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Transcript of Effects of EMI on Digital Systems Participants: Prof. P. Mazumder The University of Michigan Prof....
Effects of EMI on Digital Systems
Participants: Prof. P. Mazumder
The University of Michigan
Prof. M. Bridgwood
Clemson University
Prof. S. Dutt
University of Illinois, Chicago
MURI-01 Kick-off Meeting, June 13, 2001
� ESD Protection: How good is it for suppressing EMI (Task 3.1: Bridgwood) How simultaneous switching of million devices causes EMI and reduces chip operating margin and reliability How external EM pulses can further aggravate chip margins and reliability (Task 3.2: Mazumder) Characterization of functional and behavioral failures attributed to EMI (Task 3.3: Dutt)
Effects of EMI on Digital Systems
Conducted WB and NB Interaction with Digital Devices
• Impedances of Interfaces through Switching- Inputs, Outputs, Control Lines, Power supplies
• Vulnerability Thresholds- Disruption and Damage- Single Nodes - Multiple Nodes and Devices
• Waveforms- Pulses- Damped Rings
Clemson UniversityClemson University
SIA Roadmap - IC TechnologyYear 1997 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014
Channel length [nm] 250 180 130 100 70 50 35 Short wire Pitch [m] 0.75 0.54 0.39 0.3 0.21 0.15 0.10
P Chip Size [mm2] 300 340 430 520 620 750 901 P Transistors [106] 11 21 76 200 520 1400 3600 Global Clock [MHz] 375 1200 1600 2000 2500 3000 3674 Local Clock [MHz] 750 1250 2100 3500 6000 10000 17000 Dissipation [Watt] 70 90 130 160 170 175 183 Min Logic Vdd [V] 2.1 1.75 1.35 1.0 0.75 0.55 0.4
Wire length [km] 0.8 1.7 3.3 5 9.2 17 25 Wiring levels 6 6-7 7 7-8 8-9 9 10
ASIC Package Pins 1100 1400 1900 2600 3600 5000 6700 DRAM bits/chip 267M 1.07G 4.29G 17.2G 68.7G 275G 1.10T
P cost/transistor [$]
30 17 508 206 1.1 0.5 0.22
1. Vdd scaling substantially reduces opearting and noise margins2. Freq: ~ 2-20 GHz, Dissipation: 100-200 W, EM emissions, P/G noises3. On-chip wiring: 3-25 km; sources of parasitics, noises, delays4. No. Trans: 200 M to 1.7 B; 85%-95% of this area will be occupied by Random-Access Memories, CAMs and ROMs.
University of Michigan
• Task 3.2.1:Task 3.2.1: EMI generation due to Tr. SwitchingEMI generation due to Tr. Switching
• Task 3.2.2:Task 3.2.2: Effects of EMI on chip operationsEffects of EMI on chip operations
• Task 3.2.3: Task 3.2.3: EMI Simulator DesignEMI Simulator Design
EMI Impacts on Digital Circuits
University of Michigan
Noise Distribution PathsNoise Distribution Paths
Direct radiation from chip surfaceDirect radiation from chip surface Caused by high-frequency current within the chipCaused by high-frequency current within the chip Level of radiation is small in comparison to the following onesLevel of radiation is small in comparison to the following ones
Conducting noise from the signal portsConducting noise from the signal ports Off-chip wires act as antennaeOff-chip wires act as antennae Effect of this noise source is significant … but it’s an easy problemEffect of this noise source is significant … but it’s an easy problem
Power-line conducting noisePower-line conducting noise High-frequency large power/ground currentHigh-frequency large power/ground current Most significant source of EMI problem … and is difficult to solveMost significant source of EMI problem … and is difficult to solve
University of Michigan
Power-Line Conducting NoisePower-Line Conducting Noise
Modeling core power networkModeling core power networkPower-line capacitance modelingPower-line capacitance modelingSwitching current modelSwitching current model
University of Michigan
Switching Current SimulationSwitching Current Simulation
Time-varying switching current consumed in circuit Time-varying switching current consumed in circuit blocks is first simulated assuming ideal power supply blocks is first simulated assuming ideal power supply voltage using SPICEvoltage using SPICE
Circuit simulation is performed for the power network Circuit simulation is performed for the power network with the switching current information addedwith the switching current information added
By iterating this annotation process, one can achieve By iterating this annotation process, one can achieve better simulation accuracybetter simulation accuracy
University of Michigan
Power-Line Conducting NoisePower-Line Conducting NoiseUse UofM RAM compiler to generate Memory Array and estimate Switching Noise and Noise Spectrum. Study Failure Modes for Read and Write operations,with and without external EMI noises.
