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Published byJoel Marshall Modified over 6 years ago
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Improved Crosstalk Modeling for Noise Constrained Interconnect Optimization
Jason Cong, David Zhigang Pan & Prasanna V. Srinivas Department of Computer Science, UCLA Magma Design Automation, Inc. 2 Results Way, Cupertino, CA 95014
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Motivation Deep sub-micron net designs have higher aspect ratio (height /width ) Height is not reducing not same as width is reducing Make a simple and accurate modeling to calculate noise analysis in circuit Increased coupling capacitance between nets compared to previous process Longer propagation delay or Shorter propagation delay Increased logic errors --- Glitch Analysis
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Motivation Reduced noise margins Crosstalk cannot be ignored
Lower supply voltages Dynamic Logic Lower Vt Crosstalk cannot be ignored It can cause low yield and low performance
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Aggressor / Victim Network
Assuming idle victim net Ls: Interconnect length before coupling Lc: Interconnect length of coupling Le: Interconnect length after coupling Aggressor has clock slew tr
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2-π Model Victim net is modeled as 2 π-RC circuits
Rd: Victim drive resistance Cx is ased to be in middle of Lc, Cx is decreasing as distance is increasing victim / aggressor coupling capacitance Rise time
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2-π Model Parameters Aggressor Victim
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Analytical Solution
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Analytical Solution part 2
s-domain output voltage Transform function H(s)
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Analytical Solution part 3
Aggressor input signal Output voltage
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Simplification of Closed Form Solution
Closed form solution complicated Non-intuitive Noise peak amplitude, noise width? Dominant-pole approximation method
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Dominant-Pole Simplification
RC delay from upstream resistance of coupling element Elmore delay of victim net
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Intuition of Dominant Pole Simplification
vout rises until tr and decays after vmax evaluated at tr
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Extension to RC Trees Similar to previous model with addition of lumped capacitances Extended to a victim net in general RC tree structure
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Results Average errors of 4% comparing to HSPICE in peak noise and noise width. Devgan model 589% Vittal model 9% 95% of nets have errors less than 10%
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Spice Comparison peak noise noise width
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Effect of Aggressor Location
As aggressor is moved close to receiver, peak noise is increased Ls varies from 0 to 1mm Lc has length of 1mm Le varies from 1mm to 0
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Optimization Rules Rule 1: Rule 2: If RsC1 < ReCL
Sizing up victim driver will reduce peak noise If RsC1 > ReCL and tr << tv Driver sizing will not reduce peak noise Rule 2: Noise-sensitive victims should avoid near-receiver coupling
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Optimization Rules part 2
Preferred position for shield insertion is near a noise sensitive receiver Rule 4: Wire spacing is an effective way to reduce noise Rule 5: Noise amplitude-width product has lower bound And upper bound
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Conclusions 2-π model achieves results within 6% error of HSPICE simulation for crosstalk noise model. Dominant node simplification gives intuition to important parameters Design rules established to reduce noise
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