No Arabic abstract
As the feature size of semiconductor process further scales to sub-16nm technology node, triple patterning lithography (TPL) has been regarded one of the most promising lithography candidates. M1 and contact layers, which are usually deployed within standard cells, are most critical and complex parts for modern digital designs. Traditional design flow that ignores TPL in early stages may limit the potential to resolve all the TPL conflicts. In this paper, we propose a coherent framework, including standard cell compliance and detailed placement to enable TPL friendly design. Considering TPL constraints during early design stages, such as standard cell compliance, improves the layout decomposability. With the pre-coloring solutions of standard cells, we present a TPL aware detailed placement, where the layout decomposition and placement can be resolved simultaneously. Our experimental results show that, with negligible impact on critical path delay, our framework can resolve the conflicts much more easily, compared with the traditional physical design flow and followed layout decomposition.
Self-aligned double patterning (SADP) has become a promising technique to push pattern resolution limit to sub-22nm technology node. Although SADP provides good overlay controllability, it encounters many challenges in physical design stages to obtain conflict-free layout decomposition. In this paper, we study the impact on placement by different standard cell layout decomposition strategies. We propose a SADP friendly standard cell configuration which provides pre-coloring results for standard cells. These configurations are brought into the placement stage to help ensure layout decomposability and save the extra effort for solving conflicts in later stages.
Triple patterning lithography (TPL) is one of the most promising techniques in the 14nm logic node and beyond. However, traditional LELELE type TPL technology suffers from native conflict and overlapping problems. Recently LELEEC process was proposed to overcome the limitations, where the third mask is used to generate the end-cuts. In this paper we propose the first study for LELEEC layout decomposition. Conflict graphs and end-cut graphs are constructed to extract all the geometrical relationships of input layout and end-cut candidates. Based on these graphs, integer linear programming (ILP) is formulated to minimize the conflict number and the stitch number.
Standard cell libraries are the foundation for the entire backend design and optimization flow in modern application-specific integrated circuit designs. At 7nm technology node and beyond, standard cell library design and optimization is becoming increasingly difficult due to extremely complex design constraints, as described in the ASAP7 process design kit (PDK). Notable complexities include discrete transistor sizing due to FinFETs, complicated design rules from lithography and restrictive layout space from modern standard cell architectures. The design methodology presented in this paper enables efficient and high-quality standard cell library design and optimization with the ASAP7 PDK. The key techniques include exhaustive transistor sizing for cell timing optimization, transistor placement with generalized Euler paths and back-end design prototyping for library-level explorations.
Triple patterning lithography (TPL) is one of the most promising techniques in the 14nm logic node and beyond. Conventional LELELE type TPL technology suffers from native conflict and overlapping problems. Recently, as an alternative process, triple patterning lithography with end cutting (LELE-EC) was proposed to overcome the limitations of LELELE manufacturing. In LELE-EC process the first two masks are LELE type double patterning, while the third mask is used to generate the end-cuts. Although the layout decomposition problem for LELELE has been well-studied in the literature, only few attempts have been made to address the LELE-EC layout decomposition problem. In this paper we propose the comprehensive study for LELE-EC layout decomposition. Conflict graph and end-cut graph are constructed to extract all the geometrical relationships of both input layout and end-cut candidates. Based on these graphs, integer linear programming (ILP) is formulated to minimize the conflict number and the stitch number. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms.
Layout fracturing is a fundamental step in mask data preparation and e-beam lithography (EBL) writing. To increase EBL throughput, recently a new L-shape writing strategy is proposed, which calls for new L-shape fracturing, versus the conventional rectangular fracturing. Meanwhile, during layout fracturing, one must minimize very small/narrow features, also called slivers, due to manufacturability concern. This paper addresses this new research problem of how to perform L-shaped fracturing with sliver minimization. We propose two novel algorithms. The first one, rectangular merging (RM), starts from a set of rectangular fractures and merges them optimally to form L-shape fracturing. The second algorithm, direct L-shape fracturing (DLF), directly and effectively fractures the input layouts into L-shapes with sliver minimization. The experimental results show that our algorithms are very effective.