113 research outputs found

    A Fast Hierarchical Algorithm for Three-Dimensional Capacitance Extraction

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    Abstract-The authors present a new algorithm for computing the capacitance of three-dimensional electrical conductors of complex structures. The new algorithm is significantly faster and uses much less memory than previous best algorithms and is kernel independent. The new algorithm is based on a hierarchical algorithm for the -body problem and is an acceleration of the boundary element metho

    Modeling and Simulation of Advanced Nano-Scale Very Large Scale Integration Circuits

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    With VLSI(very large scale integration) technology shrinking and frequency increasing, the minimum feature size is smaller than sub-wavelength lithography wavelength, and the manufacturing cost is significantly increasing in order to achieve a good yield. Consequently design companies need to further lower power consumption. All these factors bring new challenges; simulation and modeling need to handle more design constraints, and need to work with modern manufacturing processes. In this dissertation, algorithms and new methodology are presented for these problems: (1) fast and accurate capacitance extraction, (2) capacitance extraction considering lithography effect, (3) BEOL(back end of line) impact on SRAM(static random access memory) performance and yield, and (4) new physical synthesis optimization flow is used to shed area and reduce the power consumption. Interconnect parasitic extraction plays an important role in simulation, verification, optimization. A fast and accurate parasitic extraction algorithm is always important for a current design automation tool. In this dissertation, we propose a new algorithm named HybCap to efficiently handle multiple planar, conformal or embedded dielectric media. From experimental results, the new method is significantly faster than the previous one, 77X speedup, and has a 99% memory savings compared with FastCap and 2X speedup, and has an 80% memory savings compared with PHiCap for complex dielectric media. In order to consider lithography effect in the existing LPE(Layout Parasitic Extraction) flow, a modified LPE flow and fast algorithms for interconnect parasitic extraction are proposed in this dissertation. Our methodology is efficient, compatible with the existing design flow and has high accuracy. With the new enhanced parasitic extraction flow, simulation of BEOL effect on SRAM performance becomes possible. A SRAM simulation model with internal cell interconnect RC parasitics is proposed in order to study the BEOL lithography impact. The impact of BEOL variations on memory designs are systematically evaluated in this dissertation. The results show the power estimation with our SRAM model is more accurate. Finally, a new optimization flow to shed area blow in the design synthesis flow is proposed, which is one level beyond simulation and modeling to directly optimize design, but is also built upon accurate simulations and modeling. Two simple, yet efficient, buffering and gate sizing techniques are presented. On 20 industrial designs in 45nm and 65nm, our new work achieves 12.5% logic area growth reduction, 5.8% total area reduction, 10% wirelength reduction and 770 ps worst slack improvement on average

    3D Capacitance Extraction With the Method of Moments

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    In this thesis, the Method of Moments has been applied to calculate capacitance between two arbitrary 3D metal conductors or a capacitance matrix for a 3D multi-conductor system. Capacitance extraction has found extensive use for systems involving sets of long par- allel transmission lines in multi-dielectric environment as well as integrated circuit package including three-dimensional conductors located on parallel planes. This paper starts by reviewing fundamental aspects of transient electro-magnetics followed by the governing dif- ferential and integral equations to motivate the application of numerical methods as Method of Moments(MoM), Finite Element Method(FEM), etc. Among these numerical tools, the surface-based integral-equation methodology - MoM is ideally suited to address the prob- lem. It leads to a well-conditioned system with reduced size, as compared to volumetric methods. In this dissertation, the MoM Surface Integral Equation (SIE)-based modeling approach is developed to realize electrostatic capacitance extraction for 3D geometry. MAT- LAB is employed to validate its e?ciency and e?ectiveness along with design of a friendly GUI. As a base example, a parallel-plate capacitor is considered. We evaluate the accu- racy of the method by comparison with FEM simulations as well as the corresponding quasi-analytical solution. We apply this method to the parallel-plate square capacitor and demonstrate how far could the undergraduate result 0C = A ? =d\u27 be from reality. For the completion of the solver, the same method is applied to the calculation of line capacitance for two- and multi-conductor 2D transmission lines

    Fast methods for full-wave electromagnetic simulations of integrated circuit package modules

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    Fast methods for the electromagnetic simulation of integrated circuit (IC) package modules through model order reduction are demonstrated. The 3D integration of multiple functional IC chip/package modules on a single platform gives rise to geometrically complex structures with strong electromagnetic phenomena. This motivates our work on a fast full-wave solution for the analysis of such modules, thus contributing to the reduction in design cycle time without loss of accuracy. Traditionally, fast design approaches consider only approximate electromagnetic effects, giving rise to lumped-circuit models, and therefore may fail to accurately capture the signal integrity, power integrity, and electromagnetic interference effects. As part of this research, a second order frequency domain full-wave susceptance element equivalent circuit (SEEC) model will be extracted from a given structural layout. The model so obtained is suitably reduced using model order reduction techniques. As part of this effort, algorithms are developed to produce stable and passive reduced models of the original system, enabling fast frequency sweep analysis. Two distinct projection-based second order model reduction approaches will be considered: 1) matching moments, and 2) matching Laguerre coefficients, of the original system's transfer function. Further, the selection of multiple frequency shifts in these schemes to produce a globally representative model is also studied. Use of a second level preconditioned Krylov subspace process allows for a memory-efficient way to address large size problems.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Swaminathan Madhavan; Committee Member: Papapolymerou John; Committee Member: Chatterjee Abhijit; Committee Member: Peterson Andrew; Committee Member: Sitaraman Sures

