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[Keyword] cell-based(8hit)

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  • Planarized Nb 4-Layer Fabrication Process for Superconducting Integrated Circuits and Its Fabricated Device Evaluation

    Shuichi NAGASAWA  Masamitsu TANAKA  Naoki TAKEUCHI  Yuki YAMANASHI  Shigeyuki MIYAJIMA  Fumihiro CHINA  Taiki YAMAE  Koki YAMAZAKI  Yuta SOMEI  Naonori SEGA  Yoshinao MIZUGAKI  Hiroaki MYOREN  Hirotaka TERAI  Mutsuo HIDAKA  Nobuyuki YOSHIKAWA  Akira FUJIMAKI  

     
    PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2021/03/17
      Vol:
    E104-C No:9
      Page(s):
    435-445

    We developed a Nb 4-layer process for fabricating superconducting integrated circuits that involves using caldera planarization to increase the flexibility and reliability of the fabrication process. We call this process the planarized high-speed standard process (PHSTP). Planarization enables us to flexibly adjust most of the Nb and SiO2 film thicknesses; we can select reduced film thicknesses to obtain larger mutual coupling depending on the application. It also reduces the risk of intra-layer shorts due to etching residues at the step-edge regions. We describe the detailed process flows of the planarization for the Josephson junction layer and the evaluation of devices fabricated with PHSTP. The results indicated no short defects or degradation in junction characteristics and good agreement between designed and measured inductances and resistances. We also developed single-flux-quantum (SFQ) and adiabatic quantum-flux-parametron (AQFP) logic cell libraries and tested circuits fabricated with PHSTP. We found that the designed circuits operated correctly. The SFQ shift-registers fabricated using PHSTP showed a high yield. Numerical simulation results indicate that the AQFP gates with increased mutual coupling by the planarized layer structure increase the maximum interconnect length between gates.

  • Nonvolatile Field-Programmable Gate Array Using a Standard-Cell-Based Design Flow

    Daisuke SUZUKI  Takahiro HANYU  

     
    PAPER-Logic Design

      Pubricized:
    2021/04/16
      Vol:
    E104-D No:8
      Page(s):
    1111-1120

    A nonvolatile field-programmable gate array (NV-FPGA), where the circuit-configuration information still remains without power supply, offers a powerful solution against the standby power issue. In this paper, an NV-FPGA is proposed where the programmable logic and interconnect function blocks are described in a hardware description language and are pushed through a standard-cell-based design flow with nonvolatile flip-flops. The use of the standard-cell-based design flow makes it possible to migrate any arbitrary process technology and to perform architecture-level simulation with physical information. As a typical example, the proposed NV-FPGA is designed under 55nm CMOS/100nm magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) technologies, and the performance of the proposed NV-FPGA is evaluated in comparison with that of a CMOS-only volatile FPGA.

  • A Design Method of a Cell-Based Amplifier for Body Bias Generation

    Takuya KOYANAGI  Jun SHIOMI  Tohru ISHIHARA  Hidetoshi ONODERA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E102-C No:7
      Page(s):
    565-572

    Body bias generators are useful circuits that can reduce variability and power dissipation in LSI circuits. However, the amplifier implemented into the body bias generator is difficult to design because of its complexity. To overcome the difficulty, this paper proposes a clearer cell-based design method of the amplifier than the existing cell-based design methods. The proposed method is based on a simple analytical model, which enables to easily design the amplifiers under various operating conditions. First, we introduce a small signal equivalent circuit of two-stage amplifiers by which we approximate a three-stage amplifier, and introduce a method for determining its design parameters based on the analytical model. Second, we propose a method of tuning parameters such as cell-based phase compensation elements and drive-strength of the output stage. Finally, based on the test chip measurement, we show the advantage of the body bias generator we designed in a cell-based flow over existing designs.

  • Large-Scale Integrated Circuit Design Based on a Nb Nine-Layer Structure for Reconfigurable Data-Path Processors Open Access

    Akira FUJIMAKI  Masamitsu TANAKA  Ryo KASAGI  Katsumi TAKAGI  Masakazu OKADA  Yuhi HAYAKAWA  Kensuke TAKATA  Hiroyuki AKAIKE  Nobuyuki YOSHIKAWA  Shuichi NAGASAWA  Kazuyoshi TAKAGI  Naofumi TAKAGI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E97-C No:3
      Page(s):
    157-165

    We describe a large-scale integrated circuit (LSI) design of rapid single-flux-quantum (RSFQ) circuits and demonstrate several reconfigurable data-path (RDP) processor prototypes based on the ISTEC Advanced Process (ADP2). The ADP2 LSIs are made up of nine Nb layers and Nb/AlOx/Nb Josephson junctions with a critical current density of 10kA/cm2, allowing higher operating frequencies and integration. To realize truly large-scale RSFQ circuits, careful design is necessary, with several compromises in the device structure, logic gates, and interconnects, balancing the competing demands of integration density, design flexibility, and fabrication yield. We summarize numerical and experimental results related to the development of a cell-based design in the ADP2, which features a unit cell size reduced to 30-µm square and up to four strip line tracks in the unit cell underneath the logic gates. The ADP LSIs can achieve ∼10 times the device density and double the operating frequency with the same power consumption per junction as conventional LSIs fabricated using the Nb four-layer process. We report the design and test results of RDP processor prototypes using the ADP2 cell library. The RDP processors are composed of many arrays of floating-point units (FPUs) and switch networks, and serve as accelerators in a high-performance computing system. The prototypes are composed of two-dimensional arrays of several arithmetic logic units instead of FPUs. The experimental results include a successful demonstration of full operation and reconfiguration in a 2×2 RDP prototype made up of 11.5k junctions at 45GHz after precise timing design. Partial operation of a 4×4 RDP prototype made up of 28.5k-junctions is also demonstrated, indicating the scalability of our timing design.

