Analog VLSI Design
Technology Trends
3 Crises in VLSI Design
VLSI - Ever Increasing Power
Trends in Power, VDD and Current
Leaky Transistors
Low Power Strategies
Interconnect
Interconnect Trends
Interconnect
Trends
Design Issues
Coupled Noise
Future Chips 2014
Challenge
ANALOG VLSI DESIGN
Principles, Techniques, Building Blocks
Is Analog VLSI Design Dead?
No, not true!
Total analog chip sales for 2002 $39 billion, 2004 ~ $48billion
10% increase over previous year, growth predicted for next 3 years
Raw transducer output in most systems is analog in nature
Although very small %age of total chip area is analog, still a
need for good design practice since analog component may be the
limiting factor on overall system performance
Days of pure analog design are over, majority of systems are integrated
with increased functionality in digital domain
Will attempt to introduce some hierarchy - use building block approach
as for digital
Bottom Line: Ability to design both analog and digital circuits and
understand interactions between the 2 domains adds dimension to
your design portfolio
Low Power + High Speed=BiCMOS
Future of Gigascale Integration lies in BiCMOS technology
Application Example : Wireless Communications - pagers,
cellular phones, laptops, palmtops
Requirement for high speed low power front end challenge for
analog designers (cannot afford time and energy to digitize first)
Historical Roadmap: Bipolar/CMOS
• 1930’s – MOS invented, didn’t catch on, dormant for 30 yrs
• 1940’s- 50’s – Bipolars invented, became dominant thru the early 70’s
• 1970’s - Power consumption issues re-ignited interest in MOS
• 1980 MOS/Bipolar share of market 50/50 (largely due to CMOS)
• 1983 – BiCMOS invented
• 1990’s – CMOS dominant
• 2000’s - BiCMOS integrated into CMOS, Gigascale Integration
Improvement Trends
Functionality (e.g. non-volatility, smart power)
Integration Level (e.g. components per chip, Moore’s Law)
Compactness (e.g. components/sq cm)
Speed (e.g. microprocessor clock in MHZ)
Power (e.g. laptop or cellphone battery life)
Cost (e.g. cost per function, historically decreasing)
Available from scaling & tech improvements over last 30yrs
Future Trends: International Technology
Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS)
S/C industry has become a global industry in the 90’s: manufacturers,
suppliers, alliances, world wide operations. Since 1992 Semiconductor
Industries Association (SIA) has produced a 15year outlook on major
trends in the s/c industry (ITRS)
Technical challenges identified
Solutions proposed (where possible)
Traditional is reaching fundamental limits
New materials must be introduced to further extend scaling limits
Way to go:
System In a Package (SiP
P-SoC (Performance System-on-a-Chip): integration of multiple silicon
technologies on a chip
Nanotechnology
Neuromorphic Systems - emulate natural signal processing (circuits
operating in subthreshold/weak inversion )
ITRS: Technology Working Groups (TWG’s)
Purpose: To provide guidance, host and edit workshop in following
areas
Design
Test
Process Integration, Devices, Structures
Front End Processes
Lithography
Interconnect
Factory Integration
Assembly & Packaging
Cross Cutting Working Groups in environment, safety, defect
reduction, metrology, modeling/simulation
ITRS: Example of Key Lithography-Related
Characteristics
Year 99 2002 2004 2008
DRAM pitch 180nm 130nm 110nm 70nm
MPU Gate Length 140nm 100nm 70nm 45nm
What is S-o-C (system on a chip)?
S-o-C chips are often mixed-technology designs, including such
diverse combinations as embedded DRAM, high-performance or
low-power logic, analog, RF, esoteric technologies like Micro-
Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS) , optical input/output.
Time-to-market for particular application-specific capability is
key
Product families will be developed around specific SoC
architectures and many SoC designs customized for target
markets by programming part (using software, FPGA, Flash,
and others).
Category of SoC is referred to as a programmable platform. The
design tools and technologies needed to assemble, verify, and
program such embedded SoC’s will present a major challenge
over the next decade.
Analog VLSI Design ECE567 Spr 2008
Professor: Dr. Abby Ilumoka, Room UT 235, Ph: (860) - 768 - 5231
Email: ILUMOKANW@MAIL.HARTFORD.EDU
Class Time: Mon 5.45pm – 8.15pm
Office Hrs: Tues Thur 10.50am – 12.10pm, Mon 4-5pm, Wed 11-11.30am
Credits: 3 credits
Objectives: Course deals with design principles and techniques for high
performance analog IC’s implemented in CMOS technology. Although analog
design appears to be much less systematic than digital, course highlights good
design principles to simplify process.
Course Text & Materials:
1. Analog Integrated Circuit Design by Johns & Martin, Wiley 1997
2. CMOS Circuit design layout & Simulation by Baker, Li & Boyce, IEEE Press, 1998
3. Specified journal & conference papers
Grading Policy and Exam Dates:
4 Exams - 4 X 25% = 100 %
Laboratory/ Design Assignments (bonus max 10%)
TOTAL 100%
Spr 2008 Exam Dates: Exam 1 Mon Feb 18
Exam 2 Mon Mar 24
Exam 3 Mon Apr 21
Exam 4 Mon May 12
TOPICS
1. Advanced MOS Modeling
- Short Channel Effects
- Sub-threshold Operation
- Leakage Currents
2. Processing and Layout for CMOS Analog Circuits
3. Fundamental Building Blocks of Analog IC’s
- MOS Current Mirrors
- Single Stage Amps
- SPICE Simulation Examples
4. Design of the 2 stage CMOS Op Amp: Op Amp I
5. Design of the 2 stage CMOS Op Amp: Op Amp II
6. Additional Analog Building Blocks
- Comparators
- Sample and Hold circuits
- Switched capacitor Circuits
7. Data Converters A-D and D-A
8. Design Refinement & Optimization Techniques
9.Noise Analysis and Modeling