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Performance Analysis and Technology of 3D ICs Krishna Saraswat Shukri Souri Kaustav Banerjee

Performance Analysis and Technology of 3D ICs Krishna Saraswat Shukri Souri Kaustav Banerjee Pawan Kapur Department of Electrical Engineering Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305 saraswat@stanford.edu Funding sources: DARPA, MARCO. Outline. Why 3-D ICs?

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Performance Analysis and Technology of 3D ICs Krishna Saraswat Shukri Souri Kaustav Banerjee

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  1. Performance Analysis and Technology of 3D ICs Krishna Saraswat Shukri Souri Kaustav Banerjee Pawan Kapur Department of Electrical Engineering Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305 saraswat@stanford.edu Funding sources: DARPA, MARCO

  2. Outline • Why 3-D ICs? • Limits of Cu/low K technology • 3D IC performance simulation • 3-D technologies • Seeding crystallization of amorphous Si • Processed wafer bonding • Thermal simulations

  3. Introduction: Interconnect Delay Is Increasing • Chip size is continually increasing due to increasing complexity • Device performance is improving but interconnect delay is increasing • Chip sizes today are wire-pitch limited: Size is determined by amount of wiring required Mark Bohr, IEDM Proceedings, 1995

  4. Cu Resistivity: Effect of Line Width Scaling • Effect of Cu diffusion Barrier • Barriers have higher resistivity • Barriers can’t be scaled below a minimum thickness • Effect of Electron Scattering • Reduced mobility as dimensions decrease • Effect of Higher Frequencies • Carriers confined to outer skin increasing resistivity Problem is worse than anticipated in the ITRS 1999 roadmap

  5. Cu Resistivity: Barriers Deposition Technology ITRS 1999 Line width (nm) Globel Local 525 250 280 133 95 48 Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) Ionized PVD Collimated PVD • 5 nm barrier assumed at the thinnest spot • No scattering assumed, I.e., bulk resistivity Interconnect dimensions scaled according to ITRS 1999

  6. Diffuse, Local Diffuse, Global Elastic 373 K Diffuse, Local 273 K Diffuse, Global Elastic Cu Resistivity: Effect of Electron Scattering Diffuse scattering Lower mobility Elastic scattering • No barrier assumed • Diffuse electron scattering increases resistivity • Lowering temperature has a big effect

  7. Fraction of chip area used by repeaters Rent’s exponents As much as 27% of the chip area at 50 nm node is likely to be occupied by repeaters.

  8. Repeaters optical I/O devices Gate n+/p+ n+/p+ VILIC M4 M3 M2 M1 Memory Analog Gate T2 n+/p+ n+/p+ M’2 M’1 Via Gate T1 n+/p+ n+/p+ Logic 3D ICs with Multiple Active Si Layers • Motivation • Performance of ICs is limited due to R, L, C of interconnects • Interconnect length and therefore R, L, C can be minimized by stacking active Si layers • Number of horizontal interconnects can be minimized by using vertical interconnects • Disparate technology integration possible, e.g., memory & logic, optical I/O, etc.

  9. Device Size Limited Memory: SRAM, DRAM Wire Pitch Limited Logic, e.g., µ-Processors    Chip Size PMOS NMOS

  10. N gates Rent’s Rule T = k N P T = # of I/O terminals N = # of gates k = avg. I/O’s per gate P = Rent’s exponent

  11. Determination of Wire-length Distribution • Conservation of I/O’s • TA + TB + TC = TA-to-B + TA-to-C + TB-to-C + TABC Block A with NA gates TA-to-B = TA + TB -TAB TB-to-C = TB+ TC -TBC Block B • Values of T within a block or collection of blocks are calculated using Rent’s rule, e.g., • TA = k (NA) P • TABC = k (NA+ NB+ NC) P • Recursive use of Rent’s rule gives wire-length distribution for the whole chip Block C Ref: Davis & Meindl, IEEE TED, March 1998

  12. Inter-Layer Connections For 3-D2-Layers N N/2 N/2 T T2 T1 • Fraction of I/O ports T1and T2 is used for inter-layer connections, Tint • Assume I/O port conservation: T = T1 + T2 - Tint • Use Rent’s Rule: T = kNPto solve for Tint (p assumed constant) k = Avg. I/O’s per gate N = No. of gates p = Rent’s exponent

  13. 1 2 5 3 4 1 4 5 3 2 Wire-length Distribution of 3-D IC • Microprocessor Example from NTRS 50 nm Node • Number of Gates 180 million • Minimum Feature Size 50 nm • Number of wiring levels, 9 • Metal Resistivity, Copper 1.673e-6 Ω-cm • Dielectric Constant, Polymer er = 2.5 Single Layer 2 Layers Replace horizontal by vertical interconnect Vertical inter-layer connections reduce metal wiring requirement

  14. Chip Area Estimation • Placement of a wire in a tier is determined by some constraint, e.g., maximum allowed RC delay • Wiring Area = wire pitch x total length • Areq = plocLtot_loc + psemiLtot_semi + pglobLtot_glob • = Aloc + Asemi + Aglob • Ltot calculated from wire-length distribution A 3-tier wiring network Global Semi- global Local

