Circuit and PD Challenges at the 14nm Technology · PDF fileCircuit and PD Design Challenges...
Transcript of Circuit and PD Challenges at the 14nm Technology · PDF fileCircuit and PD Design Challenges...
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IBM Systems and Technology Group
Circuit and PD Design Challengesat the
14nm Technology Node
Jim Warnock
Session: Advanced Technologies and Design for Manufacturability
ISPD 2013
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Outline
Introduction
Classical CMOS Scaling: The End of the Road
New Device Structures
What do these structures mean for circuit designers?
Wire Interconnects
Reliability
Conclusions
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Introduction
14nm technology will pose many challenges, for many types of designs…
This talk will focus on:
High-frequency digital CMOS design, ie for high-performance microprocessors
New PD issues
Circuits, wires, reliability, variability…
Issues related to manufacturing, yield, etc: not covered here
Why is 14nm so difficult?
What will designers be facing at the 14nm technology node?
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Outline
Introduction
Classical CMOS Scaling: The End of the Road
New Device Structures
What do these structures mean for circuit designers?
Wire Interconnects
Reliability
Conclusions
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0.1
1
10
0.01 0.1 1 10
Feature pitch (microns)
Vo
ltag
e (
V)
CMOS Supply Voltage Scaling Difficulties
Classical Dennard
Scaling Regime
14nm
Regime
Scaled voltage
High-performance voltage
Voltage“gap”
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Voltage Scaling Difficulties
“The End is Near”…ish
Maybe not the end, but things are sure getting tough…
Voltage scaling for high-performance designs is limited
Limited by leakage issues: can’t reduce threshold voltages Need steeper sub-threshold slopes…
Limited by variability, esp VT variability Need to minimize random dopant fluctuations (RDF)…
Limited by gate oxide thickness Some relief from high-K materials (postpones the problem for a
couple of generations)
Limited voltage scaling + decreasing feature sizes => Increasing electric fields
New device structures needed (short channel control)
Reliability challenges (devices and wires)
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10
100
0.01 0.1 1 10
Feature pitch (microns)
Re
lati
ve
Pe
rfo
rma
nc
e M
etr
ic
(Co
ns
t p
ow
er
de
ns
ity
)
CMOS Power-performance Scaling
Where this curve is flat, can only improve chip freq by:
a) pushing core/chip to higher power density (tough these days…)
b) design power efficiency improvements (low-hanging fruit all gone)
14nm
Regime
When scaling
was good…
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Lithography Scaling
0.1
1
0.01 0.1 1
Feature pitch (microns)
Ra
yle
igh
Fa
cto
r (k
1) Conventional lithography
Double patterning
14nm
Regime
k1 = (resolution)*NA
l
OPC, OAI,
Computational
Lithography
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Outline
Introduction
Classical CMOS Scaling: The End of the Road
New Device Structures
What do these structures mean for circuit designers?
Wire Interconnects
Reliability
Conclusions
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Multigate/FinFET Devices
G
S
D
FinFET dual-gate cross section
Gate Electrode
FinFET dual-gate cross section
Gate ElectrodeGate Electrode
FinFET tri-gate cross section
Gate Electrode
FinFET tri-gate cross section
Gate ElectrodeGate Electrode
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Trigate/FinFET Devices
The good news:
Expect improved subthreshold slope
Expect improved RDF-induced variability
Above could help to enable lower voltage operation
What designers have to worry about:
New sources of variability Fin width will have a significant impact on VT: Expect global, local
and random effects/correlations Fin height -> width variability: can’t amortize over wider fingers…
Some of the same old variability issues (continuing to worsen…) Gate line-edge roughening (LER), channel length variability May be exacerbated by 3D effects
“Quantization” of device widths Can only have integer numbers of fins
Changes in device parasitic R, C compared to usual expectations G-S cap (Miller cap), S, D contact resistance
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0
50
100
s[V
Ts
at], m
V
1/√ (number of fins)
nFET
pFET1 fin
20,10,5 fins2 fins
Trigate/FinFET Devices: Variability
Reduced RDF-relatedVT variability for FINFETs
(~25-50% depending on design)
eg. M. Jurczak et al,
Proc. 2009 IEEE Int, SOI Conf.
LER-relatedVT variability for FINFETs
eg. E. Baravelli et al, IEEE T. Nanotechnol. 7, p. 291 (2008).
Warning: considerable spread in reported literature: your mileage may vary
0
10
20
30
40
0 5 10
Planar
Bulk FinFET
SOI FinFET
s[V
T], m
V
0 5 101/√ (WL) (mm-1)
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0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Device Width (Units of Min width device)
finFET Devices Conventional Devices
Trigate/FinFET Devices: Quantization
Example: min size finFET INV
Can have p:n ratio = 1, 0.5, 2(nothing in between)
Also, even a “wide” device willalways be just a collectionof very narrow devices…
Plus, expect difficulty to createmultiple VT offerings in a fully depleted device scenario
De
vic
e S
tre
ng
th (
arb
Un
its)
Higher VT(less leakage)
Lower VT(more perf.)
Device Width (ratio to min width device)
• Likely to create most difficulty for SRAM, register file designs
• Also small feedback devices, keepers, etc.
• Issue for any device tuner, other tools expecting continuous width ranges
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• Resistance in contacts to fins might be tricky: assume it can be handled by device engineers! What about G-S cap?
Trigate/FinFET Devices: Parasitics
G
S
D
D SG
• Expect increase in Cgs comparedto planar structures
• Details will depend on fin vs trigate, fin pitch, height, thickness, etc.
