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VLSI Packaging and Power Management

This document discusses packaging, power distribution, and input/output (I/O) for CMOS VLSI chips. It covers the functions of chip packaging, different package types, bonding techniques, and package parasitics. It also discusses power distribution networks, requirements to maintain stable voltages, using multiple bypass capacitors, and thermal management challenges. Finally, it covers I/O pad design considerations like driving off-chip loads, level conversion, and protection from electrostatic discharge.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
213 views25 pages

VLSI Packaging and Power Management

This document discusses packaging, power distribution, and input/output (I/O) for CMOS VLSI chips. It covers the functions of chip packaging, different package types, bonding techniques, and package parasitics. It also discusses power distribution networks, requirements to maintain stable voltages, using multiple bypass capacitors, and thermal management challenges. Finally, it covers I/O pad design considerations like driving off-chip loads, level conversion, and protection from electrostatic discharge.

Uploaded by

Sabari
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Introduction to

CMOS VLSI
Design

Lecture 20:
Package, Power, and I/O
David Harris

Harvey Mudd College


Spring 2004
Outline
 Packaging
 Power Distribution
 I/O
 Synchronization

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 2


Packages
 Package functions
– Electrical connection of signals and power from
chip to board
– Little delay or distortion
– Mechanical connection of chip to board
– Removes heat produced on chip
– Protects chip from mechanical damage
– Compatible with thermal expansion
– Inexpensive to manufacture and test

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 3


Package Types
 Through-hole vs. surface mount

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 4


Multichip Modules
 Pentium Pro MCM
– Fast connection of CPU to cache
– Expensive, requires known good dice

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 5


Chip-to-Package Bonding
 Traditionally, chip is surrounded by pad frame
– Metal pads on 100 – 200 mm pitch
– Gold bond wires attach pads to package
– Lead frame distributes signals in package
– Metal heat spreader helps with cooling

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 6


Advanced Packages
 Bond wires contribute parasitic inductance
 Fancy packages have many signal, power layers
– Like tiny printed circuit boards
 Flip-chip places connections across surface of die
rather than around periphery
– Top level metal pads covered with solder balls
– Chip flips upside down
– Carefully aligned to package (done blind!)
– Heated to melt balls
– Also called C4 (Controlled Collapse Chip Connection)

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 7


Package Parasitics
 Use many VDD, GND in parallel
– Inductance, IDD
Package

Chip Bond Wire Lead Frame Board


VDD VDD
Signal Pins

Signal Pads

Chip Package
Capacitor
Chip Board
GND GND

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 8


Heat Dissipation
 60 W light bulb has surface area of 120 cm2
 Itanium 2 die dissipates 130 W over 4 cm2
– Chips have enormous power densities
– Cooling is a serious challenge
 Package spreads heat to larger surface area
– Heat sinks may increase surface area further
– Fans increase airflow rate over surface area
– Liquid cooling used in extreme cases ($$$)

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 9


Thermal Resistance
 DT = qjaP
– DT: temperature rise on chip
– qja: thermal resistance of chip junction to ambient
– P: power dissipation on chip
 Thermal resistances combine like resistors
– Series and parallel
 qja = qjp + qpa
– Series combination

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 10


Example
 Your chip has a heat sink with a thermal resistance
to the package of 4.0° C/W.
 The resistance from chip to package is 1° C/W.
 The system box ambient temperature may reach
55° C.
 The chip temperature must not exceed 100° C.
 What is the maximum chip power dissipation?

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 11


Example
 Your chip has a heat sink with a thermal resistance
to the package of 4.0° C/W.
 The resistance from chip to package is 1° C/W.
 The system box ambient temperature may reach
55° C.
 The chip temperature must not exceed 100° C.
 What is the maximum chip power dissipation?

 (100-55 C) / (4 + 1 C/W) = 9 W

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 12


Power Distribution
 Power Distribution Network functions
– Carry current from pads to transistors on chip
– Maintain stable voltage with low noise
– Provide average and peak power demands
– Provide current return paths for signals
– Avoid electromigration & self-heating wearout
– Consume little chip area and wire
– Easy to lay out

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 13


Power Requirements
 VDD = VDDnominal – Vdroop
 Want Vdroop < +/- 10% of VDD
 Sources of Vdroop
– IR drops
– L di/dt noise
 IDD changes on many time scales
Power

Max
clock gating

Average

Min

Time

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 14


Power System Model
 Power comes from regulator on system board
– Board and package add parasitic R and L
– Bypass capacitors help stabilize supply voltage
– But capacitors also have parasitic R and L
 Simulate system for time and frequency responses
Voltage Printed Circuit Package Solder Chip
Regulator Board Planes and Pins Bumps

Bulk Ceramic Package On-Chip On-Chip


VDD
Capacitor Capacitor Capacitor Capacitor Current Demand

Board Package

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 15


Bypass Capacitors
 Need low supply impedance at all frequencies
 Ideal capacitors have impedance decreasing with w
 Real capacitors have parasitic R and L
– Leads to resonant frequency of capacitor
2
10

1
10
0.03 
impedance

1 mF 10
0

0.25 nH
-1
10

-2
10
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
10 10 10 10 10 10 10
frequency (Hz)

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 16


Frequency Response
 Use multiple capacitors in parallel
– Large capacitor near regulator has low impedance
at low frequencies
– But also has a low self-resonant frequency
– Small capacitors near chip and on chip have low
impedance at high frequencies
 Choose caps to get low impedance at all frequencies
impedance

frequency (Hz)

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 17


Input / Output
 Input/Output System functions
– Communicate between chip and external world
– Drive large capacitance off chip
– Operate at compatible voltage levels
– Provide adequate bandwidth
– Limit slew rates to control di/dt noise
– Protect chip against electrostatic discharge
– Use small number of pins (low cost)

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 18


I/O Pad Design
 Pad types
– VDD / GND
– Output
– Input
– Bidirectional
– Analog

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 19


Output Pads
 Drive large off-chip loads (2 – 50 pF)
– With suitable rise/fall times
– Requires chain of successively larger buffers
 Guard rings to protect against latchup
– Noise below GND injects charge into substrate
– Large nMOS output transistor
– p+ inner guard ring
– n+ outer guard ring
• In n-well

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 20


Input Pads
 Level conversion VDDH VDDL

– Higher or lower off-chip V A


VDDL Y A Y

– May need thick oxide gates


weak

 Noise filtering A Y
Y
– Schmitt trigger weak

– Hysteresis changes VIH, VIL A

 Protection against electrostatic discharge

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 21


ESD Protection
 Static electricity builds up on your body
– Shock delivered to a chip can fry thin gates
– Must dissipate this energy in protection circuits
before it reaches the gates Diode
clamps
 ESD protection circuits R
PAD
– Current limiting resistor Current Thin
gate
– Diode clamps
limiting
resistor oxides

 ESD testing
1500 
– Human body model Device
Under
100 pF
– Views human as charged capacitor Test

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 22


Bidirectional Pads
 Combine input and output pad
 Need tristate driver on output
– Use enable signal to set direction
– Optimized tristate avoids huge series transistors
PAD

En
Din
Dout

NAND

Dout

En Y

Dout
NOR

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 23


Analog Pads
 Pass analog voltages directly in or out of chip
– No buffering
– Protection circuits must not distort voltages

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 24


MOSIS I/O Pad
 1.6 mm two-metal process
– Protection resistors
– Protection diodes
– Guard rings
– Field oxide clamps

PAD
600/3
264  185 
Out
240 48 90
En In
160 20 40
Out
In_unbuffered In_b

20: Package, Power, and I/O CMOS VLSI Design Slide 25

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