433 research outputs found

    On the suitability and development of layout templates for analog layout reuse and layout-aware synthesis

    Get PDF
    Accelerating the synthesis of increasingly complex analog integrated circuits is key to bridge the widening gap between what we can integrate and what we can design while meeting ever-tightening time-to-market constraints. It is a well-known fact in the semiconductor industry that such goal can only be attained by means of adequate CAD methodologies, techniques, and accompanying tools. This is particularly important in analog physical synthesis (a.k.a. layout generation), where large sensitivities of the circuit performances to the many subtle details of layout implementation (device matching, loading and coupling effects, reliability, and area features are of utmost importance to analog designers), render complete automation a truly challenging task. To approach the problem, two directions have been traditionally considered, knowledge-based and optimization-based, both with their own pros and cons. Besides, recently reported solutions oriented to speed up the overall design flow by means of reuse-based practices or by cutting off time-consuming, error-prone spins between electrical and layout synthesis (a technique known as layout-aware synthesis), rely on a outstandingly rapid yet efficient layout generation method. This paper analyses the suitability of procedural layout generation based on templates (a knowledge-based approach) by examining the requirements that both layout reuse and layout-aware solutions impose, and how layout templates face them. The ability to capture the know-how of experienced layout designers and the turnaround times for layout instancing are considered main comparative aspects in relation to other layout generation approaches. A discussion on the benefit-cost trade-off of using layout templates is also included. In addition to this analysis, the paper delves deeper into systematic techniques to develop fully reusable layout templates for analog circuits, either for a change of the circuit sizing (i.e., layout retargeting) or a change of the fabrication process (i.e., layout migration). Several examples implemented with the Cadence's Virtuoso tool suite are provided as demonstration of the paper's contributions.Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia TEC2004-0175

    Fast and Robust Design of CMOS VCO for Optimal Performance

    Get PDF
    The exponentially growing design complexity with technological advancement calls for a large scope in the analog and mixed signal integrated circuit design automation. In the automation process, performance optimization under different environmental constraints is of prime importance. The analog integrated circuits design strongly requires addressing multiple competing performance objectives for optimization with ability to find global solutions in a constrained environment. The integrated circuit (IC) performances are significantly affected by the device, interconnect and package parasitics. Inclusion of circuit parasitics in the design phase along with performance optimization has become a bare necessity for faster prototyping. Besides this, the fabrication process variations have a predominant effect on the circuit performance, which is directly linked to the acceptability of manufactured integrated circuit chips. This necessitates a manufacturing process tolerant design. The development of analog IC design methods exploiting the computational intelligence of evolutionary techniques for optimization, integrating the circuit parasitic in the design optimization process in a more meaningful way and developing process fluctuation tolerant optimal design is the central theme of this thesis. Evolutionary computing multi-objective optimization techniques such as Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm-II and Infeasibility Driven Evolutionary Algorithm are used in this thesis for the development of parasitic aware design techniques for analog ICs. The realistic physical and process constraints are integrated in the proposed design technique. A fast design methodology based on one of the efficient optimization technique is developed and an extensive worst case process variation analysis is performed. This work also presents a novel process corner variation aware analog IC design methodology, which would effectively increase the yield of chips in the acceptable performance window. The performance of all the presented techniques is demonstrated through the application to CMOS ring oscillators, current starved and xi differential voltage controlled oscillators, designed in Cadence Virtuoso Analog Design Environment

