11,246 research outputs found

    Repeater insertion to minimise delay in coupled interconnects.

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    Signalling over long interconnect is a dominant issue in electronic chip design in current technologies, with the device sizes getting smaller and smaller and the circuits becoming ever larger. Repeater insertion is a well established technique to minimise the propagation delay over long resistive interconnect. In deep sub-micron technologies, as the wires are spaced closer and closer together and signal rise and fall times go into the sub-nano second region, the coupling between interconnects assumes great significance. The resulting crosstalk has implications on the data throughput and on signal integrity. Depending on the data correlation on the coupled lines, the delay can either decrease or increase. In this paper we attempt to quantify the effect of worst-case capacitive crosstalk in parallel buses and look at how it affects repeater insertion in particular. We develop analytic expressions for the delay, buffer size and number that are suitable in a-priori timing analyses and signal integrity estimations. All equations are checked against a dynamic circuit simulator (SPECTRE

    Charge fluctuations in open chaotic cavities

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    We present a discussion of the charge response and the charge fluctuations of mesoscopic chaotic cavities in terms of a generalized Wigner-Smith matrix. The Wigner-Smith matrix is well known in investigations of time-delay of quantum scattering. It is expressed in terms of the scattering matrix and its derivatives with energy. We consider a similar matrix but instead of an energy derivative we investigate the derivative with regard to the electric potential. The resulting matrix is then the operator of charge. If this charge operator is combined with a self-consistent treatment of Coulomb interaction, the charge operator determines the capacitance of the system, the non-dissipative ac-linear response, the RC-time with a novel charge relaxation resistance, and in the presence of transport a resistance that governs the displacement currents induced into a nearby conductor. In particular these capacitances and resistances determine the relaxation rate and dephasing rate of a nearby qubit (a double quantum dot). We discuss the role of screening of mesoscopic chaotic detectors. Coulomb interaction effects in quantum pumping and in photon assisted electron-hole shot noise are treated similarly. For the latter we present novel results for chaotic cavities with non-ideal leads.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures;v.2--minor changes; contribution for the special issue of J. Phys. A on "Trends in Quantum Chaotic Scattering

    Product assurance technology for custom LSI/VLSI electronics

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    The technology for obtaining custom integrated circuits from CMOS-bulk silicon foundries using a universal set of layout rules is presented. The technical efforts were guided by the requirement to develop a 3 micron CMOS test chip for the Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite (CRRES). This chip contains both analog and digital circuits. The development employed all the elements required to obtain custom circuits from silicon foundries, including circuit design, foundry interfacing, circuit test, and circuit qualification

    Irreversibility and Dephasing from Vacuum Fluctuations

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    We investigate the role of vacuum (zero-point) fluctuations in generating decoherence in a number of simple models. First we discuss a harmonic oscillator coupled to a semi-infinite elastic string and discuss the irreversible nature of such a bath. We investigate the fluctuations in energy of the oscillator and discuss the trace the oscillator leaves in the bath. Most of the work deals with two-level systems coupled to a bosonic bath (a transmission line). For two-level systems with a Hamiltonian that commutes with the total Hamiltonian (system plus coupling plus bath) the ground state is a pure state. The energy of the system is a constant of motion. For the general case, the energy of the two-level system fluctuates, and the ground state is only partially coherent. A particular realization of such a two level system consists of a mesoscopic ring with a quantum dot coupled capacitively to a transmission line. In the presence of an Aharonov-Bohm flux this system exhibits a persistent current. This current is a measure of the coherence of the ground state. As a function of the coupling strength the ground state undergoes a crossover from a state characterized by a time-averaged persistent current which is much larger than its time-averaged mean squared fluctuations to a state characterized by a persistent current with an average amplitude that is much smaller than its mean squared fluctuations.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures: submitted for "Complexity from Microscopic to Macroscopic Scales: Coherence and Large Deviations", NATO ASI, Geilo, Norway, April 17-27 (2001) edited by Arne T. Skjeltorp and Tamas Vicsek, (Kluwer, Dordrecht

    A 24-GHz SiGe Phased-Array Receiver—LO Phase-Shifting Approach

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    A local-oscillator phase-shifting approach is introduced to implement a fully integrated 24-GHz phased-array receiver using an SiGe technology. Sixteen phases of the local oscillator are generated in one oscillator core, resulting in a raw beam-forming accuracy of 4 bits. These phases are distributed to all eight receiving paths of the array by a symmetric network. The appropriate phase for each path is selected using high-frequency analog multiplexers. The raw beam-steering resolution of the array is better than 10 [degrees] for a forward-looking angle, while the array spatial selectivity, without any amplitude correction, is better than 20 dB. The overall gain of the array is 61 dB, while the array improves the input signal-to-noise ratio by 9 dB

    Modeling and Analysis of Noise and Interconnects for On-Chip Communication Link Design

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    This thesis considers modeling and analysis of noise and interconnects in onchip communication. Besides transistor count and speed, the capabilities of a modern design are often limited by on-chip communication links. These links typically consist of multiple interconnects that run parallel to each other for long distances between functional or memory blocks. Due to the scaling of technology, the interconnects have considerable electrical parasitics that affect their performance, power dissipation and signal integrity. Furthermore, because of electromagnetic coupling, the interconnects in the link need to be considered as an interacting group instead of as isolated signal paths. There is a need for accurate and computationally effective models in the early stages of the chip design process to assess or optimize issues affecting these interconnects. For this purpose, a set of analytical models is developed for on-chip data links in this thesis. First, a model is proposed for modeling crosstalk and intersymbol interference. The model takes into account the effects of inductance, initial states and bit sequences. Intersymbol interference is shown to affect crosstalk voltage and propagation delay depending on bus throughput and the amount of inductance. Next, a model is proposed for the switching current of a coupled bus. The model is combined with an existing model to evaluate power supply noise. The model is then applied to reduce both functional crosstalk and power supply noise caused by a bus as a trade-off with time. The proposed reduction method is shown to be effective in reducing long-range crosstalk noise. The effects of process variation on encoded signaling are then modeled. In encoded signaling, the input signals to a bus are encoded using additional signaling circuitry. The proposed model includes variation in both the signaling circuitry and in the wires to calculate the total delay variation of a bus. The model is applied to study level-encoded dual-rail and 1-of-4 signaling. In addition to regular voltage-mode and encoded voltage-mode signaling, current-mode signaling is a promising technique for global communication. A model for energy dissipation in RLC current-mode signaling is proposed in the thesis. The energy is derived separately for the driver, wire and receiver termination.Siirretty Doriast

    Antibunched photons emitted by a dc-biased Josephson junction

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    We show experimentally that a dc biased Josephson junction in series with a high-enough-impedance microwave resonator emits antibunched photons. Our resonator is made of a simple microfabricated spiral coil that resonates at 4.4 GHz and reaches a 1.97kΩ characteristic impedance. The second order correlation function of the power leaking out of the resonator drops down to 0.3 at zero delay, which demonstrates the antibunching of the photons emitted by the circuit at a rate of 6×10^7 photons per second. Results are found in quantitative agreement with our theoretical predictions. This simple scheme could offer an efficient and bright single-photon source in the microwave domain
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