2,245 research outputs found

    Fast 3D Integrated Circuit Placement Methodology using Merging Technique

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    In the recent years the advancement in the field of microelectronics integrated circuit (IC) design technologies proved to be a boon for design and development of various advanced systems in-terms of its reduction in form factor, low power, high speed and with increased capacity to incorporate more designs. These systems provide phenomenal advantage for armoured fighting vehicle (AFV) design to develop miniaturised low power, high performance sub-systems. One such emerging high-end technology to be used to develop systems with high capabilities for AFVs is discussed in this paper. Three dimensional IC design is one of the emerging field used to develop high density heterogeneous systems in a reduced form factor. A novel grouping based partitioning and merge based placement (GPMP) methodology for 3D ICs to reduce through silicon vias (TSVs) count and placement time is proposed. Unlike state-of-the-art techniques, the proposed methodology does not suffer from initial overlap of cells during intra-layer placement which reduces the placement time. Connectivity based grouping and partitioning ensures less number of TSVs and merge based placement further reduces intra layer wire-length. The proposed GPMP methodology has been extensively against the IBMPLACE database and performance has been compared with the latest techniques resulting in 12 per cent improvement in wire-length, 13 per cent reduction in TSV and 1.1x improvement in placement time

    Extending systems-on-chip to the third dimension : performance, cost and technological tradeoffs.

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    Because of the today's market demand for high-performance, high-density portable hand-held applications, electronic system design technology has shifted the focus from 2-D planar SoC single-chip solutions to different alternative options as tiled silicon and single-level embedded modules as well as 3-D integration. Among the various choices, finding an optimal solution for system implementation dealt usually with cost, performance and other technological trade-off analysis at the system conceptual level. It has been identified that the decisions made within the first 20% of the total design cycle time will ultimately result up to 80% of the final product cost. In this paper, we discuss appropriate and realistic metric for performance and cost trade-off analysis both at system conceptual level (up-front in the design phase) and at implementation phase for verification in the three-dimensional integration. In order to validate the methodology, two ubiquitous electronic systems are analyzed under various implementation schemes and discuss the pros and cons of each of them

    3D IC optimal layout design. A parallel and distributed topological approach

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    The task of 3D ICs layout design involves the assembly of millions of components taking into account many different requirements and constraints such as topological, wiring or manufacturability ones. It is a NP-hard problem that requires new non-deterministic and heuristic algorithms. Considering the time complexity, the commonly applied Fiduccia-Mattheyses partitioning algorithm is superior to any other local search method. Nevertheless, it can often miss to reach a quasi-optimal solution in 3D spaces. The presented approach uses an original 3D layout graph partitioning heuristics implemented with use of the extremal optimization method. The goal is to minimize the total wire-length in the chip. In order to improve the time complexity a parallel and distributed Java implementation is applied. Inside one Java Virtual Machine separate optimization algorithms are executed by independent threads. The work may also be shared among different machines by means of The Java Remote Method Invocation system.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure

    A thermal simulation process based on electrical modeling for complex interconnect, packaging, and 3DI structures

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    To reduce the product development time and achieve first-pass silicon success, fast and accurate estimation of very-large-scale integration (VLSI) interconnect, packaging and 3DI (3D integrated circuits) thermal profiles has become important. Present commercial thermal analysis tools are incapable of handling very complex structures and have integration difficulties with existing design flows. Many analytical thermal models, which could provide fast estimates, are either too specific or oversimplified. This paper highlights a methodology, which exploits electrical resistance solvers for thermal simulation, to allow acquisition of thermal profiles of complex structures with good accuracy and reasonable computation cost. Moreover, a novel accurate closed-form thermal model is developed. The model allows an isotropic or anisotropic equivalent medium to replace the noncritical back-end-of-line (BEOL) regions so that the simulation complexity is dramatically reduced. Using these techniques, this paper introduces the thermal modeling of practical complex VLSI structures to facilitate thermal guideline generation. It also demonstrates the benefits of the proposed anisotropic equivalent medium approximation for real VLSI structures in terms of the accuracy and computational cost. © 2006 IEEE.published_or_final_versio

    TSV placement optimization for liquid cooled 3D-ICs with emerging NVMs

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    Three dimensional integrated circuits (3D-ICs) are a promising solution to the performance bottleneck in planar integrated circuits. One of the salient features of 3D-ICs is their ability to integrate heterogeneous technologies such as emerging non-volatile memories (NVMs) in a single chip. However, thermal management in 3D-ICs is a significant challenge, owing to the high heat flux (~ 250 W/cm2). Several research groups have focused either on run-time or design-time mechanisms to reduce the heat flux and did not consider 3D-ICs with heterogeneous stacks. The goal of this work is to achieve a balanced thermal gradient in 3D-ICs, while reducing the peak temperatures. In this research, placement algorithms for design-time optimization and choice of appropriate cooling mechanisms for run-time modulation of temperature are proposed. Specifically, an architectural framework which introduce weight-based simulated annealing (WSA) algorithm for thermal-aware placement of through silicon vias (TSVs) with inter-tier liquid cooling is proposed for design-time. In addition, integrating a dedicated stack of emerging NVMs such as RRAM, PCRAM and STTRAM, a run-time simulation framework is developed to analyze the thermal and performance impact of these NVMs in 3D-MPSoCs with inter-tier liquid cooling. Experimental results of WSA algorithm implemented on MCNC91 and GSRC benchmarks demonstrate up to 11 K reduction in the average temperature across the 3D-IC chip. In addition, power density arrangement in WSA improved the uniformity by 5%. Furthermore, simulation results of PARSEC benchmarks with NVM L2 cache demonstrates a temperature reduction of 12.5 K (RRAM) compared to SRAM in 3D-ICs. Especially, RRAM has proved to be thermally efficient replacement for SRAM with 34% lower energy delay product (EDP) and 9.7 K average temperature reduction

    PeF: Poisson's Equation Based Large-Scale Fixed-Outline Floorplanning

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    Floorplanning is the first stage of VLSI physical design. An effective floorplanning engine definitely has positive impact on chip design speed, quality and performance. In this paper, we present a novel mathematical model to characterize non-overlapping of modules, and propose a flat fixed-outline floorplanning algorithm based on the VLSI global placement approach using Poisson's equation. The algorithm consists of global floorplanning and legalization phases. In global floorplanning, we redefine the potential energy of each module based on the novel mathematical model for characterizing non-overlapping of modules and an analytical solution of Poisson's equation. In this scheme, the widths of soft modules appear as variables in the energy function and can be optimized. Moreover, we design a fast approximate computation scheme for partial derivatives of the potential energy. In legalization, based on the defined horizontal and vertical constraint graphs, we eliminate overlaps between modules remained after global floorplanning, by modifying relative positions of modules. Experiments on the MCNC, GSRC, HB+ and ami49\_x benchmarks show that, our algorithm improves the average wirelength by at least 2\% and 5\% on small and large scale benchmarks with certain whitespace, respectively, compared to state-of-the-art floorplanners
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