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Title: VLSI sytem Design Lecture 1: Introduction Outline Syllabus


1
VLSIsytem DesignLecture 1 Introduction

2
Outline
  • Syllabus
  • Logistics (time, place, instructor, website,
    textbook)
  • Grading
  • Topics
  • Outcomes
  • Introduction to VLSI
  • A brief history
  • MOS transistors
  • CMOS logic gates

3
Course Information (1)
  • Time and Place
  • Tue/Thu 710-825pm, ENGR 1.250
  • Instructor
  • Hasina Huq
  • hhuq_at_utpa.edu
  • ENGR 3.278, 384-5017
  • Office hours TWR 10.30-12.30 pm or walk in or
    by appointment

4
Course Information (2)
  • Prerequisites
  • Digital logic (ELEE2330) and Solid state devices
    (ELEE 4328), or equivalent
  • I assume you know the following topics
  • Boolean algebra, logic gates, etc.
  • Undergraduate physics Ohms law, resistors,
    capacitors, etc.
  • Undergraduate math calculus

5
Course Information (3)
  • Text Ken Martin, Digital Integrated Circuits
    design, Oxford, 1999
  • Reference Class handouts
  • Cadence manual set
  • H.Craig Casey, Jr., Devices for Integrated
    Circuits, John-Wiley,
  • Baker, Li, Boyce, CMOS Circuit Design, Layout,
    and Simulation, IEEE Press, 1998.

6
Course Information (4)
  • Grading
  • 50 project
  • 10 homework
  • 10 mid-term exam
  • 30 final exam
  • Laboratory Based Projects (3) 50 (10, 10, 30)
  • Final project include design, report and
    presentation
  • Total 100

7
Course Information (5)
  • Topics
  • NMOS,POMS CMOS
  • logic gate
  • fabrication and layout
  • MOS transistor modeling
  • Performance analysis for VLSI circuits
  • Combinational circuits
  • Sequential circuits
  • Memory circuits
  • Low power design
  • Testing
  • System on chip

8
Course Information (6)
  • Outcomes
  • Use the Electric CAD tool to design a chip
    including
  • Schematic entry
  • Layout
  • Transistor-level cell design
  • Gate-level logic design
  • Hierarchical design
  • Switch-level simulation (IRSIM)
  • Design rule checking (DRC)
  • Electrical rule checking (ERC)
  • HDL design (Verilog)
  • Place and route
  • Pad frame generation and routing

9
Course Information (7)
  • Outcomes
  • Estimate and optimize combinational circuit delay
    using RC delay models and logical effort
  • Design high speed and low power logic circuits
  • Understand interconnect and reliability issues
  • Design functional units including adders,
    multipliers, ROMs, SRAMs, and PLAs
  • Beware of the VLSI trends and challenges

10
Introduction
  • Integrated circuits many transistors on one
    chip.
  • Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) very many
  • Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor
  • Fast, cheap, low power transistors

11
  • Today How to build your own simple CMOS chip
  • CMOS transistors
  • Building logic gates from transistors
  • Transistor layout and fabrication
  • Rest of the course How to build a good CMOS chip

12
p-n Junctions
  • A junction between p-type and n-type
    semiconductor forms a diode.
  • Current flows only in one direction

13
nMOS Transistor
  • Four terminals gate, source, drain, body
  • Gate oxide body stack looks like a capacitor
  • Gate and body are conductors
  • SiO2 (oxide) is a very good insulator
  • Called metal oxide semiconductor (MOS)
    capacitor
  • Even though gate is
  • no longer made of metal

14
nMOS Operation
  • Body is usually tied to ground (0 V)
  • When the gate is at a low voltage
  • P-type body is at low voltage
  • Source-body and drain-body diodes are OFF
  • No current flows, transistor is OFF

15
nMOS Operation Cont.
  • When the gate is at a high voltage
  • Positive charge on gate of MOS capacitor
  • Negative charge attracted to body
  • Inverts a channel under gate to n-type
  • Now current can flow through n-type silicon from
    source through channel to drain, transistor is ON

