Power Supply Distribution and Other Wiring Issues For deep-submicron Ic's

1998 ◽  
Vol 514 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. T. Lynch ◽  
L. A. Arledge

ABSTRACTAn Interconnect Architecture Optimization (IAO) methodology is proposed. The algorithm makes use of fundamental RLCLL2 relations for wiring delays, as well as predictive 3D interconnect density function histograms with y and x axes of wire length and inverse gate delay. The fundamental RLCLL2 relations determine “maximum” wire lengths as a function of wiring size within the wiring hierarchy; the 3D histogram establishes the pre-physical design allocations of wiring nets within the hierarchy. The decision process begins with the set-asides of wiring for power, clock, and vias, and ends with an optimized number of wiring levels and sizes. Some of the major conclusions of the preliminary analyses are: there are no significant problems with wiring at the lowest level as long as the local wire lengths are appropriately scaled; the MOSFET device may not be able to provide enough current to satisfy the capacitive fanout loads within the future allocations of clock period; and the global wires, despite significant improvements in performance, will continue to provide a design and technology challenge for larger chips and higher frequencies.

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Walter Schneider

The growing impact of process variations on circuit performance has become a major concern for deep-submicron integrated circuit design, resulting in numerous SSTA-algorithms. The acceptance of such algorithms in industry however will be dependent on modeling the real silicon behavior in SSTA. This includes that the statistical gate-delay models must consider arbitrary process variations and dependencies. In this paper, we introduce the innovative concept of Copulas to handle this topic. A complete Matlab based framework starting from process parameter statistics up to the computation of the statistical gate-delay distribution is presented. Experimental results demonstrate the importance of accounting realistic process variations.


Author(s):  
Ying-Jun Zeng ◽  
Zhi-Jing Zhang ◽  
Mao-Dong Wang ◽  
Wei Gao

2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (05) ◽  
pp. 1650044 ◽  
Author(s):  
Debanjali Nath ◽  
Priyanka Choudhury ◽  
Sambhu Nath Pradhan

Power gating (PG) is used to reduce leakage power by shutting down the power supply of the inactive block of the circuit. PG technique for finite state machine (FSM) is used to reduce not only leakage power but also the switching power of circuit. One FSM is partitioned into two sub-FSMs and encoded for minimizing total power for the power-gated design of the circuit. Depending on the state of the machine, at a time one sub-FSM is power gated by shutting off the power supply. There is a complete eradication of power in power-gated sub-FSM, but another one is in an active mode that continues to dissipate power. There is a scope to reduce leakage in active sub-FSM if the clock period is larger than the critical path delay of the combinational part of this sub-FSM. In this condition, there is a certain portion of the clock period which is idle and in this period PG may be used. The objective of this paper is to reduce power by applying PG at circuit level to the active sub-FSM, whereas, inactive sub-FSM is still power gated. This paper presents a new technique, called WCPG_IN_PG, which reduces the power of active sub-FSM (within the clock period) and power-gated FSM. By varying the frequency, power results are reported for different input combinations.


Author(s):  
Takaaki OKUMURA ◽  
Fumihiro MINAMI ◽  
Kenji SHIMAZAKI ◽  
Kimihiko KUWADA ◽  
Masanori HASHIMOTO

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