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Layout Rules Check & Electrical Rules Check. Presented by KANTHARAJU P K. Layout Rules Check. Layout rules are used for preparing the masks for fabrication Fabrications processes have inherent limitations in accuracy Design rules are: Minimum width Minimum spacing
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Layout Rules Check & Electrical Rules Check Presented by KANTHARAJU P K
Layout Rules Check • Layout rules are used for preparing the masks for fabrication • Fabrications processes have inherent limitations in accuracy Design rules are: • Minimum width • Minimum spacing • Minimum enclosure • Minimum extension
1) MINIMUM WIDTH • The minimum width of polygon defines the limits of a fabrication process • The minimum width rules potentially results in an open circuit
2) Minimum spacing • To avoid an unwanted short circuit between two polygons during fabrication • S1>Smin, where Smin is set during fabrication.
3) Minimum enclosure • It is applied to polygons on different layers • Misalignment between polygons may result in either unwanted open or short circuit connections
4) Minimum extension • Some geometrics must extend beyond the edge of others by a minimum value
Layout Design Rules Processes on: • The layout design process can be abstracted to manageable number of layout levels that represent the physical features on processed silicon wafer ,i.e. • Two different substrates • Doped regions p- and n- transistor forming materials • Transistor gate electrodes • Interconnect paths • Interlayer contacts
ELECTRICAL RULES CHECK (ERC) • Electrical rule checking (ERC) is a methodology used to check the robustness of a design both at schematic and layout levels against various electronic design rules • These design rules are often project-specific and developed based on knowledge from previous tape outs or in anticipation of potential new failures
ERC Rules • Power estimation • Transistor-ratio checkers • Short-circuits and isolated circuits • Miscellaneous electrical rules
1) POWER ESTIMATION • Metal wires that are required to carry too much power suffer metal migration, in which the atoms move within the wire, leaving a break in the conductor. • Typical process rules specify the number of amps per unit width of wire. • Standard IC packages can handle dissipations up to a few watts • New packaging designs employ heat fins and other cooling methods to allow greater power dissipation. nMOS power consumption: (a) nMOS depletion transistor in pullup configuration (b) Pullup and pulldown. Coupling considerations in power estimation
2) Transistor-ratio checkers • When doing VLSI layout, it is necessary to scale transistors so that they function effectively, relative to each other. • In order to achieve proper logic transition, a threshold voltage must be crossed and the speed at which this happens is determined by the relative scales or ratios of the driving components. • The problem is particularly important in nMOS design, because an imbalance exists between rising and falling transition times. • To ensure that such a circuit will operate correctly, an analysis of the relative transistor ratios must be done. Restored and unrestored transistor ratios: (a) Restored (b) Unrestored
3) Short-circuits and isolated circuits • A short-circuit is a path between any two unconnected nets such as from power to ground • Detection of direct paths is simply a process of ensuring that the nets are distinct • Often this is done during node extraction, when a simple test of the net numbers will tell the truth. • Also important is a check to ensure that no transistor gates power and ground signals. Although this configuration is not a static short-circuit, it does not make electrical sense and is easy to detect • Another static analysis is the detection of circuitry that is not properly connected Short-circuit configurations of power to ground.
4) Miscellaneous electrical rules • There is an unending number of specialized electrical rules. • When two output signals connect such that their values combine, they are called tied outputs. • This may be purposeful, but it may also be an error. Microwave circuit boards require that the wires be tapered to prevent incorrect impedance conditions. • Some design environments limit the number of components that an output signal can drive (fan-out limitation) or the number of input lines that a component can accept (fan-in limitation).
ERC Rules check for things such as • Floating gates. • Wrong transistor connections (Source and Drain connected together for instance). • Floating interconnect, Metal, Poly • Shorted Drain & Source of a MOS • No substrate- or well contact ('figure having no stamped connection') • Different contacts of substrate / well are connected to different nets • Distance of MOS to next substrate / well contact too large (Latchup rule)