16
pMOS Transistor
  • Similar, but doping and voltages reversed
  • Body tied to high voltage (VDD)
  • Gate low transistor ON
  • Gate high transistor OFF
  • Bubble indicates inverted behavior

17
Fabrication Steps
  • Start with blank wafer
  • Build inverter from the bottom up
  • First step will be to form the n-well
  • Cover wafer with protective layer of SiO2 (oxide)
  • Remove layer where n-well should be built
  • Implant or diffuse n dopants into exposed wafer
  • Strip off SiO2

18
Fabrication Steps
  • Start with blank wafer
  • Build inverter from the bottom up
  • First step will be to form the n-well
  • Cover wafer with protective layer of SiO2 (oxide)
  • Remove layer where n-well should be built
  • Implant or diffuse n dopants into exposed wafer
  • Strip off SiO2

19
Oxidation
  • Grow SiO2 on top of Si wafer
  • 900 1200 C with H2O or O2 in oxidation furnace

20
Photoresist
  • Spin on photoresist
  • Photoresist is a light-sensitive organic polymer
  • Softens where exposed to light

21
Lithography
  • Expose photoresist through n-well mask
  • Strip off exposed photoresist

22
Strip Photoresist
  • Strip off remaining photoresist
  • Use mixture of acids called piranah etch
  • Necessary so resist doesnt melt in next step

23
n-well
  • n-well is formed with diffusion or ion
    implantation
  • Diffusion
  • Place wafer in furnace with arsenic gas
  • Heat until As atoms diffuse into exposed Si
  • Ion Implanatation
  • Blast wafer with beam of As ions
  • Ions blocked by SiO2, only enter exposed Si

24
Strip Oxide
  • Strip off the remaining oxide using HF
  • Back to bare wafer with n-well
  • Subsequent steps involve similar series of steps

25
Polysilicon
  • Deposit very thin layer of gate oxide
  • lt 20 Å (6-7 atomic layers)
  • Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) of silicon layer
  • Place wafer in furnace with Silane gas (SiH4)
  • Forms many small crystals called polysilicon
  • Heavily doped to be good conductor

26
Polysilicon Patterning
  • Use same lithography process to pattern
    polysilicon

27
Self-Aligned Process
  • Use oxide and masking to expose where n dopants
    should be diffused or implanted
  • N-diffusion forms nMOS source, drain, and n-well
    contact

28
N-diffusion
  • Pattern oxide and form n regions
  • Self-aligned process where gate blocks diffusion
  • Polysilicon is better than metal for self-aligned
    gates because it doesnt melt during later
    processing

29
N-diffusion cont.
  • Historically dopants were diffused
  • Usually ion implantation today
  • But regions are still called diffusion

30
N-diffusion cont.
  • Strip off oxide to complete patterning step

31
P-Diffusion
  • Similar set of steps form p diffusion regions
    for pMOS source and drain and substrate contact

32
Contacts
  • Now we need to wire together the devices
  • Cover chip with thick field oxide
  • Etch oxide where contact cuts are needed

33
Metalization
  • Sputter on aluminum over whole wafer
  • Pattern to remove excess metal, leaving wires

34
Layout
  • Chips are specified with set of masks
  • Minimum dimensions of masks determine transistor
    size (and hence speed, cost, and power)
  • Feature size f distance between source and
    drain
  • Set by minimum width of polysilicon
  • Feature size improves 30 every 3 years or so
  • Normalize for feature size when describing design
    rules
  • Express rules in terms of l f/2
  • E.g. l 0.3 mm in 0.6 mm process

35
Simplified Design Rules
  • Conservative rules to get you started

36
Inverter Layout
  • Transistor dimensions specified as Width / Length
  • Minimum size is 4l / 2l, sometimes called 1 unit
  • In f 0.6 mm process, this is 1.2 mm wide, 0.6
    mm long

37
Summary
  • MOS transistors are stacks of gate, oxide,
    silicon
  • Act as electrically controlled switches
  • Build logic gates out of switches
  • Draw masks to specify layout of transistors
  • The basic to start designing schematics and
    layout for a simple chip!
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