    Circuit Design

    Get PDF
    Circuit Design = Science + Art! Designers need a skilled "gut feeling" about circuits and related analytical techniques, plus creativity, to solve all problems and to adhere to the specifications, the written and the unwritten ones. You must anticipate a large number of influences, like temperature effects, supply voltages changes, offset voltages, layout parasitics, and numerous kinds of technology variations to end up with a circuit that works. This is challenging for analog, custom-digital, mixed-signal or RF circuits, and often researching new design methods in relevant journals, conference proceedings and design tools unfortunately gives the impression that just a "wild bunch" of "advanced techniques" exist. On the other hand, state-of-the-art tools nowadays indeed offer a good cockpit to steer the design flow, which include clever statistical methods and optimization techniques.Actually, this almost presents a second breakthrough, like the introduction of circuit simulators 40 years ago! Users can now conveniently analyse all the problems (discover, quantify, verify), and even exploit them, for example for optimization purposes. Most designers are caught up on everyday problems, so we fit that "wild bunch" into a systematic approach for variation-aware design, a designer's field guide and more. That is where this book can help! Circuit Design: Anticipate, Analyze, Exploit Variations starts with best-practise manual methods and links them tightly to up-to-date automation algorithms. We provide many tractable examples and explain key techniques you have to know. We then enable you to select and setup suitable methods for each design task - knowing their prerequisites, advantages and, as too often overlooked, their limitations as well. The good thing with computers is that you yourself can often verify amazing things with little effort, and you can use software not only to your direct advantage in solving a specific problem, but also for becoming a better skilled, more experienced engineer. Unfortunately, EDA design environments are not good at all to learn about advanced numerics. So with this book we also provide two apps for learning about statistic and optimization directly with circuit-related examples, and in real-time so without the long simulation times. This helps to develop a healthy statistical gut feeling for circuit design. The book is written for engineers, students in engineering and CAD / methodology experts. Readers should have some background in standard design techniques like entering a design in a schematic capture and simulating it, and also know about major technology aspects

    Circuit Design

    Get PDF
    Circuit Design = Science + Art! Designers need a skilled "gut feeling" about circuits and related analytical techniques, plus creativity, to solve all problems and to adhere to the specifications, the written and the unwritten ones. You must anticipate a large number of influences, like temperature effects, supply voltages changes, offset voltages, layout parasitics, and numerous kinds of technology variations to end up with a circuit that works. This is challenging for analog, custom-digital, mixed-signal or RF circuits, and often researching new design methods in relevant journals, conference proceedings and design tools unfortunately gives the impression that just a "wild bunch" of "advanced techniques" exist. On the other hand, state-of-the-art tools nowadays indeed offer a good cockpit to steer the design flow, which include clever statistical methods and optimization techniques.Actually, this almost presents a second breakthrough, like the introduction of circuit simulators 40 years ago! Users can now conveniently analyse all the problems (discover, quantify, verify), and even exploit them, for example for optimization purposes. Most designers are caught up on everyday problems, so we fit that "wild bunch" into a systematic approach for variation-aware design, a designer's field guide and more. That is where this book can help! Circuit Design: Anticipate, Analyze, Exploit Variations starts with best-practise manual methods and links them tightly to up-to-date automation algorithms. We provide many tractable examples and explain key techniques you have to know. We then enable you to select and setup suitable methods for each design task - knowing their prerequisites, advantages and, as too often overlooked, their limitations as well. The good thing with computers is that you yourself can often verify amazing things with little effort, and you can use software not only to your direct advantage in solving a specific problem, but also for becoming a better skilled, more experienced engineer. Unfortunately, EDA design environments are not good at all to learn about advanced numerics. So with this book we also provide two apps for learning about statistic and optimization directly with circuit-related examples, and in real-time so without the long simulation times. This helps to develop a healthy statistical gut feeling for circuit design. The book is written for engineers, students in engineering and CAD / methodology experts. Readers should have some background in standard design techniques like entering a design in a schematic capture and simulating it, and also know about major technology aspects

    Una aproximación multinivel para el diseño sistemático de circuitos integrados de radiofrecuencia.

