2. transistors and layout

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2. Transistors and Layout •Fabrication techniques •Transistors and wires •Design rule for layout •Basic concepts and tools for Layout

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2. Transistors and Layout. Fabrication techniques Transistors and wires Design rule for layout Basic concepts and tools for Layout. 2.2 Fabrication Processes 2.2.1 Overview. Minimum channel length=0.5μm λ=0.25μm ---- 0.5μProcess. 2.2.2 Fabrication Steps. Photoresist: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 2. Transistors and Layout

2. Transistors and Layout

•Fabrication techniques

•Transistors and wires

•Design rule for layout

•Basic concepts and tools

for Layout

Page 2: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.2 Fabrication Processes2.2.1 Overview

Minimum channel length=0.5μmλ=0.25μm ---- 0.5μProcess

Page 3: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.2.2 Fabrication Steps

Photoresist: mask pattern SiO2 pattern• Features are patterned on the wafer

by a photolithographic process;

• The wafer is covered by light sensitive material “photoresist”.

• It is exposed to light with proper mask pattern.

• The patterns left by the photoresist can be used to control where SiO2 is grown on materials.

Page 4: 2. Transistors and Layout

1) Put tubs into wafer.2) Form an oxide

covering on wafer and the polysilicon wires.

3) Diffusion (wires) (polysilicon masks the formation of diffusion wires.=self-aligned)

4) Metal connections are made with filling cuts (via) to make connections after another oxide layer is deposited.

Steps in processing a wafer

(twin tub process)

Page 5: 2. Transistors and Layout

• “MOS” : sandwich of Metal, Oxide, and Silicon (semiconductor substrate).

• The positive voltage on the polysilicon forms gate attracts the elctoron at the top of the channel.

• The threshold voltage (Vt) collects enough electrons at the channel boundary to form an inversion layer (p -> n).

2.3 Transistors2.3.1 Structures of Transistors

Gate Oxide

Field Oxide

Page 6: 2. Transistors and Layout
Page 7: 2. Transistors and Layout

Layout of n-type and p-type transistors

nMOS pMOS nMOS with wide width

Page 8: 2. Transistors and Layout

Linear region

Saturated region

])[('2

1dstgsd VVV

L

WkI 2

]2

1)[(' dsdstgsd VVVV

L

WkI 2

2.3.2 A Simple Transistor Model

tgsds VVV

tgsds VVV

Page 9: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Cg: gate capacitance= 0.9fF/μm2 (2 μprocess)

• Cgs/Cgd: source/drain overlap capacitance=Cox W (Cox: gate/bulk overlap capacitance)

2.3.3 Transistor Parasitics

Page 10: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Tub Ties

(substrate bias)

2.2.4 Tub Layout and Latchup

Page 11: 2. Transistors and Layout

Tubo Layout and Latchup

Page 12: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.2.5 Advanced Transistor Characteristics

Parallel plate oxide capacitance per unit areaCox = εox/xox

whereεox= permittivity of silicon dioxide = (3.9 εo)xox = oxide thickness

Page 13: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Q(y)=Cox(Vgs-Vt-Vy)• dV=Iydy/μQ(y)W

Shape of the inversion layer as a function of gate voltage

Page 14: 2. Transistors and Layout
Page 15: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Wires of different layers are insulated by an additional layer of SiO2.

• Vias are cuts in the insulating SiO2.

2.4 Wires and Vias

Page 16: 2. Transistors and Layout

• The mean time for failure (MTF)MTF=j-ne(Q/kT).

j:current densityn:constant(1~2)Q:diffusion activation

energy.

• jMetal < 1.5mA/μm width

(4.5mA by 3μm width wire)

MTF for metal wires

Page 17: 2. Transistors and Layout

Cj0 = εSi/xd

Depletion region capacitance

Cj0 : zero-bias depletion capacitance εSi : permittivity of siliconxd : thickness of depletion region

depending on applied voltage.

2.4.1 Wire Parasitics

Page 18: 2. Transistors and Layout
Page 19: 2. Transistors and Layout

0.3fF/cm2

(overlapping area)

0.1fF/cm2

metal 3

Depending on distance

Page 20: 2. Transistors and Layout

0.5 μm process (λ=0.25 μm) 1) Unit bottomwall capacitance C1_0=0.6fF/μm2

Area=3 μm x 0.75 μm+1.0 μm x 1.0 μm=3.25 μm2 (3.25 λ2μm2) C1=0.6fF(/ λ2) x 3.25 (xλ2)=1.95 fF2 )   Unit sidewall capacitance C2_0=0.2fF/μm Perimeter=0.75+4+1+1+0.25+3=10 μm C2=0.2fFx10=2fF3) Metal capacitance C3_0=0.04fF/ μm2 Area=2.5 μm x 1.5 μm=3.75μm2

