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analog ic layout

F

fredo

Jan 1, 1970
0
i want to do an analog ic layout.
where can i learn the technique?
or will there be any internet resources for reference?
or where would you recommend me to start.
thank you.
 
C

Chris

Jan 1, 1970
0
fredo said:
i want to do an analog ic layout.
where can i learn the technique?
or will there be any internet resources for reference?
or where would you recommend me to start.
thank you.

Hi, Fredo. Start with these Analog Devices appnotes of general
interest:

AN-202: An IC Amplifier User's Guide to Decoupling, Grounding, and
Making Things Go Right for a Change

AN-345: Grounding for Low-and-High-Frequency Circuits

AN-214: Ground Rules for High Speed Circuits

http://www.analog.com/en/dcIndex.html

By the way, "analog ic layout" isn't very specific. You might get more
specific help if you could describe what you're doing.

Good luck
Chris
 
F

fredo

Jan 1, 1970
0
Chris 寫�:
Hi, Fredo. Start with these Analog Devices appnotes of general
interest:

AN-202: An IC Amplifier User's Guide to Decoupling, Grounding, and
Making Things Go Right for a Change

AN-345: Grounding for Low-and-High-Frequency Circuits

AN-214: Ground Rules for High Speed Circuits

http://www.analog.com/en/dcIndex.html

By the way, "analog ic layout" isn't very specific. You might get more
specific help if you could describe what you're doing.

Good luck
Chris


First of all, thanks Chris.

Just one further question. If you are doing analog layout, how do you
minimize the so-called parasitics to make it as ideal as in the
schematic design? And how do you know if your layout has reached best
optimization.

I am working on a 0.35um technology with a rectifier design at UHF.

Thank you in advance again.
 
C

Chris

Jan 1, 1970
0
fredo said:
Chris 寫�:



First of all, thanks Chris.

Just one further question. If you are doing analog layout, how do you
minimize the so-called parasitics to make it as ideal as in the
schematic design? And how do you know if your layout has reached best
optimization.

I am working on a 0.35um technology with a rectifier design at UHF.

Thank you in advance again.

Hi, Fredo. Try sci.electronics.design for advice on this one.

Good luck
Chris
 
N

notme

Jan 1, 1970
0
fredo said:
Just one further question. If you are doing analog layout, how do you
minimize the so-called parasitics to make it as ideal as in the
schematic design? And how do you know if your layout has reached best
optimization.

You should get a book on analog layout such as "The Art of Analog Layout"
by Hastings. The short answer to your question is, its something you get
an intuitive feel for after you do a lot of times. You need to consider
what nets are particularly sensitive to loading and then keep them away
from other nets. Nets which are sensitive to Miller capacitance for
instance you probably want to be most careful of.

There are plenty of other issues besides parasitics. You also must worry
about matching considerations. When laying out MOS transistors you want
to be wary of the following:

1) Matched transistors should be placed as close together as possible
2) Matched transistors should be exact copies of each other.
3) Matched transistors should have source-drain current flowing in the
same direction
4) Matched transistors should have dummy transistors placed on each end
to ensure equal etch rates.
5) Matched transistors should not have any metal run over them, or if
its unavoidable the metal should run over both.
6) The well or substrate tap spacing should be identical for both.
7) Both Vt and Beta mismatch is inversely proportional to the square root
of the gate area, so gate area should be large.
8) If possible use a common centroid configuration (for instance breaking
a pair of matched transistors into 2 pairs of matched transistors)
where one pair is the outer two, and the other pair is in the inner
two. 2-dimensional arrays are fine, but make it symmetric about the
origin and make sure to have dummy transistors above and below.
9) If you are matching a pair of transistors (such as a current mirror)
over a long distance, the net should carry current into the drain of
the mirroring transistor, not voltage to the gate.

You should route signals differentially or shielded by a (CLEAN) ground
if you are taking analog signals near digital ones. Analog and Digital
power supplies should be seperated, and if possible ground as well (this
is more important, but there is less you can do about it if you have a
common substrate and can't put down P-wells). You also should consider
using guard rings or other similar techniques.

In general to improve routability, you should try to route all odd layer
Metals in one direction, and all even layer Metals in the other. Avoid
long runs of two nets above/below or to the side to decrease coupling
(unless of course its differential). Also, try to use multiple vias when
changing layers.

Another consideration is the pads and ground/power bounce. The bondwires
(unless you are using a flip-chip) are often quite inductive, there can be
significant coupling between bondwires and significant LdI/dt power/ground
movement especially if you have digital circuits on your chip. You need
to make sure you have adequate bypass capacitance on the die.

To answer your question regarding optimal. There's no such thing as
optimal, and its a wildly underconstrained problem so even if there was an
"optimal" solution the likelyhood that you'd find it is virtually nill.
You are constantly faced with choices when floorplanning it, and as stuff
is placed down the choices do become easier, but clearly the way to do a
good job is experience. All you can do is extract it, and run a
simulation with the parasitics in it and see how it does compared to the
schematic. If its failing your design criteria then you may need to go
back and tweak things.
 
K

Kevin Aylward

Jan 1, 1970
0
fredo said:
Chris ??:



First of all, thanks Chris.

Just one further question. If you are doing analog layout, how do you
minimize the so-called parasitics to make it as ideal as in the
schematic design? And how do you know if your layout has reached best
optimization.

I am working on a 0.35um technology with a rectifier design at UHF.

Get:

"The Art Of Analog Layout" - Prentice Hall ISBN 0-13-087061-7 by Alan
(Roy) Hastings

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0131464108/ref=sr_11_1/104-6485116-0422310?_encoding=UTF8

Kevin Aylward
[email protected]
http://www.anasoft.co.uk
SuperSpice, a very affordable Mixed-Mode
Windows Simulator with Schematic Capture,
Waveform Display, FFT's and Filter Design.
 
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