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Page 1: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

3D IC

PRESENTED BY

TRIPTI KUMARI

REG NO – 12110081

S7, CSE, SOE, CUSAT

ROLL NO - 79

SEMINAR GUIDE

MISS LATHA R NAIR

ASSISTANT PROFESSOR

COMPUTER SCIENCE & ENGINEERING

SOE, CUSAT

Page 2: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

WHY 3D

BENEFITS OF 3D INTEGRATION

ARCHITECTURE

MANUFACTURING

PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS

CHALLENGES AND ISSUES

CONCLUSIONS

REFERENCES

Page 3: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

INTRODUCTION

• A 3D Integrated Circuit is a chip that has active electronic components stacked on one or more layers that are integrated both vertically and horizontally forming a single circuit.

• In the 3-D design architecture, an entire chip is divided into a number of blocks, and each block is placed on a separate layer of Si that are stacked on top of each other.

• In a generic 3D IC structure, each die is stacked on top of another and communicated by Through-Silicon Vias (TSVs).

Page 4: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

EVOLUTION IN INTEGRATION

Page 5: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

WHY 3D ?

• Multi-core are bandwidth-hungry:

• Limited caches

• Multi-threading

• Virtualization

“The Bandwidth Challenge”

Page 6: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

2.5D VS 3D IC

Page 7: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

COMMUNICATION BOTTLENECK

• Architectural issues• Traditional shared buses do not scale

well – bandwidth saturation• Chip IO is pad limited

• Physical issues• On-chip Interconnects become

increasingly slower w.r.t. logic• IOs are increasingly expensive

• Consequences• Performance losses• Power/Energy cost• Design closure issues or infeasibility

Page 8: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

BENEFITS OF 3D INTEGRATION

• Reduced wire length

• Total wire length

• Larger circuits produce

more improvement

• Lower power per transistor

• Decreased interconnect

delay

• Higher transistor packing

densities

• Smaller chip areas

Page 9: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

ARCHITECTURE

Page 10: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

ARCHITECTURE CONT…

IEEE

Page 11: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

ARCHITECTURE CONT…

Page 12: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

MANUFACTURING

• There are four ways to build a 3D IC:

1.Monolithic

2.Wafer-on-Wafer

3.Die-on-Wafer

4.Die On Die

Page 13: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

MONOLITHIC

• A technology breakthrough allows the fabrication of semiconductor devices with multiple thin tiers (<1um) of copper connected active devices utilizing conventional fab equipment.

• Electronic components and their connections (wiring) are built in layers on a single semiconductor wafer, which is then diced into 3D ICs.

• There is only one substrate, hence no need for aligning, thinning, bonding, or through-silicon via.

Page 14: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

WAFER-ON-WAFER

• Electronic components are built on two or more semiconductor wafers, which are then aligned, bonded, and diced into 3D ICs.

• Each wafer may be thinned before or after bonding.

Layer 1

Layer 2

Layer 3

Layer 4

Layer 5

Bulk Substrate

Inter-layerbonds

Metal levelof wafer 1

Devicelevel 1

SOI wafers

with bulk substrate removed

Bulk wafer

500mm

10mm

1mm

Detailed view

Generalized view

Page 15: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

DIE-ON-WAFER

• Electronic components are built on two semiconductor wafers. One wafer is diced; the singulated dice are aligned and bonded onto die sites of the second wafer

INTER-LAYER INTERCONNECT

DICE

WAFER

Page 16: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

DIE ON DIE

• Electronic components are built on multiple dice, which are then aligned and bonded.

• Thinning and TSV creation may be done before or after bonding.

Page 17: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

3D FABRICATION TECHNOLOGIES

Page 18: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS

• Timing

• Energy

• With shorter interconnects in 3D ICs, both switching energy and cycle time are expected to be reduced

Page 19: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS CONT…

• Timing• In current

technologies, timing is interconnect driven.

• Reducing interconnect length in designs can dramatically reduce RC delays and increase chip performance

• The graph below shows the results of a reduction in wire length due to 3D routing

Page 20: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS CONT…

• Energy

• Wire length reduction has an impact on the cycle time and the energy dissipation

• Energy dissipation decreases with the number of layers used in the design

Page 21: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

CHALLENGES AND ISSUES

1- Clock Distribution in 3D

• 2D clock tree very hard but feasible (H-Tree, Differential, Single Ended Clock Distribution)

• Minimizing the clock skew of a clock tree in a complex 3D structure is an extremely challenging task

Clock Root

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CHALLENGES AND ISSUES CONT…

high number of vertical vias

• At runtime, thermal variations will introduce additional time-varying clock skew, further increasing design uncertainty

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CHALLENGES AND ISSUES CONT…

2 - Thermal Issues In 3-D ICs

• Due to reduction in chip size of a 3D implementation, 3D circuits exhibit a sharp increase in

power density

• Analysis of Thermal problems in 3D is necessary to evaluate thermal robustness of different

3D technology and design options.

3 - Reliability Issues In 3-D ICs

• Electro thermal and Thermo-mechanical effects between various active layers can influence

electro-migration and chip performance

• Die yield issues may arise due to mismatches between die yields of different layers, which

affect net yield of 3D chips.

Page 24: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

RELIABILITY ENHANCEMENT

• TSV check on reset• Control use dedicated Vias

in order to establish which vias are corrupted.

• If 1, 2 and 3 TSVs are OK, the control set the enable signal set_to and set_from: broken path are skipped!

• Pads routing shift as show in the figure

• Need to define The handling protocol during the TSVs check

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CONCLUSION

• 3D IC design is a relief to interconnect driven IC design.

• Still many manufacturing and technological difficulties

• Physical Design needs to consider the multiple layers of Silicon available.

• Optimization of both temperature and wirelength

• Placement and routing algorithms need to be modified

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REFERENCES

[1] J. Davis, et al., "Interconnect limits on gigascale integration (GSI) in the 21st century," Proceedings of the IEEE , vol.89, no.3, pp.305-324, Mar 2001.

[2] Banerjee, K.; Souri, S.J.; Kapur, P.; Saraswat, K.C.; , "3-D ICs: a novel chip design for improving deep- submicrometer interconnect performance and systems-on-chip integration," Proceedings of the IEEE , vol.89, no.5, pp.602-633, May 2001.

Page 27: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

THANKYOU

Page 28: 3D IC Presented by Tripti Kumari, School of Engineering, CUSAT

QUESTIONS ?

IC