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CMOS Technology and Passive Devices

This document summarizes a lecture on CMOS technology and passive devices: 1) It discusses the 45nm 1P9M CMOS process used, including the minimum channel length of 50nm and 1 level of polysilicon and 9 levels of metal. 2) It reviews the different options for implementing resistors in CMOS, including poly resistors, diffusion resistors, and N-well resistors. It also discusses specifications like resistivity and temperature coefficient. 3) It examines the different options for implementing capacitors in CMOS and challenges in building simple capacitors using just the substrate.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views23 pages

CMOS Technology and Passive Devices

This document summarizes a lecture on CMOS technology and passive devices: 1) It discusses the 45nm 1P9M CMOS process used, including the minimum channel length of 50nm and 1 level of polysilicon and 9 levels of metal. 2) It reviews the different options for implementing resistors in CMOS, including poly resistors, diffusion resistors, and N-well resistors. It also discusses specifications like resistivity and temperature coefficient. 3) It examines the different options for implementing capacitors in CMOS and challenges in building simple capacitors using just the substrate.

Uploaded by

kimjin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 23

EECS240 – Spring 2013

Lecture 2: CMOS Technology and


Passive Devices

Lingkai Kong
EECS

Today’s Lecture
•  EE240 CMOS Technology

•  Passive devices
•  Motivation
•  Resistors
•  Capacitors
•  (Inductors)

•  Next time: MOS transistor modeling

1
EE240 Process
•  45nm 1P9M CMOS
•  Minimum channel length: 50nm
•  1 level of polysilicon
•  9 levels of metal (Cu)
•  1V supply
•  Models for this process not “real”
•  Other processes you might see
•  Shorter channel length (28nm / 1V, 20nm / 1V)
•  Bipolar, SiGe HBT
•  SOI
•  FinFET

Process Options
•  Available for many processes

•  Add features to “baseline process”

•  E.g.
•  Silicide block option
•  “High voltage” devices (2.5V & 3.3V, >10V)
•  Low VTH devices
•  Capacitor option (2 level poly, MIM)
•  …

2
CMOS Cross Section

Metal p- substrate p+ diffusion

Poly n- well n+ diffusion

Dimensions

³90nm
1.4nm

50nm

0.6mm

700mm

Drawing is not to scale!"

3
CMOS Process Overview

Why Talk About Passives?

4
Resistors

What are the Options in CMOS?


Metal p- substrate p+ diffusion

Poly n- well n+ diffusion

10

5
Resistors: Options
•  Poly resistors
•  Diffusion resistors
•  N-Well resistors
•  Metal resistors
•  Transistor as resistors
•  …

11

N-Well Resistor

12

6
N-Well Resistor?
•  How much does N-well resistor vary?

13

Silicide Block Option


•  Non-silicided layers have significantly
larger sheet resistance

Type Silicided Non-Silicided


N+ Poly ~5Ω ~100Ω
P+ Poly ~5Ω ~180Ω
N+ Diffusion ~5Ω ~50Ω
P+ Diffusion ~5Ω ~100Ω

14

7
Poly Resistor

15

Diffusion Resistor
•  Applied voltage
p- substrate p+ diffusion modulates depletion
width
n- well n+ diffusion
(cross-section of
V1 V2 VB
conductive channel)
•  Well acts as a shield
R

V1 − V2
R=
I
⎡ ⎛ V + V2 ⎞⎤
≈ Ro ⎢1 + TC (T − 25o ) + VC (V1 − V2 ) + BC ⎜ 1 − VB ⎟⎥
⎣ ⎝ 2 ⎠⎦
16

8
Temperature and Voltage Coefficient

Layer R/☐ [Ω/☐]


TC [ppm/oC] VC [ppm/V] BC [ppm/V]
@ T = 25 oC
N+ poly 100 -800 50 50
P+ poly 180 200 50 50
N+ diffusion 50 1500 500 -500
P+ diffusion 100 1600 500 -500
N-well 1000 -1500 20,000 30,000

17

Compensation

18

9
Resistors: Specs
•  Resistivity – sheet resistance
•  Linearity (Voltage Dependency)
•  Temperature Coefficient
•  Parasitic
•  Variability and Matching
•  Stress
•  Electromigration (EM)
•  …

19

Systematic Variations from Layout


•  Example:

2R
?
•  Use unit element instead:


2R

R

20

10
Better Unit Element

21

Common Centroid and Dummies


Example: R1 : R2 = 1 : 2" gradient"
Dummy à"

0.5 * R2 + ΔR"

R1"

0.5 * R2 - ΔR"

Dummy à"

22

11
Resistor Layout (cont.)
Serpentine layout for large values:"

Better layout (mitigates offset due to thermoelectric effects):"

See Hastings, “The art of analog layout,” Prentice Hall, 2001."