UofM NDR-Group is the developerof Quantum SPICE simulator and wehave extensive knowledge in SPICE.
University of Michigan
Clock Network
Transmission line modeling of clock wiresTransmission line modeling of clock wires Differential Quadrature Method (DQM) Model Reduction by Krylov Subspace Method
Study of clock jitters and synchronization Study of clock jitters and synchronization failures due to ringing and deformitiesfailures due to ringing and deformities
FD-TLM based VEDICS Tool (designed at Univ. of Michigan)
More accurate than lumped model yet more efficient than other field solvers
University of Michigan
EMI SimulatorEMI Simulator
EMI simulation requires SPICE-like simulatorsEMI simulation requires SPICE-like simulators
Give accurate resultsGive accurate results
Orders of magnitude faster than full-wave simulatorOrders of magnitude faster than full-wave simulator
We willWe will
incorporate new transmission line modeling methodsincorporate new transmission line modeling methods
incorporate new device model including parasitic devicesincorporate new device model including parasitic devices
combine FD-TLM based simulator with SPICEcombine FD-TLM based simulator with SPICE
University of Michigan
System Level Studies for System Level Studies for Estimating EMI EffectsEstimating EMI Effects
Subcircuit level:Subcircuit level: Simple gates (Inverter, NAND, NOR, XOR, MUX, etc.)Simple gates (Inverter, NAND, NOR, XOR, MUX, etc.) Logic families (Static CMOS, Domino, DCVS, etc.)Logic families (Static CMOS, Domino, DCVS, etc.)
Subsystem level (chips are already designed at UM):Subsystem level (chips are already designed at UM): 16-bit ALU16-bit ALU 16x16 multiplier16x16 multiplier 4Kx32x32 (4 Mb) RAM SRAM memory4Kx32x32 (4 Mb) RAM SRAM memory
System level:System level: Power/ground networkPower/ground network Clock distribution networkClock distribution network 32-bit RISC microprocessor (such as DEC Alpha, 32-bit RISC microprocessor (such as DEC Alpha,
Pentium)Pentium)
University of Michigan
Funded and Past Work• Recently-funded work on FT (S. Dutt) [Verma, MS Thesis,
UIC,’01], [Verma & Dutt, ICCAD’01 subm.] [Dutt, et al., ICCAD’99], [Mahapatra & Dutt, FTCS’99]-- Funded in part by DARPA-ACS, Xilinx Inc.:– On-line test and fault reconfiguration of field-
programmable gate arrays using a roving tester– Key is effective incremental re-placement and re-routing to
dynamically move the roving tester
• EM-induced faults:– High level computer failure detection due to different
types of EM signals [Mojert et al., EMC’01]; no cause-effect or classification analysis.