    Get PDF
    Tesis reducida por acuerdo de confidencialidad.En un mercado bien establecido como el de las telecomunicaciones, donde se está evolucionando hacia el 5G, se estima que hoy en día haya más de 2 Mil Millones de usuarios de Smartphones. Solo de por sí, este número es asombroso. Pero nada se compara a lo que va a pasar en un futuro muy próximo. El próximo boom tecnológico está directamente conectado con el mercado emergente del internet of things (IoT). Se estima que, en 2020, habrá 20 Mil Millones de dispositivos físicos conectados y comunicando entre sí, lo que equivale a 4 dispositivos físicos por cada persona del planeta. Debido a este boom tecnológico, van a surgir nuevas e interesantes oportunidades de inversión e investigación. De hecho, se estima que en 2020 se van a invertir cerca de 3 Mil Millones de dólares solo en este mercado, un 50% más que en 2017. Todos estos dispositivos IoT tienen que comunicarse inalámbricamente entre sí, algo en lo que los circuitos de radiofrecuencia (RF) son imprescindibles. El problema es que el diseño de circuitos RF en tecnologías nanométricas se está haciendo extraordinariamente difícil debido a su creciente complejidad. Este hecho, combinado con los críticos compromisos entre las prestaciones de estos circuitos, tales como el consumo de energía, el área de chip, la fiabilidad de los chips, etc., provocan una reducción en la productividad en su diseño, algo que supone un problema debido a las estrictas restricciones time-to-market de las empresas. Es posible concluir, por tanto, que uno de los ámbitos en los que es tremendamente importante centrarse hoy en día, es el desarrollo de nuevas metodologías de diseño de circuitos RF que permitan al diseñador obtener circuitos que cumplan con especificaciones muy exigentes en un tiempo razonable. Debido a las complejas relaciones entre prestaciones de los circuitos RF (por ejemplo, ruido de fase frente a consumo de potencia en un oscilador controlado por tensión), es fácil comprender que el diseño de circuitos RF es una tarea extremadamente complicada y debe ser soportada por herramientas de diseño asistido por ordenador (EDA). En un escenario ideal, los diseñadores tendrían una herramienta EDA que podría generar automáticamente un circuito integrado (IC), algo definido en la literatura como un compilador de silicio. Con esta herramienta ideal, el usuario sólo estipularía las especificaciones deseadas para su sistema y la herramienta generaría automáticamente el diseño del IC listo para fabricar (lo que se denomina diseño físico o layout). Sin embargo, para sistemas complejos tales como circuitos RF, dicha herramienta no existe. La tesis que se presenta, se centra exactamente en el desarrollo de nuevas metodologías de diseño capaces de mejorar el estado del arte y acortar la brecha de productividad existente en el diseño de circuitos RF. Por lo tanto, con el fin de establecer una nueva metodología de diseño para sistemas RF, se han de abordar distintos cuellos de botella del diseño RF con el fin de diseñar con éxito dichos circuitos. El diseño de circuitos RF ha seguido tradicionalmente una estrategia basada en ecuaciones analíticas derivadas específicamente para cada circuito y que exige una gran experiencia del diseñador. Esto significa que el diseñador plantea una estrategia para diseñar el circuito manualmente y, tras varias iteraciones, normalmente logra que el circuito cumpla con las especificaciones deseadas. No obstante, conseguir diseños con prestaciones óptimas puede ser muy difícil utilizando esta metodología, ya que el espacio de diseño (o búsqueda) es enorme (decenas de variables de diseño con cientos de combinaciones diferentes). Aunque el diseñador llegue a una solución que cumpla todas las especificaciones, nunca estará seguro de que el diseño al que ha llegado es el mejor (por ejemplo, el que consuma menos energía). Hoy en día, las técnicas basadas en optimización se están utilizando con el objetivo de ayudar al diseñador a encontrar automáticamente zonas óptimas de diseño. El uso de metodologías basadas en optimización intenta superar las limitaciones de metodologías previas mediante el uso de algoritmos que son capaces de realizar una amplia exploración del espacio de diseño para encontrar diseños de prestaciones óptimas. La filosofía de estas metodologías es que el diseñador elige las especificaciones del circuito, selecciona la topología y ejecuta una optimización que devuelve el valor de cada componente del circuito óptimo (por ejemplo, anchos y longitudes de los transistores) de forma automática. Además, mediante el uso de estos algoritmos, la exploración del espacio de diseño permite estudiar los distintos y complejos compromisos entre prestaciones de los circuitos de RF. Sin embargo, la problemática del diseño de RF es mucho más amplia que la selección del tamaño de cada componente. Con el objetivo de conseguir algo similar a un compilador de silicio para circuitos RF, la metodología desarrollada en la tesis, tiene que ser capaz de asegurar un diseño robusto que permita al diseñador tener éxito frente a medidas experimentales, y, además, las optimizaciones tienen que ser elaboradas en tiempos razonables para que se puedan cumplir las estrictas restricciones time-to-market de las empresas. Para conseguir esto, en esta tesis, hay cuatro aspectos clave que son abordados en la metodología: 1. Los inductores integrados todavía son un cuello de botella en circuitos RF. Los parásitos que aparecen a altas frecuencias hacen que las prestaciones de los inductores sean muy difíciles de modelar. Existe, por tanto, la necesidad de desarrollar nuevos modelos más precisos, pero también muy eficientes computacionalmente que puedan ser incluidos en metodologías que usen algoritmos de optimización. 2. Las variaciones de proceso son fenómenos que afectan mucho las tecnologías nanométricas, así que para obtener un diseño robusto es necesario tener en cuenta estas variaciones durante la optimización. 3. En las metodologías de diseño manual, los parásitos de layout normalmente no se tienen en cuenta en una primera fase de diseño. En ese sentido, cuando el diseñador pasa del diseño topológico al diseño físico, puede que su circuito deje de cumplir con las especificaciones. Estas consideraciones físicas del circuito deben ser tenidas en cuenta en las primeras etapas de diseño. Por lo tanto, con el fin de abordar este problema, la metodología desarrollada tiene que tener en cuenta los parásitos de la realización física desde una primera fase de optimización. 4. Una vez se ha desarrollado la capacidad de generar distintos circuitos RF de forma automática utilizando esta metodología (amplificadores de bajo ruido, osciladores controlados por tensión y mezcladores), en la tesis se aborda también la composición de un sistema RF con una aproximación multinivel, donde el proceso empieza por el diseño de los componentes pasivos y termina componiendo distintos circuitos, construyendo un sistema (por ejemplo, un receptor de radiofrecuencia). La tesis aborda los cuatro problemas descritos anteriormente con éxito, y ha avanzado considerablemente en el estado del arte de metodologías de diseño automáticas/sistemáticas para circuitos RF.Premio Extraordinario de Doctorado U