23

MOSFETs as Resistors
•  Triode region (“square
law”):
W ⎛ V ⎞
I D = µCox ⎜VGS − VTH − DS ⎟VDS for VGS − VTH > VDS
L ⎝ 2 ⎠
•  Small signal resistance:
1 ∂I W
= D = µCox (VGS − VTH − VDS )
R ∂VDS L
1
R≈ for VGS − VTH >> VDS
W
µCox (VGS − VTH )
L
•  Voltage coefficient:
1 ∂R 1
VC = =
R ∂VDS VGS − VTH − VDS
24

12
MOS Resistors
Example: R = 1 MΩ
•  Large R-values realizable in
small area
•  Very large voltage
R≈
W
1
coefficient
(VGS − VTH )
µCox
L •  Applications:
W 1
= •  MOSFET-C filters:
L µCox R (VGS − VTH )
(linearization)
1 1 Ref: Tsividis et al,
= =
µA 200
100 2 × 1MΩ × 2 V “Continuous-Time MOSFET-C
V
Filters in VLSI,” JSSC, pp.
15-30, Feb. 1986.
1
VC V
DS = 0V
=
VGS − VTH •  Biasing: (>1GΩ)
1
Ref: Geen et al, “Single-Chip
= = 0.5V −1 Surface-Micromachined
2V
Integrated Gyroscope with 50o/
hour Root Allen Variance,”
ISSCC, pp. 426-7, Feb. 2002. 25

Resistor Summary
•  No or limited support in standard CMOS
•  Costly: large area (compared to FETs)
•  Nonidealities:
•  Large run-to-run variations
•  Temperature coefficient
•  Voltage coefficients (nonlinear)

•  Avoid them when you can


•  Especially in critical areas, e.g.
•  Amplifier feedback networks
•  Electronic filters
•  A/D converters
•  We will get back to this point
26

13
Capacitors

Capacitors
•  Simplest capacitor:

substrate"

•  What’s the problem with this?

28

14
Capacitors
•  “Improved” capacitor:

substrate"
•  Is this only 1 capacitor?

29

Capacitor Options

30

15
Capacitor Options
Type C [aF/µm2] VC [ppm/V] TC [ppm/
oC]

Gate 10,000 Huge Big

Poly-poly 1000 10 25
(option)
Metal-metal 50 20 30

Metal-substrate 30

Metal-poly 50

Poly-substrate 120

Junction caps ~ 1000 Big Big


31

MOS Capacitor

•  High non-linearity,
temperature coefficient

•  But, still useful in many


applications, e.g.:
•  (Miller)
compensation
capacitor
•  Bypass capacitor
(supply, bias)

32

16
Capacitor Layout

•  Unit elements"
•  Shields:"
•  Etching"
•  Fringing fields"
•  “Common-centroid”"
•  Wiring and interconnect
parasitics"

Ref.: Y. Tsividis, “Mixed Analog-Digital VLSI


Design and Technology,” McGraw-Hill,
1996."

33

MIM Capacitors
•  Some processes have MIM cap as add-on
option
•  Separation between metals is much thinner
•  Higher density

•  Used to be fairly popular


•  But not as popular now that have many metal layers
anyways

34

17
Capacitor Geometries
•  Horizontal parallel plate
•  Vertical parallel plate
•  Combinations

Ref: R. Aparicio and A. Hajimiri, “Capacity Limits and Matching


Properties of Integrated Capacitors,” JSSC March 2002, pp.
384-393.

35

“MOM” Capacitors

•  Metal-Oxide-Metal capacitor. Free with modern CMOS.


•  Use lateral flux (~Lmin) and multiple metal layers to realize
high capacitance values

36

18
MOM Capacitor Cross Section

•  Use a wall of metal and


vias to realize high
density

•  More layers – higher


density
•  May want to chop off lower
layers to reduce Cbot

•  Reasonably good
matching and accuracy
37

Distributed Effects
•  Can model IC resistors
as distributed RC
circuits.

•  Could use transmission


line analysis to find
equivalent 2-port
parameters.

•  Inductance negligible
for small IC structures
up to ~10GHz.
38

19
Effective Resistance

•  High frequency resistance depends on W, e.g.:


•  W=1µ 10kΩ resistor works fine at 1GHz
•  W=5µ 10kΩ resistor drops to 5kΩ at 1 GHz

•  May need distributed model for accurate freq


response
39

Capacitor Q

•  Current density drops as you go farther


from contact edge…

40

20
Double Contact Strucutre

•  If contact on both edges,


•  R drops 4X
•  Can be a good idea even if not hitting distributed
effects

41

Inductors

21
Passives: Inductors

43

What About Inductors?

•  Mostly not used in analog/mixed-signal design


•  Usually too big
•  More of a pain to model than R’s and C’s
•  But they do occasionally get used
•  Example inductor app.: shunt peaking
•  Can boost bandwidth by up to 85%!
•  Q not that important (L in series with R)
•  But frequency response may not be flat
44

22
Spiral Inductors

•  Used widely in RF circuits for small L


(~1-10nH).
•  Use top metal for Q and high self resonance
frequencies.
•  Very good matching and accuracy – if you model
them right 45

23

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