Title: Interconnect%20and%20Packaging%20Lecture%202:%20Scalability
1Interconnect and PackagingLecture 2 Scalability
Chung-Kuan Cheng UC San Diego
2Outlines
- Trends of Interconnect and Packaging
- Scalability
- References
3I. Trends of High Performance Interconnect and
Packaging
Year 2005 2010 2015
D1/2 Pitch nm 80 45 25
Chip size (mm2) 310 310 310
Pin count 3,400 4,009 6,402
Cents/pin 1.78 1.37 1.05
On-chip (MHz) 5,170 12,000 -
Off-chip (MHz) 3,125 - 29,103
Power Density (w/mm2) 0.54 0.64 -
4I. Trends
- On-Chip Interconnect
- Delay (5-40 times of Speed of Light 5ps/mm)
- Power Density (gt ½)
- Clock Skew Variations (5GHz)
- Off-Chip Interconnect and Packaging
- Number of pins (limited growth)
- Wire density (scalability)
- Speed and distance of interconnect
5I. Trends
- On-chip Global Interconnect trend
- Concerns Speed, Power, Cost, Reliability
6I. Trend
- Scalability
- Latency, Bandwidth
- Attenuation, Phase Velocity
- Distortion
- Intersymbol Interference, Jitter, Cross Talks
- Clock Distribution
- Skew, Jitter, Power Consumption
- IO Interface
- Density
- Impedance Matching
- Cross Talks, Return loops
7II. Scalability Interconnect Models
- Voltage drops through serial resistance and
inductance - Current reduces through shunt capacitance
- Resistance increases due to skin effect
- Shunt conductance is caused by loss tangent
8II. Scalability Interconnect Models
9II. Scalability of Physical Dimensions
- R p /A p/(wt)
- Z ¼ (u/e)1/2 ln (bw)/(tw)
- C v Z
- L Z/v
p resistivity of the conductor u magnetic
permeability e dielectric permittivity v speed
of light in the medium
10II. Scalability of Physical Dimensions
- Resistance Increases quadratically with scaling,
e.g. p2um-cm - R0.0002ohm/um at A10umx10um
- R0.02ohm/um at A1umx1um
- R2ohm/um at A0.1umx0.1um
- Characteristic Impedance No change
- Capacitance per unit length No change
- Inductance per unit length No change
11II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges
- RC Region
- LC Region
- Skin Effect
- Loss Tangent
12II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges
1. RC Region
e.g. on-chip wires
R2ohm/um(A0.01um2) L0.3pH/um,
C0.2fF/um R/L0.67x1012
13II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges RC Region
Elmore delay model with buffers inserted in
intervals
ltr length from transmitter to receiver l
interval between buffers rn nmos resistance cn
nmos gate capacitance cg(1g)cn, g is pn
ratio. rw wire resistance/unit length cw wire
capacitance/unit length f cd/cg
14II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges RC Region
Elmore delay model with buffers inserted in
intervals
Optimal interval
Optimal buffer size
Optimal delay
15II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges
Example w 85nm, t 145nm
rn 10Kohm,cn0.25fF,cg2.34xcn0.585fF rw2ohm/um
, cw0.2fF/um
Optimal interval
Optimal buffer size
Optimal delay
16II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges RC Region
Year (On-Chip) 2005 2010 2015
rncn (ps) 0.86 0.39 0.18
rwcw (ps/mm) 284 616 1510
l (um) 168 77 33
D (ps/um) 0.096 0.095 0.101
no scattering, p2.2uohm-cm
17II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges RC Region
- Device delay, rncn, decreases with scaling
- Wire delay, rwcw, increases with scaling
- Interval, l, between buffers decreases with
scaling - In order to increase the interval, we add the
stages of each buffer.
18II. Scalability of Frequency Ranges
2. LC Region
19II. Scalability
3. Skin Effect Skin Depth
e.g. 0.7um _at_ f10GHz, p2uohm-cm For
100umx25um RDC0.000008ohm/um 8ohm/m R
0.000114ohm/um114ohm/m
20II. Scalability
4. Loss Tangent
21References
- E. Lee, et al., CMOS High-Speed I/Os Present
and Future, ICCD 2003. - http//www.itrs.net/Common/2004Update/2004Update.h
tm - G.A. Sai-Halasz G.A. "Performance Trends in
High-End Processors, IEEE Proceedings, pp.
20-36, Jan. 1995. - M.T. Bohr, Interconnect scaling-the real limiter
to high performance ULSI Electron Devices
Meeting, 1995., International10-13 Dec. 1995
pp.241 244.