    The Unified-FFT Method for Fast Solution of Integral Equations as Applied to Shielded-Domain Electromagnetics

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    Electromagnetic (EM) solvers are widely used within computer-aided design (CAD) to improve and ensure success of circuit designs. Unfortunately, due to the complexity of Maxwell\u27s equations, they are often computationally expensive. While considerable progress has been made in the realm of speed-enhanced EM solvers, these fast solvers generally achieve their results through methods that introduce additional error components by way of geometric approximations, sparse-matrix approximations, multilevel decomposition of interactions, and more. This work introduces the new method, Unified-FFT (UFFT). A derivative of method of moments, UFFT scales as O(N log N), and achieves fast analysis by the unique combination of FFT-enhanced matrix fill operations (MFO) with FFT-enhanced matrix solve operations (MSO). In this work, two versions of UFFT are developed, UFFT-Precorrected (UFFT-P) and UFFT-Grid Totalizing (UFFT-GT). UFFT-P uses precorrected FFT for MSO and allows the use of basis functions that do not conform to a regular grid. UFFT-GT uses conjugate gradient FFT for MSO and features the capability of reducing the error of the solution down to machine precision. The main contribution of UFFT-P is a fast solver, which utilizes FFT for both MFO and MSO. It is demonstrated in this work to not only provide simulation results for large problems considerably faster than state of the art commercial tools, but also to be capable of simulating geometries which are too complex for conventional simulation. In UFFT-P these benefits come at the expense of a minor penalty to accuracy. UFFT-GT contains further contributions as it demonstrates that such a fast solver can be accurate to numerical precision as compared to a full, direct analysis. It is shown to provide even more algorithmic efficiency and faster performance than UFFT-P. UFFT-GT makes an additional contribution in that it is developed not only for planar geometries, but also for the case of multilayered dielectrics and metallization. This functionality is particularly useful for multi-layered printed circuit boards (PCBs) and integrated circuits (ICs). Finally, UFFT-GT contributes a 3D planar solver, which allows for current to be discretized in the z-direction. This allows for similar fast and accurate simulation with the inclusion of some 3D features, such as vias connecting metallization planes

    Validación analítica y experimental de un software extractor de capacitancias de código abierto

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    Este trabajo se halla enmarcado en un proyecto de desarrollo de instrumental de laboratorio para sensado de biomasa por medio de espectroscopia dieléctrica (ED). Resulta entonces una búsqueda de cimientos, sobre los cuales se puedan ensayar en simulación distintas geometrías y configuraciones de electrodos. Para esto resulta indispendable contar con programas informáticos de diseño CAD, simuladores de efecto de campo eléctrico y aplicaciones para resolver matrices de capacitancia. Las características de FasterCap (FC) lo tornan candidato para abordar esta última cuestión. Es un programa versátil, potente, y que hereda las prestaciones y precisión de su antecesor, FastCap2.Facultad de Ingenierí

    Towards a more efficient spectrum usage: spectrum sensing and cognitive radio techniques

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    The traditional approach of dealing with spectrum management in wireless communications has been through the definition on a license user granted exclusive exploitation rights for a specific frequency.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Modeling EMI Resulting from a Signal Via Transition Through Power/Ground Layers

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    Signal transitioning through layers on vias are very common in multi-layer printed circuit board (PCB) design. For a signal via transitioning through the internal power and ground planes, the return current must switch from one reference plane to another reference plane. The discontinuity of the return current at the via excites the power and ground planes, and results in noise on the power bus that can lead to signal integrity, as well as EMI problems. Numerical methods, such as the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD), Moment of Methods (MoM), and partial element equivalent circuit (PEEC) method, were employed herein to study this problem. The modeled results are supported by measurements. In addition, a common EMI mitigation approach of adding a decoupling capacitor was investigated with the FDTD method

    Numerical and Analytical Methods in Electromagnetics

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    Like all branches of physics and engineering, electromagnetics relies on mathematical methods for modeling, simulation, and design procedures in all of its aspects (radiation, propagation, scattering, imaging, etc.). Originally, rigorous analytical techniques were the only machinery available to produce any useful results. In the 1960s and 1970s, emphasis was placed on asymptotic techniques, which produced approximations of the fields for very high frequencies when closed-form solutions were not feasible. Later, when computers demonstrated explosive progress, numerical techniques were utilized to develop approximate results of controllable accuracy for arbitrary geometries. In this Special Issue, the most recent advances in the aforementioned approaches are presented to illustrate the state-of-the-art mathematical techniques in electromagnetics
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