2015
DOI: 10.1117/12.2085739
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Standard cell design in N7: EUV vs. immersion

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Cited by 19 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…One way the SC designers can improve the SC pin accessibility is to intelligently design the I/O pins, which maximizes the number of access hit points for each I/O pin of the SC's [2,3]. However, the complicated MPL constraints introduce interactions among neighboring access points of different I/O pins of the SC's.…”
Section: Pin Access Optimizationmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…One way the SC designers can improve the SC pin accessibility is to intelligently design the I/O pins, which maximizes the number of access hit points for each I/O pin of the SC's [2,3]. However, the complicated MPL constraints introduce interactions among neighboring access points of different I/O pins of the SC's.…”
Section: Pin Access Optimizationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…At the library design level, SC designers target at improving the inter-cell compatibility for all combinations of cells, regardless of what kind of placement [2]. With MPL applied to multiple layers with small feature sizes [2,3], it is difficult to guarantee that any combination of SC's is compatible with MPL coloring constraints. However, a robust library should minimize the number illegal SC's combinations that lead to MPL coloring violations.…”
Section: Library Robustness Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Due to complex design-for-manufacturing constraints, there are finite options of standard cell architecture for a specific advanced technology node [6], [33], [55]. Figure 5 illustrates a 7.5-track standard cell architecture at 7 nm technology node.…”
Section: Standard Cell Architecturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For better pin accessibility, a standard cell designer mainly focuses on increasing the vertical span of an M1 pin (assuming horizontal M2 routing tracks), which provides more hit points for each pin during routing stage [33]. In advanced technology nodes, this technique is becoming less effective due to a finite number of M2 routing tracks and pin-to-pin interference [6], [64]. To systematically evaluate pin accessibility under pin-to-pin interference and advanced manufacturing constraints, it is important to quantify pin accessibility in terms of "hit point combinations" and "hit points" simultaneously [64].…”
Section: Definition 1 (Hit Point) the Overlap Of An M2 Routing Track mentioning
confidence: 99%