    A Review of Bayesian Methods in Electronic Design Automation

    Full text link
    The utilization of Bayesian methods has been widely acknowledged as a viable solution for tackling various challenges in electronic integrated circuit (IC) design under stochastic process variation, including circuit performance modeling, yield/failure rate estimation, and circuit optimization. As the post-Moore era brings about new technologies (such as silicon photonics and quantum circuits), many of the associated issues there are similar to those encountered in electronic IC design and can be addressed using Bayesian methods. Motivated by this observation, we present a comprehensive review of Bayesian methods in electronic design automation (EDA). By doing so, we hope to equip researchers and designers with the ability to apply Bayesian methods in solving stochastic problems in electronic circuits and beyond.Comment: 24 pages, a draft version. We welcome comments and feedback, which can be sent to [email protected]

    A Structured Design Methodology for High Performance VLSI Arrays

    Get PDF
    abstract: The geometric growth in the integrated circuit technology due to transistor scaling also with system-on-chip design strategy, the complexity of the integrated circuit has increased manifold. Short time to market with high reliability and performance is one of the most competitive challenges. Both custom and ASIC design methodologies have evolved over the time to cope with this but the high manual labor in custom and statistic design in ASIC are still causes of concern. This work proposes a new circuit design strategy that focuses mostly on arrayed structures like TLB, RF, Cache, IPCAM etc. that reduces the manual effort to a great extent and also makes the design regular, repetitive still achieving high performance. The method proposes making the complete design custom schematic but using the standard cells. This requires adding some custom cells to the already exhaustive library to optimize the design for performance. Once schematic is finalized, the designer places these standard cells in a spreadsheet, placing closely the cells in the critical paths. A Perl script then generates Cadence Encounter compatible placement file. The design is then routed in Encounter. Since designer is the best judge of the circuit architecture, placement by the designer will allow achieve most optimal design. Several designs like IPCAM, issue logic, TLB, RF and Cache designs were carried out and the performance were compared against the fully custom and ASIC flow. The TLB, RF and Cache were the part of the HEMES microprocessor.Dissertation/ThesisPh.D. Electrical Engineering 201

    Millimeter-Wave CMOS Digitally Controlled Oscillators for Automotive Radars

    Get PDF
    All-Digital-Phase-Locked-Loops (ADPLLs) are ideal for integrated circuit implementations and effectively generate frequency chirps for Frequency-Modulated-Continuous-Wave (FMCW) radar. This dissertation discusses the design requirements for integrated ADPLL, which is used as chirp synthesizer for FMCW automotive radar and focuses on an analysis of the ADPLL performance based on the Digitally-Controlled-Oscillator (DCO) design parameters and the ADPLL configuration. The fundamental principles of the FMCW radar are reviewed and the importance of linear DCO for reliable operation of the synthesizer is discussed. A novel DCO, which achieves linear frequency tuning steps is designed by arranging the available minimum Metal-Oxide-Metal (MoM) capacitor in unique confconfigurations. The DCO prototype fabricated in 65 nm CMOS fullls the requirements of the 77 GHz automotive radar. The resultant linear DCO characterization can effectively drive a chirp generation system in complete FMCW automotive radar synthesizer
    corecore