C3=0.04fFx3.75=0.15fF4) Metal fringe capacitance C4_0=0.09fF /μm Perimeter=(2.5+1.5)x2=8 μm C4=0.09fFx8=0.72fF5) Total capacitance=1.95+2+0.15+0.72=4.85fF

Example of Parasitic capacitance measurement

Page 21: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Ohms per square [Ω/ ]

= Sheet resistance

Example of Resistance Measurement

0.5 μm process (λ=0.25 μm) 1) Polysilicon resistance

Rpoly=[18/3]x4[Ω/ ]=24 Ω2) n-diffusion resistance

[(9/3)+(6/3)+1/2]x2 [Ω/ ]=11 Ω

Page 22: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Problems when wire are too wide or narrow.

• Polysilicon should extend beyond boundary of difusion area.

• The cut of via must connect elements and not mistakenly connect to substrate or others.

2.5 Design Rule2.5.1 Fabrication Errors

Page 23: 2. Transistors and Layout

All physical parameters to be shrunk by a factor 1/x• Lengths: W–› W/x• Widths: L –› L/x• Vertical dimensions

such as oxide thickness: tox –› tox/x

• Doping concentrations: Nd –› Nd/x

• Supply voltages: VDD-VSS –› (VDD-VSS)

Id’/Id =1/xCg’/Cg =1/x(C’V’/I’)/(CV/I) = 1/x

2.5.2 Scalable Design Rules

Page 24: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Metal1 min-width=3λ, min-sep= 3λ

• Metal2 min-width=3λ, min-sep= 3λ

• poly min-width=2λ, min-sep= 2λ

• n, p-dif min-width=3λ, min-sep(n-n, p-

p)= 3λ (n-p 10λ)

• Tube min-width=10λ, min-distance(tub- active)= 5λ

• Transistors min-W/L=3λ/2λ poly extension= 2λdif extension= 2λactive-poly/metal via=λmin-sep(tran.-tran.)= 2λmin-sep(tran-tub.tie) = 3λ

2.5.2 SCMOS Design Rules

Page 25: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Vias cuts=2λx2λ via =4λx4λ

n,p.diff-poly, poly-metal1n,p.diff-metal1, metal1-metal2

• Tub ties cuts =2λx2λ metal =4λx4λ

• Metal1 min-width=6λ, min-sep= 4λ available via to

metal2• Special rules

cut to poly – poly sep =3λpoly.cut-dif.cut sep=2λcut-tran.active sep =2λdif.cut-dif sep = 4λmeta2.via must not be directly over polysilicon

• Prohibit small negative features.

SCMOS Design Rules (continue)

Page 26: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.5.4 Typical Process Parameters

Page 27: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Net: a set of electrical connections

• Wire: a set of point-point connections.

• Wire segment: a straight section of wire.

• Circuit schematic:n-type, p-type transistors withW/L

2.6 Layout Design and Tools2.6.1 Layouts for Circuits

Page 28: 2. Transistors and Layout

Design of an inverter layout

Page 29: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.6.2 Stick Diagram

Page 30: 2. Transistors and Layout

Rules for possible interaction between layers

Page 31: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.6.3 Hierarchical Stick Diagrams

Page 32: 2. Transistors and Layout

Example of stick design of a multiplexer

Page 33: 2. Transistors and Layout

Example of stick design of a multiplexer (continue)

Page 34: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Layout Editors: intensive graphic program for manual layout

symbolic layouts: more detail than stick diagram

• Design Rule Checkers (DRC):check items: minimum spacing

minimum size combination of layers

• Circuit Extractions:extension of DRC (identify transistors and

vias)a complete job of compnents and wire

extraction to produce a net list from layout.

2.6.4 Layout Design and Analysis Tools

Page 35: 2. Transistors and Layout

Basic Operation of Circuit ExtractionNOT, AND, OR between 2 masksgrow and shrink operation over

masks.

1) extraction of transistors AND(poly - p/n.diff) 2) identify via

grow cutAND(grown-cut, metal, poly)

Circuit Extraction

Page 36: 2. Transistors and Layout

• Flattening is required to make extracted netlist small by making correspondence between net names in cells and nets int the top-level components.

Hierarchical Circuit Extraction

Page 37: 2. Transistors and Layout

2.6.5 Automatic Layout

Cell generator (or macrocell generator)parameterized layout

Page 38: 2. Transistors and Layout

Standard Cell Placement and Routing

Logic gates, latches, flip-flops, or larger logic

Routingchannels

Page 39: 2. Transistors and Layout

An Example of Standard Cell Layout

• 2 stagesplacementrouting