MIT Focuses on Chip Optimization 30
eldavojohn writes "MIT's Microsystems Technology Laboratories is focusing on the manufacturing of chips as the variables that affect chip quality become more and more influential. From one of the researchers, "The extremely high speeds of these circuits make them very sensitive to both device and interconnect parameters. The circuit may still work, but with the nanometer-scale deviations in geometry, capacitance or other material properties of the interconnect, these carefully tuned circuits don't operate together at the speed they're supposed to achieve.""
Re:In Soviet Russia (Score:4, Insightful)
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Not just lithography (Score:5, Informative)
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Right. (Score:3, Informative)
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The article is extremely short on details, but it sounds very similar to what IBM has done in the area of "statistical timing" over the last couple of years.
http://www.physorg.com/news4385.html [physorg.com]
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I couldn't find much on the web about this besides a patent from 1994 [wikipatents.com].
Just to clarify (Score:4, Informative)
Ultimately this will have a limited impact on your desktop's Giggerhurts, somewhere way down the line, but it's nothing you'll notice and, for most of us, nothing we'll really understand. Unless the mathematical basis of chip-fab optimisation is your field, this isn't going to mean much.
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Ultimately this will have a limited impact on your desktop's Giggerhurts, somewhere way down the line, but it's nothing you'll notice and, for most of us, nothing we'll really understand. Unless the mathematical basis of chip-fab optimisation is your field, this isn't going to mean much.
There's plenty on /. that won't affect me personally (nor the vast majority of slashdotters). This doesn't lessen our interest in the matter. Perhaps plenty of slashdotters don't understand this now, but having been exposed to this the subject matter may garner some of our interests. Don't underestimate the value (or interest in) information, irrelevant of how useless it may seem.
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Maybe I'm just getting old, but there seem to be an awful lot more Ritalin-kids on /. these days. Maybe I'll emigrate to worsethanfailure.com.
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Re:Just to clarify (Score:4, Informative)
With this in mind, consider a digital circuit that's driving the output voltage from the voltage of a logical 0 (let's call it 0V) to logical 1 (let's say, 5V for early TTL lovers). That voltage isn't going to rise instantaneously. The time it takes to go from 0 to 5 volts will depend on:
1. The various capacitances of the circuit, both parasitic and device capacitance.
2. Resistance in various circuit elements.
3. Cross-inductance.
4. Threshold voltages for all of the transistors.
Having an accurate model to statistically predict these variations will allow chip designers to better estimate the speed of their digital circuits. So if the target goal of a chip is 10 GHz, they can know, before they commit to silicon, roughly how many chips in a batch will meet that target speed.
Other factors also play in as we get to lower and lower powered chips. With a VDD of 1.0V or below (as in ultra-low-voltage chips), cross-inductance, capacitance on the power rails, etc. can actually affect the stability of a digital circuit. Noise is injected that can turn a voltage that was meant to be a logical 0 into a logical 1. With modern chips turning voltages in regions of the chip on and off, the di/dt problem comes in. Without accurate predictions as to the impedances across the chip, reflections on the power rails can cause a voltage that's higher than VDD and, if the transistors weren't designed conservatively (to meet power and speed goals), they could burn out.
harder on designers (Score:5, Interesting)
The ruleset for quarter-micron was maybe forty pages. The ruleset for 90 nm was the size of a small phonebook. I don't even want to think about what the rules for 65 or 45 nm must look like.
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Re:harder on designers (Score:4, Interesting)
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The 45nm one is like the 2 dimensional prison in Superman II that Zod and his chums get banished into. Except it has greem-screen text characters on it like in the Matrix. And the 2001 music plays whenever you see it.
News? (Score:2)
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monkeys (Score:4, Funny)
I read the title as 'MIT Focuses on Chimp Optimization.'
Thought maybe they'd been having trouble recruiting.
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They figured out a way to generate all of Shakespeare using a finite number of monkeys on typewriters. But it still takes an infinite amount of time.
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Shortage of good scratch monkeys (Score:1)
http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/S/scratch-mo
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As in Fish and Chips.
I love science like this! (Score:1)
1. The "Symposium" was "March 26-28, 2007" ( this is OLD news )
2. The MIT Team presented an invited paper that has *no* Abstract
"Variation (Invited Paper)"Duane Boning, et al"
3. The paper they presented from the article is for consumer electronics, at 65nm scale, which is basically yesterdays processor technology, ( they should ask AMD and Intel about *their* experence in 65nm fab, although they are working on digital computing silico