– Failure in real-time communication & control systems from communication line errors due to EM signals [Kohlberg & Carter, EMC’01]
University of Illinois
Assumptions/Scenarios of Past Work
• Past Work on general fault detection:– Faults directly affect transistors & on-chip
interconnects– Random single (sometimes double) faults– Deterministic faults– Types of faults: permanent, transient, intermittent;
intermittent not generally tackled
• Past Work on EM-induced faults:– No how/why/what analysis and classification of
computer failure due to EM interference
University of Illinois
Different Scenarios in Proposed Work• Faults directly affects off-chip signal lines (memory address,
data and control lines) and power/ground (p/g) lines
• p/g line faults => multiple faults (clustered if p/g lines are partitioned, else random)
• Signal line faults => incorrect instr./data => multiple clustered faults along control/data path
• Window of susceptibility if p/g lines shielded -- probabilistic model (e.g., susceptible on cache misses)
• May need to tackle intermittent faults due to periodic EM pulses
• Detailed error analysis and classification due to EM-induced faults
University of Illinois
Proposed Work
• Comprehensive VHDL processor and memory model• Will include variable-width variable-period fault injection capability for
off-chip signal lines (to simulate different pulse widths and periods).• Similar fault-injection capability for on-chip wires with a probabilistic
component
MUXVar-width Var-period pulse gen.
Signal line
Signal line
0 1 Select line
To other fault injectors
University of Illinois
Proposed Work (contd.)
• Will determine and classify the following type of computer system behavioral error (i.e., program errors) due to different patterns, extent, duration and location of faults:
Control flow errors -- incorrect sequence of instruction execution. Causes; address gen. error, memory faults, bus faults
Data errors. Causes: computation errors, memory & bus faults Hung processor & crashes. Causes: C.U. transition to dead-end states,
invalid instruction, out-of-bound address, divide-by-zero, spurious interrupts (?)
• To the best of our knowledge, more comprehensive analysis of fault effects on a computer system than that attempted previously
• Comprehensive analysis is needed due to the nature of EM effects--all pervasive, periodic, clustered
University of Illinois
Proposed Work--Methodologies: Control Flow Checking [Mahmood & McCluskey, TC’88]
• A node is a block of instructions with a branch at the end
• A derived signature of a node is a function (e.g., xor, LFSR) of all its instructions
• A program graph is one in which there is an arc from node u to v if the branch at u can lead to node v
v1
v2 v3
v5
v6
v4
ADD r1 r3LD r2 address
BLT r4 r8 offMA
IN
Sign(v4)BRT v6
WD
Processor
Memory Hierarchy
Watchdog
Memory Bus
Signal frombranch circuit
Proposed Work--Methodologies: Algorithm-Based Fault Tolerance
[Huang & Abraham, TC’84], [Dutt & Assad, TC‘96]
• Use properties of the computation to check correctness of computed data
• E.g., linearity property: f(v1+v2) = f(v1) + f(v2), of computation f( ) can be used to check it: Pre-compute v’ = v1 + v2 + … + vk (input checksum) Compute f(v1), …., f(vk) Compute u = f(v) + f(v2) + …. + f(vk) (output checksum) Check if f(v’) = u; inequality indicates computation error(s)
• Can be used for linear computations such as matrix multiplication, matrix addition, Gaussian elimination [Huang & Abraham, TC’84], [Dutt & Assad, TC‘96]
University of Illinois
Goals, Questions & Future Outlook
• Correlate the probability/frequency of different types of computer system errors to [pattern, extent, duration, location] of EM-induced faults
• Correlate types of logic faults w/ similar descriptors to functional errors (output error of ALU, Control Unit) -- classification of catastrophic vs. non-catastrophic logic faults
• Q: Are there patterns of errors that lead to computer crashes w/ high probability?
• Q: If so, can the detection of such patterns be used to shut down the computer in a fail-safe manner (save state & data for later resumption)?
University of Illinois
Goals, Questions & Future Outlook (contd.)
• Q: Are there patterns of errors that are characteristic of EM-induced faults versus random single/double faults?
• Q: If so, can these be used as “early detection & warning” of EM interference?
• Future: Based on the correlation of system errors to EM faults, determine fault tolerance/error minimization techniques for EM-induced faults
University of Illinois