Eighty layers of metal!

R

Robert Myers

Guest
Article intended for FPGA-types has a nice summary (for dummies like
me) of the state of the wire-delay/interconnect problem:

http://www.us.design-reuse.com/articles/article5786.html

"James Meindl at the Georgia Institute of Technology, who has become
an expert in predicting the impending impact of physical parameters on
future IC generations, has taken on the interconnect problem. His
analysis predicts 80 levels of metal by 2014 if no architectural
changes are made in circuit design."

Won't happen of course. Possible solutions: get away from Manhattan
routing (25% savings in wire delay--yawn), copper interconnect (been
done of course, discovered from the same article that copper atoms
like to diffuse into silicon, maybe it's just as well that chips
become obsolete every few years), repeaters every few atoms or so (why
do we keep trying to do it with electrons? Because we're *electrical*
engineers, that's why), and then

"Another possibility in this direction is the introduction of photonic
waveguides for long interconnect lines. There is some hope here. With
recent work on building photonic bandgap structures into silicon
circuits, this might become a practical option for designers. Photonic
structures can now be defined on-chip with the same lithographic
processes used in CMOS manufacturing. Photonic interconnects do not
carry the RC delay penalty that creates so many problems for wire
inter connects."

RM
 
Bernd Paysan <bernd.paysan@gmx.de> writes:

Robert Myers wrote:
Possible solutions: get away from Manhattan
routing (25% savings in wire delay--yawn)

He even said this was "novel". Looking at the 25 years old die of the 8086,
45 angle wiring wasn't novel back then - when layout was made by hand, and
digitized afterwards. What's novel is chip place&route tools that can
handle 45 angle wiring.
One thing I've never understood is what makes IC P&R different to
PCBs? PCB autorouters have been doing 45 degree routing for
years... Interested minds want to know.

Cheers!

Martin

--
martin.j.thompson@trw.com
TRW Conekt, Solihull, UK
http://www.trw.com/conekt
 
In article <klfjfvkej6gjid66vjumdopjoiau97kslc@4ax.com>,
Robert Myers <rmyers@rustuck.com> wrote:
Won't happen of course. Possible solutions: get away from Manhattan
routing (25% savings in wire delay--yawn), copper interconnect (been
done of course, discovered from the same article that copper atoms
like to diffuse into silicon, maybe it's just as well that chips
become obsolete every few years) ...
It is, apparently, common knowledge that copper is doom, in terms
of silicon. So I asked my chip-process-engineer brother how Intel
and IBM can be investigating the use of copper. My digest of his
answer is that the "copper equals doom" theory appears to be bunk.
It certainly has some ways to go wrong, but from a chemistry and
solid-state physics standpoint, it ought to be able to work.

I may have misinterpreted what he said, but I throw this into the
mix for discussion purposes. :)
--
In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Wind River Systems (BSD engineering)
Salt Lake City, UT, USA (40°39.22'N, 111°50.29'W) +1 801 277 2603
email: forget about it http://67.40.109.61/torek/index.html (for the moment)
Reading email is like searching for food in the garbage, thanks to spammers.
 
Hi Chris,

Copper has been solved by the process guys. The trick is that you have to
put a barrier metal (tantalum?) between the copper and the silicon
dioxide/FSG in order to prevent the copper from diffusing into the
dielectric. This makes copper processes more complicated (dual damascene)
and hence a little more costly, have higher defect rates (tantalum bridging,
via underfill, etc.) Apparently, things get trickier when you mix copper
with lower-k dielectrics.

There's a nice little paper here that describes things at a pretty high
level: http://www.icknowledge.com/threshold_simonton/techtrends01.pdf

It took a while for the fab guys to get everything worked out, but now adays
I think almost everyone's in copper at .13u and definitely below. We've
been successfully manufacturing and yielding chips use copper interconnects
since the 0.15u node (in 2001), and all of our recent FPGAs use an
all-copper process (APEX 20KC, APEX II, Stratix, Stratix GX, Cyclone).