  • A Novel Digitally-Controlled Varactor for Portable Delay Cell Design

    Pao-Lung CHEN  Ching-Che CHUNG  Chen-Yi LEE  

     
    LETTER-Physical Design

      Vol:
    E87-A No:12
      Page(s):
    3324-3326

    In this paper, a novel digitally-controlled varactor (DCV) for portable delay cell design is presented. The proposed varactor uses the gate capacitance differences of NAND/NOR gates under different digital control inputs to build up a digitally-controlled varactor. Then the proposed varactor is applied to design a high resolution delay cell and to achieve a fine delay resolution. Different types of NAND/NOR gates (2-input or 3-input) for DCV design are also investigated in this paper. The proposed DCV can be implemented with standard cells, thus it can be easily ported to different processes in a short time. A test chip fabricated on a standard 0.35 µm CMOS 2P4M process proves that the proposed delay cell has a fine delay resolution about 1.55 ps. As a result, the proposed DCV exhibits finer resolution, better linearity, and better portability than traditional delay elements, and is very suitable for portable delay cell design.

  • Logic Design of a Single-Flux-Quantum (SFQ) 22 Unit Switch for Banyan Networks

    Yoshio KAMEDA  Shinichi YOROZU  Shuichi TAHARA  

     
    PAPER-Digital Devices and Their Applications

      Vol:
    E85-C No:3
      Page(s):
    625-630

    We describe the logic design of a single-flux-quantum (SFQ) 22 unit switch. It is the main component of the SFQ Banyan packet switch we are developing that enables a switching capacity of over 1 Tbit/s. In this paper, we focus on the design of the controller in the unit switch. The controller does not have a simple "off-the-shelf" conventional circuit, like those used in shift registers or adders. To design such a complicated random logic circuit, we need to adopt a systematic top-down design approach. Using a graphical technique, we first obtained logic functions. Next, to use the deep pipeline architecture, we broke down the functions into one-level logic operations that can be executed within one clock cycle. Finally, we mapped the functions on to the physical circuits using pre-designed SFQ standard cells. The 22 unit switch consists of 59 logic gates and needs about 600 Josephson junctions without gate interconnections. We tested the gate-level circuit by logic simulation and found that it operates correctly at a throughput of 40 GHz.

  • DEMI: A Delay Minimization Algorithm for Cell-Based Digital VLSI Design

    Tae Hoon KIM  Young Hwan KIM  

     
    PAPER-VLSI Design Technology and CAD

      Vol:
    E82-A No:3
      Page(s):
    504-511

    This paper presents a heuristic algorithm that minimizes the delay of the given circuit through a two-pass cell selection in cell-based design. First, we introduce a new graph, called candidate web, which conveniently represents all cell combinations available for the implementation of the given circuit. We, then, present an efficient method to obtain a tentative set of optimal cells, while estimating the delay of the longest path between each cell and the primary output on the candidate web. In this step, multiple cells are allowed to bind the same logic gate. Finally, we describe how the proposed approach actually selects the optimal cells from the tentative set, which would minimize the circuit delay. Experimental results on a set of benchmarks show that the proposed approach is effective and efficient in minimizing the delay of the given circuit.

  • CB-Power: A Hierarchical Power Analysis and Characterization Environment of Cell-Based CMOS Circuits

    Wen-Zen SHEN  Jiing-Yuan LIN  Jyh-Ming LU  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E80-A No:10
      Page(s):
    1908-1914

    In this paper, we present CB-Power, a hierarchical power analysis and characterization environment of cell-based CMOS circuits. The environment includes two parts, a cell characterization system for timing, input capacitance as well as power and a cell-based power estimation system. The characterization system can characterize basic, complex and transmission gates. During the characterization, input slew rate, output loading, capacitive feedthrough effect and the logic state dependence of nodes in a cell are all taken into account. The characterization methodology separates the power consumption of a cell into three components, e.g., capacitive feedthrough power, short-circuit power and dynamic power. With the characterization data, a cell-based power estimator (CBPE) embedded in Verilog-XL is used for estimating the power consumption of the gates in a circuit. CBPE is also a hierarchical power estimator. Macrocells such as flip-flops and adders are partitioned into primitive gates during power estimation. Experimental results on a set of MCNC benchmark circuits show that the power estimation based on our power modeling and characterization provides within 6% error of SPICE simulation on average while the CPU time consumed is more than two orders of magnitude less.