularity • Similar submodules • All level of design hierarchy: equal size transistors, standard cell type library, parameterized RAM, etc. • Design reuse

  7. Modularity • Well defined functions and interfaces • Interaction with other modules well characterized • Behavioral, structural and physical interfaces (function, signals, electrical and timing constraints)

  8. Locality • The internal variables of a module don’t interest other modules correspond to reduce global variables in HDL • Advantage for the clock

  9. Design methods • Microprocessor/DSP • Programmable logic • Gate Array and Sea of Gates • Cell-based • Full custom • Platform-based design (SoC)

  10. Programmable Logic: PAL Connections of planes are realized with fuses or EPROM or EEPROM

  11. Programmable Logic: FPGA

  12. Sea of Gates • Uninterrupted lines of Pand N diffusions • Metal interconnects over non used transistors • Lines are interrupted connecting PMOS to Vdd and NMOS to Vss • 2-5 masks – till three levels of metals, vias, interconnects

  13. Cell-based • SSI • Memory • System level modules (processors, serial interfaces, etc. • Mixed signal modules Possible automatic generation of MSI modules Option for power (1X, 2X, 4X….) and inputs

  14. Full custom • Symbolic layout (old – place transistors, wires, contacts with graphic editor) • Silicon compilation: HDL that give all the views of a project, i.e. behavior, timing, logical • Placement in a standard cell layout

  15. Platform-based design (SoC) • Processors, memory, I/O functions, FPGA • Use of IP, hw/sw codesign

  16. Design Flows • From behavioral specifications to layout • Front end till RTL synthesis • Back end from structural specifications to Physical synthesis and layout

  17. ASIC Design flow Fig. 8.39

  18. Automated Layout Generation Fig. 8.41

  19. Layout Design: Timing Fig. 8.43

  20. Design Economics • Stotal=Ctotal/(1-m) • Stotal : Selling price • Total cost • Non-recurring engineering costs • Recurring engineering costs • Fixed costs

  21. Non-recurring engineering costs Ftotal=Etotal+Ptotal • Engineering costs • Personnel cost (architectural design, logic, simulation, layout, timing, DRC, test) • Prototype manufacturing costs • Computer • CAD software • Education • Costs (per annum): Personnel $150 K,computer $ 10K, CAD tools (digital back end) $ 1 M shared

  22. NREs - Prototyping • Mask cost • Test fixture cost • Package tooling Values: • Mask set for 130 nm about $500-1000 • Test fixture $ 1000-50.000

  23. Recurring costs Cost of single IC after the development phase Rtotal=Rprocess+Rpackage+Rtest Rprocess=W/(NxYwxYpa) W = wafer cost (500-3000 $) N=Number die Yw=Die yield (70-90 %) =Packaging yield (95-99%)

  24. Fixed costs • Data sheets • Application notes • Marketing and commercial costs

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