Regards,

Paul Leventis
Altera Corp.


"Chris Torek" <nospam@elf.eng.bsdi.com> wrote in message
news:bdh5md$pa1$1@elf.eng.bsdi.com...
In article <klfjfvkej6gjid66vjumdopjoiau97kslc@4ax.com>,
Robert Myers <rmyers@rustuck.com> wrote:
Won't happen of course. Possible solutions: get away from Manhattan
routing (25% savings in wire delay--yawn), copper interconnect (been
done of course, discovered from the same article that copper atoms
like to diffuse into silicon, maybe it's just as well that chips
become obsolete every few years) ...

It is, apparently, common knowledge that copper is doom, in terms
of silicon. So I asked my chip-process-engineer brother how Intel
and IBM can be investigating the use of copper. My digest of his
answer is that the "copper equals doom" theory appears to be bunk.
It certainly has some ways to go wrong, but from a chemistry and
solid-state physics standpoint, it ought to be able to work.

I may have misinterpreted what he said, but I throw this into the
mix for discussion purposes. :)
--
In-Real-Life: Chris Torek, Wind River Systems (BSD engineering)
Salt Lake City, UT, USA (40°39.22'N, 111°50.29'W) +1 801 277 2603
email: forget about it http://67.40.109.61/torek/index.html (for the
moment)
Reading email is like searching for food in the garbage, thanks to
spammers.
 
Paul Leventis wrote:

Hi Chris,

Copper has been solved by the process guys. The trick is that you have to
put a barrier metal (tantalum?) between the copper and the silicon
dioxide/FSG in order to prevent the copper from diffusing into the
dielectric.
http://www.chipscalereview.com/issues/0301/techReport.html

gives an overview of barriers used. Tantalum Nitride is one of them, you
also can use Titanium or Tungsten Nitride, and optionally add Silicon.
Basically what you want is a robust crystal that doesn't allow the copper
to migrate through. There are many available, pick those which can be
processed easily and don't cost too much. Titanium Nitride is already used
as barrier for the AlCu alloys, so the question is whether it's good enough
(there are doubts). Tungsten has the disadvantage of crystalizing into
nano-needles, which increases the surface resistance (not that Tungsten has
a good inner resistance, either), but it works. Tungsten is also often used
as local interconnect, and some processes use Tungsten barriers for AlCu
(e.g. xfab 0.6u).

--
Bernd Paysan
"If you want it done right, you have to do it yourself"
http://www.jwdt.com/~paysan/
 
In article <bdh5md$pa1$1@elf.eng.bsdi.com>,
Chris Torek <nospam@elf.eng.bsdi.com> writes:
|> In article <klfjfvkej6gjid66vjumdopjoiau97kslc@4ax.com>,
|> Robert Myers <rmyers@rustuck.com> wrote:
|> >Won't happen of course. Possible solutions: get away from Manhattan
|> >routing (25% savings in wire delay--yawn), copper interconnect (been
|> >done of course, discovered from the same article that copper atoms
|> >like to diffuse into silicon, maybe it's just as well that chips
|> >become obsolete every few years) ...
|>
|> It is, apparently, common knowledge that copper is doom, in terms
|> of silicon. So I asked my chip-process-engineer brother how Intel
|> and IBM can be investigating the use of copper. My digest of his
|> answer is that the "copper equals doom" theory appears to be bunk.
|> It certainly has some ways to go wrong, but from a chemistry and
|> solid-state physics standpoint, it ought to be able to work.
|>
|> I may have misinterpreted what he said, but I throw this into the
|> mix for discussion purposes. :)
|> --

Copper is doom. IBM shipping large quantities of copper metallized chips. Hmm,
secret double damascene process to keep copper out of si.

Change "it ought to be able to work" to "It works"
--

Del Cecchi
cecchi@us.ibm.com
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