• Might have to watch out for certaintypes of noise issues
• Might decrease static timing accuracy
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• Sea-of-fins technology is attractive: offers tightest fin pitch
• Additional constraint on PD cell image
• Vertical: Fin, metal pitches Horizontal: gate, metal pitches
Trigate/FinFET Devices: PD Issues
Meta
l Pitc
h
Fin
Pitc
h
Metal Pitch
Gate Pitch
Example:12:16
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FinFET PD Implications
Higher fins -> more current drive per unit area
But technology minimum device width grows
Quantization issues tougher to deal with
Finer fin pitch -> more current drive per unit area
Can trade off shorter fin height with finer fin pitch
Sea-of-fins constraints, other litho-related constraints
Net: stronger technology <-> PD interaction
Library cell definition likely to be dependent on technology fin pitch
Will need to find gear ratios (metal pitch vs fin pitch) that work well together
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Outline
Introduction
Classical CMOS Scaling: The End of the Road
New Device Structures
What do these structures mean for circuit designers?
Wire Interconnects
Reliability
Conclusions
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Wire Interconnect Scaling (or lack thereof…)
Assume all logic scales with litho shrink factor
Wire lengths then also would scale
Best case scenario: RC stays constant (“perfect scaling”) This is already painful, chip area generally hasn’t been shrinking!
Data below shows expectations that wire delays will grow significantly, even in scaled designs.
1
1.2
1.4
1.6
1.8
2
0 50 100 150
M1 Metal Pitch (nm)
Re
lati
ve
RC
, s
ca
led
14nm
Regime
ITRSdata
ITRS data,but assumingnon-improving dielectric constants
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Wire Scaling Implications
High-performance designs will not be able to tolerate such large RC increases
Will need coarser-pitch, faster wires (ie non-scaled wires)
But also need fine-pitched wires to leverage technology density
Result: push for more wiring interconnect layers (coarse-pitch)
Will still need some number of fine-pitch layers as well for short-run local connections
Improved DA tools (routers) needed
Optimize wire plane usage to limit technology complexity
Negotiate through special design rules for the finest levels
Via optimization, especially at driver end
Tricky performance vs wireability tradeoffs
Many wires will need “special” treatment Increase width, push higher, add buffers, etc.
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14nm Wires: PD Implications
Complications from double-patterning lithography!
High-performance fat wires lead to local disruption…
Need to understand coloring for proper analysis…
X
Stitch
Cap increases
Cap decreases
Cap constant
Misalignment
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14nm Wires: DPL
How to make sure designs can be colored properly?
Rules to guarantee colorability complicated, non-local
Coloring solution may be subject to external factors…
Need color-aware analysis for highest accuracy
Correlated capacitance shifts
Solution: color-aware toolset & design methodology
Build in coloring info as design is constructed
Correct, DPL-aware solutions, by construction
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Outline
Introduction
Classical CMOS Scaling: The End of the Road
New Device Structures
What do these structures mean for circuit designers?
Wire Interconnects
Reliability
Conclusions
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0.01
0.1
1
0 50 100 150
M1 Metal Pitch (nm)
Re
lati
ve
Lif
eti
me
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
Re
lati
ve
cu
rre
nt
de
ns
ity
Interconnect Reliability
Reliability will become a significant focus item for designers in 14nm technology
Parameters below taken from ITRS, plotted WRT 2009 data
Assume constant voltage, const frequency for simplicity
14nm
Regime
M1 Metal Pitch (nm)
Re
lati
ve
Cu
rre
nt
De
ns
ity
Re
lati
ve
Lif
eti
me
Lifetime withexpectedcurrent densityscaling
Lifetime atconstantcurrentdensity
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New materials likely needed for the finest-pitch planes
Resistance increases likely
More impetus to push signal wires higher in the stack
TDDB concerns likely to push technology to higher K materials
Higher dielectric constant materials tend to have better reliability
Wire cap increase drives higher power, increased RC
Concern again for finest-pitch planes…
LER, defect-narrowing likely to exacerbate EM concerns
Interconnect Reliability
TT
F (
Arb
Un
its
E (MV/cm)
TEOS
1E-01
1E+01
1E+03
1E+05
1E+07
1E+09
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
Ogawa et al,
2003 IRPS2.2
3.62.9
DielectricConstant4.2
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Interconnect Reliability: Implications
Will need efficient design tool solutions for robust reliability
Likely many elements with current pushing close to reliability limits
May need detailed understanding of local switching factors
Local thermal effects likely significant for high-frequency logic
IR heating by currents in fine wires
EM effects very sensitively dependent on temperature
What happens when hot wires are placed in close proximity? Answer: they get even hotter (and they heat up the surroundings)
Need design tools to help avoid bad thermal situations
Need thermal analysis tools to detect problematic local situations
Increased overhead from error checking & recovery expected
For high-reliability systems, checking alone is not enough!
Need to be able to recover from hard errors
Ability to take processor cores offline gracefully Replace with spare core?
page 27 of 29
Outline
Introduction
Classical CMOS Scaling: The End of the Road
New Device Structures
What do these structures mean for circuit designers?
Wire Interconnects
Reliability
Conclusions
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Conclusions
Breakdown in scaling is pushing technology in new directions
Limited voltage scaling for high-performance chips Power/power-density limited performance
More constraints from lithography (DPL)
FinFET device structures => new circuit/PD design challenges
VT variability still likely to be a challenge…
Constraints from fin pitch, width quantization
Biggest challenges for high-performance designs: wires
Non-scaling RC
Reliability
DPL makes everything tougher…
Circuit/system-level check/recovery features will need extra emphasis for high-reliability systems