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Scaling II

Scaling II. Mohammad Sharifkhani. Reading. Textbook I, Chapter 2 Textbook II, Section 3.5, Section 4.5.3, Section 5.6. CMOS Scaling. Basic MOS rule: L↓  g m ↑, C ↓ Short channel effect + Lithography  limits L

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Scaling II

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  1. Scaling II Mohammad Sharifkhani

  2. Reading • Textbook I, Chapter 2 • Textbook II, Section 3.5, Section 4.5.3, Section 5.6

  3. CMOS Scaling • Basic MOS rule: L↓  gm↑, C ↓ • Short channel effect + Lithography limits L • The worst SCE: reduction in gate Vt where MOS turns on, especially at high VDS • Process needs to keep SCE under control

  4. Constant Field Scaling • To scale vertical and horizontal dimensions at the same proportions • Gate insulator, junctions depth, etc. • Doping concentration ↑ Depletion width ↓ • Decreasing the applied voltage •  Size 1/k, voltage 1/k E constant •  Hot carrier injection is not worse than the original device

  5. Scaling of MOS and circuit parameter

  6. Scaling of MOS and circuit parameter • R of the MOS remains unchanged (I and V scale together) • Delay ~ R x C  1/K • Power ~ V x I  1/K^2 • Power x Delay  1/K^3  • Power density ~ Power / Area  1

  7. 2-D effects (Deep sub-micron) • Poisson equation: • Increasing the doping keeps E unchanged over X axis • Boundary cond. function of built-in p-n potential  Do not scale • When V~1V (bandgap) the second order effects kick-in

  8. 2-D effects (Deep sub-micron) • Maximum gate depletion width: Wdm (no carriers under the gate) • If horiz. side is twice as long as vertical side, long-channel device with good short-channel behavior • Else, source channel potential (critical for setting threshold condition) is influenced by drain voltage (SCE)  No small Vt is possible

  9. 2-D effects (Deep sub-micron) • There are oxide and silicon • Boundary cond. at interface • Depth of oxide region equivalent to In silicon • So the total vertical side • L min ~= 2(Wdm+3tox)  both tox and Wdm has to be scaled proportionally

  10. Power-supply and threshold voltage scaling • Power supply usually do not scale as much • Subthreshold diffusion current not scaled • Previous generation voltages are of interest • Problems: • High electric field  Hot carrier injection to the gate, electromigration • Power consumption (100W)

  11. Power-supply and threshold voltage scaling • In subthreshold the leakage drops exponentially proportional to kT • I0~0.1uA/um for a 0.1um device • Even if Vt is kept constant, the leakage increases in proportion to 1/tox and Wtot/L because the current at threshold is proportional to Qi ~ 1.5 kT/q Cox • Every 0.1V decrease in Vt  10x more leakage • For a 100million T chip, the average leakage current <10nA • Minimum bound for Vt ~ 0.2V

  12. Power-supply and threshold voltage scaling • Vt/Vdd ↑  performance ↓: • Performance ~ 0.7-Vt/Vdd ; stronger than Ion because of the finite rise time at the input • With Vt bound to 0.2, Vdd less than 1V will not buy us a lot of performance

  13. Power-supply and threshold voltage scaling • Performance gain • Lower Vt, higher stand-by power (high Vt for low power designs) • Higher Vdd, higher dynamic power (high performance processes)

  14. Power-supply and threshold voltage scaling • A 0.1um CMOS ring oscillator 101 stage • 10% decrease in performance  30%-40% reduction in active power

  15. Gate oxide • Gate oxide thickness ↓ α L ↓ • tox ~ 1/25-1/50 L • tox ~ 3nm: a few layers of atoms • Gate leakage : Quantum Mech. Tunneling • Exponentially proportional to tox • Direct tunneling: gate voltage do not play an important role • Only for turned on NMOS (gate is on) • PMOS is better • For 0.1cm2 gate area on a chip, tolarable gate leakage 1-10 A/cm2 • Minimum tox is 1.5-2nm

  16. Gate oxide • Two other phenomena: • Inversion layer quantization: • Density of inversion electrons 1nm below the Si surface  effectively 0.3-0.4 nm thicker tox (SiO2) • Polysilicon gate depletion effect: • Thin space charge layer within the poly  reduces the effectiveness of the gate • At tox = 2nm; 20% loss in inversion charge 

  17. Gate • Poly: • Resistive (silicide) • Depletion effect • Why poly and not metal? • Metal : mid-gap bands • Compensating doping  poor short channel effect

  18. Channel profile design • Both tox and Wdm must be scaled • Wdm ↓  Na ↑  higher depletion charge @ surface  higher electric field  higher threshold voltage • Retrograde doping prevents this to happen

  19. Channel profile design • Comparison between the uniform and (extreme) retrograde profiles • For the same Wdm • In Retrograde the total depletion charge and hence the electrical field is half of that of the uniform

  20. Other channel doping effects • Body-effect coeff. m=1+3tox/Wdm • Inverse subthreshold slope, (ln 10) mkT/q • Substrate sensistivity ↑, subthreshold slope↑ • We need to keep m close to 1; m<1.5 or 3tox/Wdm<0.5

  21. Halo Doping • Non-uniform lateral profile • Ion-implantation, self aligned to gate + diffusion (a little) • Counter acts short-channel effects • Off current robust against L variations • Shortest channel length possible

  22. Halo Doping • Flat Vt dependence on channel length • Lower Vt is posssible • Performance Suffered from SCE  i.e., Vds influences Vt

  23. Interconnect scaling • Everything is scaled, including the oxide between the stacked wires • Wire length Lw is also scaled as a result of tech scaling • Fringing cap, wire-to wire caps/length remains constant tw Ww

  24. Interconnect scaling • Cw= K (gap between the wires) x 1/K (width) • τ (Tau) =1/K (C for a scaled length) x K (R for a scaled length) • Current density increases; Electromigration

  25. Interconnect scaling • Some typical values: • @0.25um ; Cw = 2pF/cm • For aluminum • Tau = 3 x 10-18 (sec) x L2/(Ww x tw) • For a 0.25u x 0.25u size wire x 100um long; delay = 0.5pSec; comparable to a cmos inverter in 0.1u tech (20pSec). • Conclusion: local wires is not a big issue

  26. Global wire issues • Global block to block cross-chip wires • The chip size usually do not scale; it may even increase • When remains the same; Tau increases by K2(see last page L cte) • The cross-chip wires can create up to 1ns delay

  27. Global interconnects • Solutions: • Use of copper: 40% faster • Minimizing the number of corss-chip interconnects (Brain, CAD tools, etc.) • Repeaters • Fundamental solution • Thicker wires (lower resistance, higher cap) • wider dielectric spacing (lower cap)

  28. Global interconnects • Strategy: • Scale down the size and spacing of local interconnects • Un-scaled, scaled up wires/distance for higher layers (reduction in delay for a given length) • Limit: Transmission Line delay (when inductance becomes dominant) • Rise time is shorter than the flight time over the length • Speed of electromagnetic wave, instead of RC:

  29. Global interconnects • For oxide, time of flight is: • 70pSec/cm • A longer global wire  larger wire cross section

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