This invention relates to improvements in the extraction of interconnect parasitics.
Previously capacitance and resistance interconnect parasitics have been extracted from specific test structures. This is complex and time consuming. A direct capacitance extraction parametric tester can measure parallel plate and comb structure capacitance. Such a measurement tool capability and Device Under Test (DUT) area, limit accuracy and scribeline implementation. An alternative method that has been used is to load a ring oscillator with appropriate metalization, then to measure the frequency of the output. The ring oscillator capacitance extraction uses the ring oscillator frequency difference between a reference ring oscillator and one containing the resistance and capacitance (RC) network to calculate the capacitance. The ring oscillator frequency is the sum of the ring oscillator gate and the RC delays. This has various advantages, especially that of more reasonably simulating actual parasitic conditions in a circuit. However, the technique does not give a good overall value of just the parasitics.
The method used previously has two independent ring oscillators, one with minimal loading, and the other with significant parasitic loading. From this it is possible to obtain two delay times, and to calculate the delay attributable to the parasitics. This can cause some problems, since ring oscillators from a wafer lot can, under normal temperature and voltage conditions, display output frequencies that can range over +/−30% from normal. Adjacent rings would be unlikely to exhibit such large variation, but a 10% difference is not uncommon. Since the delay time of the parasitics is rarely greater than the delay of the ring, any delay in the ring causes a similar error in the parasitic values. An example of this type of circuit is shown in
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention an improved detectability of the effects of interconnect RC in a logic circuit is provided by multiplexing parasitic and minimum oscillator circuitry to obtain delay with and without parasitics.
a) illustrates a minimum interconnect ring of 11 inverter oscillator with divider.
b) illustrates the same structure as
In accordance with the present invention a means is provided for selectively switching a basic ring oscillator, or one of several paths. In accordance with a preferred embodiment a multiplexer is integrated into the ring oscillator circuit. The ring allows many of the ring components to be common to each resistance and capacitance (RC) measurement (ring oscillator frequency). The component sharing reduces the key source of uncontrolled variation in the ring oscillator frequency. The ring oscillator to ring oscillator base frequency speed varies by 10–30% of the nominal frequency for adjacent and far separated rings.
With a ring of 11 inverter oscillator, for a four-way selectable ring there are seven common stages, and a further four that are adjacent, that make up the drivers or the decode.
Clearly it is possible to multiplex many more than four (4), but a tradeoff occurs, in that as more stages are multiplexed fewer stages are common. However, further multiplexing comes at a very high advantage in terms of probe/bond pads required, such that eight (8) different options only requires seven (7) pads, just one more pin than the four (4) options take.
While the invention has been described in the context of a preferred embodiment, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present invention may be modified in numerous ways and may assume many embodiments other than that specifically set out and described above.
This is a division of application Ser. No. 10/215,223, filed Aug. 8, 2002 now U.S. Pat No. 6,819,123, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5811983 | Lundberg | Sep 1998 | A |
6463570 | Dunn et al. | Oct 2002 | B1 |
20020120898 | Chen et al. | Aug 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050012558 A1 | Jan 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10215223 | Aug 2002 | US |
Child | 10921386 | US |