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3-D ICs: A Novel Chip Design for Improving Deep-Submicrometer Interconnect Performance and Systems-on-Chip Integration
- Proceedings of the IEEE
, 2001
"... This paper analyzes the limitations of the existing interconnect technologies and design methodologies and presents a novel three-dimensional (3-D) chip design strategy that exploits the vertical dimension to alleviate the interconnect related problems and to facilitate heterogeneous integration of ..."
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Cited by 78 (5 self)
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This paper analyzes the limitations of the existing interconnect technologies and design methodologies and presents a novel three-dimensional (3-D) chip design strategy that exploits the vertical dimension to alleviate the interconnect related problems and to facilitate heterogeneous integration of technologies to realize a system-on-a-chip (SoC) design. A comprehensive analytical treatment of these 3-D ICs has been presented and it has been shown that by simply dividing a planar chip into separate blocks, each occupying a separate physical level interconnected by short and vertical interlayer interconnects (VILICs), significant improvement in performance and reduction in wire-limited chip area can be achieved, without the aid of any other circuit or design innovations. A scheme to optimize the interconnect distribution among different interconnect tiers is presented and the effect of transferring the repeaters to upper Si layers has been quantified in this analysis for a two-layer 3-D
High-performance germanium-seeded laterally crystallized TFT’s for vertical device integration
- IEEE Trans. Electron Devices
, 1998
"... Abstract—Increasing chip complexity and area has resulted in interconnect delay becoming a significant fraction of overall chip delay. Continued scaling of design rules will further aggravate this problem. Vertical integration of devices will enable a substantial reduction in chip size and thus in i ..."
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Cited by 8 (4 self)
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Abstract—Increasing chip complexity and area has resulted in interconnect delay becoming a significant fraction of overall chip delay. Continued scaling of design rules will further aggravate this problem. Vertical integration of devices will enable a substantial reduction in chip size and thus in interconnect delay. We present a novel technique to achieve vertical integration of CMOS devices. Germanium is used as a seeding agent at the source and/or drain of thin film transistors (TFT’s) to laterally crystallize amorphous silicon films, resulting in high-performance devices. This is achieved through the formation of large grain polysilicon with a precise control over the location of the grain. TFT’s have been demonstrated offering substantial performance improvement over conventional unseeded polycrystalline TFT’s, with demonstrated mobilities as high as 300 cm P /V-s. The process is fully CMOS compatible and has a low thermal budget. It is highly scalable to deep-submicron technologies and, with suitable optimization, should enable the production of high-performance, high density, vertically integrated ULSI. Index Terms — Lateral crystallization, SOI technology, solid phase crystallization, thin film transistors, vertical integration. I.
Multiple Si Layer ICs: Motivation, Performance Analysis, and Design Implications
- and design implications”, IEEE Design Automation Conference
, 2000
"... Continuous scaling of VLSI circuits is reducing gate delays but rapidly increasing interconnect delays. Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) roadmap predicts that, beyond the 130 nm technology node, performance improvement of advanced VLSI is likely to begin to saturate unless a paradigm shift f ..."
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Continuous scaling of VLSI circuits is reducing gate delays but rapidly increasing interconnect delays. Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) roadmap predicts that, beyond the 130 nm technology node, performance improvement of advanced VLSI is likely to begin to saturate unless a paradigm shift from present IC architecture is introduced. This paper presents a comprehensive analytical treatment of ICs with multiple Si layers (3-D ICs). It is shown that significant improvement in performance (more than 145%) and reduction in wire-limited chip area can be achieved with 3-D ICs with vertical inter-layer interconnects (VILICs). This analysis is based on dividing a chip into separate blocks, each occupying a separate physical level. A scheme to optimize interconnect distribution among different interconnect tiers is presented and the effect of transferring the repeaters to upper Si layers has been quantified in this analysis. Furthermore, thermal analysis of ICs with two Si layers is pres...
New Feature of Quantum Module: Schrödinger-Poisson Solver for Nanowire Application
"... The trend toward ultra-short gate length MOSFET requires a more and more effective control of the channel ..."
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The trend toward ultra-short gate length MOSFET requires a more and more effective control of the channel