  15. Upper tiers pitches are reduced for constant chip frequency, fc Less wiring needed Almost 50% reduction in chip area 2 Active Layer Results

  16. 3-D Wire-Length Distribution Symmetric Interconnects: Comparable inter- and intra-device layer connectivity Asymmetric Interconnects: Negligible inter-device layer connectivity Ref: Rahman & Reif (MIT) N: Number of logic gates, f.o.: fan-out, k and p: Rent’s parameters, Nz: Number of device layers More vertical interconnects required

  17. 1.0 0.95 0.85 Normalized Interconnect Delay 0.75 0.65 1 2 3 4 5 No. of Active Layers More than 2 active layers

  18. 1 . 0 I n t er c onnec t D el ay 0.1 T ypi c a l ga t e De l ay Interconnect Delay: 0.01 2 D I C w it h r e p e a te r s 3D IC 2X metal layers, 5 Si layers 3 D I C c o n st a n t m e t al la y e r s 2X 3 D I C me ta l l a y e rs 0.001 200 250 50 100 150 T e chno l ogy Ge ne r a t ion (nm ) Delay of Scaled 2D and 3D ICs • Moving repeaters to upper active tiers reduces interconnect delay by 9%. • 3D (2 Si layers) shows significant delay reduction (64%). • Increasing the number of metal levels in 3D improves interconnect delay by another 40%. • Increasing the number of Si layers to 5 further improves interconnect delay. Simulations assumed state-of-the-art chip at a technology node with data from NTRS

  19. Repeaters or optical I/O devices Gate n+/p+ n+/p+ VILIC M4 M3 M2 M1 Memory or Analog Gate T2 n+/p+ n+/p+ M’2 M’1 Via Gate T1 n+/p+ n+/p+ Logic 3D Approaches Wafer Bonding (MIT) Seeding crystallization of -Si (Stanford) Epitaxial Lateral Overgrowth (Purdue)

  20. Statistical Variations in Poly-TFT Properties Mobility Conventional Poly-TFT Grain size 0.3-0.5 µm Effect of Grain Boundaries • As channel length  grain size, statistical variation increases • Elimination of grain boundaries should reduce this variation

  21. Ge seeds Seeding SiO2 a -Si Substrate Grain Growth Lateralcrystallization -Si MOSFET Fabrication Gate Gate oxide Grain S o u r c e C h a n n e l D r a i n Substrate Ge Seeded Lateral Crystallization Single Grain 0.1 µm NMOS Concept: • Locally induce nucleation • Grow laterally, inhibiting additional nucleation • Build MOSFET in a single grain

  22. Single Grain Transistors in Ge Induced Crystallized Si ID-VG of 0.1 µm NMOS Mobility SGT

  23. Ni seed SiGe gate SiO2 Crystallized Si -Si substrate Ni Seeded Lateral Crystallization NMOS Tmax = 450ºC • Initially transistor fabricated in -Si • Ni seeding for simultaneous crystallization and dopant activation • Low thermal budget (≤ 450°C) • Devices could be fabricated on top of a metal line

  24. Thermal Behavior in 3D ICs Power Dissipation for 2D • Energy is dissipated during transistor operation • Heat is conducted through the low thermal conductivity dielectric, Silicon substrate and packaging to heat sink • 1-D model assumed to calculate die temperature

  25. Bulk Si M4 n+ n+ T2 Gate M3 M6 M2 M5 M1 M4 Gate M3 T2 p+ p+ M’2 M’2 M’1 M’1 Gate Gate T1 n+ n+ T1 n+ n+ Bulk Si Bulk Si 3D Examples for Thermal Study • Case A: Heat dissipation is confined to one surface • Case B: Heat dissipation possible from 2 surfaces.

  26. Die Temperature Simulation Attainable die temperatures for 2-D and 3-D ICs at the NTRS based 50 nm node using advanced heat-sinking technologies that would reduce the normalized thermal resistance, R

  27. 3D ICs: Implications for Circuit Design • Critical Path Layout: By vertical stacking, the distance between logic blocks on the critical path can be reduced to improve circuit performance. • Integration of disparate technologies is easier • Microprocessor Design: on-chip caches on the second active layer will reduce distance from the logic and computational blocks. • RF and Mixed Signal ICs: Substrate isolation between the digital and RF/analog components can be improved by dividing them among separate active layers - ideal for system on a chip design. • Optical I/O can be integrated in the top layer • Repeaters: Chip area can be saved by placing repeaters (~ 10,000 for high performance circuits) on the higher active layers. • Physical Design and Synthesis: Due to a non-planar target graph (upon which the circuit graph is embedded), placement and routing algorithms, and hence synthesis algorithms and architectural choices, need to be suitably modified.

  28. Summary • Cu/low k will not solve the problems of interconnects. • Modeling of interconnect delay shows significant improvement by transitioning from 2-D to 3-D ICs. • Seeding and lateral crystallization of amorphous Si is a promising technique to implement 3-D ICs. • Thermal dissipation in 3-D ICs may require innovative packaging solutions.

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