Layout to minimize gate orientation related skew effects

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6601224
  • Patent Number
    6,601,224
  • Date Filed
    Monday, August 28, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 29, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
A method and apparatus for a driver layout is described. The layout includes an first number of gate lines arranged along a first axis and a second equal number of gates arranged along a second axis, such that the first set of gates lines is orthogonal to the second set of gates lines. The layout includes a total of N discrete transistors.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to integrated circuits, and more specifically, to integrated circuit layout design.




BACKGROUND




As the frequency of VLSI circuits increases, the need to control skew in critical circuits becomes increasingly important. Two major process related components of skew are optical astigmatism and angle of implantation. Both of these effects are sensitive to gate orientation.




Optical astigmatism can cause vertical and/or horizontal lines to be imaged onto a silicon wafer less accurately than normal. The accuracy of these critical dimensions (CDs) is fundamental but obviously some variance must be tolerated. Variance in the width and/or length of the intended transistor channel dimensions ultimately affects the strength, β, (Eq. 1.4), i.e. the current carrying capability of the device (Eqs 1.2 & 1.3). This effect is becoming ever more dominant as CDs continue to approach photolithographical limits.




The second source of transistor driving strength modulation, albeit less dominant, is a result of a variance in the angle of implantation. This causes a modulation of the device threshold voltage, V


t


, resulting in a change in the effective driving strength of the device.




In the prior art, several methods have been used to control skew. Two of these are:




use of long-channeled transistors




guaranteeing the same gate orientation of all critical circuits.




The use of long-channel transistors minimizes the effects of poly CD variance reducing the percentage change in L


eff


(Eq. 1.6) caused by Δl. However, in order to achieve that same effective driving strength for the driver in question, the effective width, W


eff


(Eq. 1.5) must be increased so that the β of the device is equal to that of the minimum channel device. Long-channel drivers inherently consume more die area. For example, a 20% increase in L


eff


requires a 20% increase in W


eff


which translates to a 20% or more increase in silicon area required.





FIG. 1A

illustrates a driver circuit that may be implemented with the various circuits described below.

FIG. 1B

illustrates one layout of the driver of

FIG. 1A

having a vertical orientation with parallel transistors.

FIG. 1C

illustrates an alternative layout with parallel transistors having a horizontal orientation. The driver may alternatively be implemented as a single large device, as shown in FIG.


1


D. The device example shown has a W/L ratio of 12.

FIG. 1E

shows the horizontal embodiment of the single legged device. A vertical implementation may be done in the alternative.




Guaranteeing the same gate orientation for all critical transistors is another method of controlling skew. However, maintaining the same gate orientation is not always practical. For example, I/O cells are normally placed radially to form the I/O ring of a design as shown in FIG.


2


. As can be seen, the same I/O library element is placed on both the top/bottom and left/right side of a die. Thus, the same gate orientation can not be maintained.




Therefore, an improved method of controlling skew would be advantageous.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




A method and apparatus for a driver layout is described. The layout includes an first number of gate lines arranged along a first axis and a second equal number of gates arranged along a second axis, such that the first set of gates lines is orthogonal to the second set of gates lines. The layout includes a total of N discrete transistors.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The present invention is illustrated by way of example, and not by way of limitation, in the figures of the accompanying drawings and in which like reference numerals refer to similar elements and in which:





FIG. 1A

is a circuit diagram of a driver circuit.





FIGS. 1B-1E

are circuit diagrams and layouts of prior art transistors.





FIG. 2

is a layout of a prior art I/O ring design.





FIGS. 3A-C

are one embodiment of layouts of circuits according to one embodiment of the present invention.





FIG. 4

is a layout illustrating optical astigmatism.





FIGS. 5A-8C

illustrate one embodiment of step-by-step manufacturing of the driver circuit of FIG.


3


.





FIG. 9

illustrates one embodiment of a diffusion plate that may be used to create the diffusion areas shown in FIG.


7


A.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION




A circuit layout to minimize gate orientation related skew effects is described. This layout, for a driver with N gates, orients N/2 gates horizontally and N/2 vertically to reduce skew in integrated circuits. This is fundamentally different from selecting specific gate orientation for skew sensitive circuits on a die. For one embodiment, this driver can be referred to as a T


4


driver, for tic-tac-toe Transistor layout.




The T


4


driver minimizes skew by reducing the overall range of drain current, I


ds


, resulting from optical astigmatism variances. All other process parameters being equal, i.e. μE/tox constant, the skew of driver strength can be directly controlled by minimizing the range of β.




For simplicity sake, the following set of equations discussed vertical and horizontal astigmatism effects separately. If it can be shown that β


current


is in the middle of possible values for both single and multi-legged device oriented either vertically or horizontally, then the T


4


layout provides a circuit less sensitive to gate orientation skew effects. The T


4


driver minimizes skew due to optical astigmatism—defined in the background section—by reducing the minimum and maximum ranges of the transistor. The discussion below, for simplicity addresses the structure of a N-type metal oxide semiconductors (NMOS).




The basic MOS transistor equations for I


ds


, the drain to source current for a transistor, are:










I
ds

=


0






V
gs





V
t







(
cutoff
)







(
1.1
)







I

ds






=

β
*

[



(


V
gs

-

V
t


)



V
ds


-


V
ds
2

2


]

















0
<

V
ds

<


V
gs

-

V
t













(

non-saturation

)










(
1.2
)







I
ds

=


β
*

[



(


V
gs

-

V
t


)

2

2

]






0

<


V
gs

-

V
t


<


V
ds







(

saturation

)







(
1.3
)













Where




V


gs


is the gate to source voltage,




V


1


is the device threshold voltage,




V


ds


is the drain to source voltage, and β is the transistor gain factor, such that










β
=


με

t

ox







*

[


W
eff


L
eff


]



,




(
1.4
)













where






με

t

ox
















is the process dependent factor, where




μ is the effective surface mobility of carriers (electrons or holes),




ε is the permittivity of the gate insulator,




t


ox


is the thickness of the gate insulator,




W


eff


is the effective width of the channel, and




L


eff


is the effective length of the channel such that








W




eff




=W±Δw


  (1.5)










L




eff




=L±Δl,


  (1.6)






where




Δw is the diffusion critical dimension variance, and




Δl is the poly critical dimension variance




Based on these equations, the transistor gain factor can be calculated for various circuit types. For one embodiment, for this calculation it can be assumed that the process dependent factor is a constant, k. Thus, for the circuits described in

FIG. 1D

, a single legged circuit, the value of β is











β

1

t


=

k
*





12

W

±

Δ





w



L

Δ






,




(
2.1
)













while for the twelve parallel legged circuit shown in

FIG. 1B

, the value of β is










β

12

t


=

k
*





12


(

W
±

Δ





w


)



L

Δ




.






(
2.2
)













The value of β for the circuit described below in

FIG. 3

is











β
current

=

k
*





6


(

W
±

Δ





w


)



L


Δ





l



+


6


(

W


Δ





w


)



L
±

Δ





l








,




(
2.3
)













since half of the transistors are horizontally oriented, while the other half of the transistors are vertically oriented.




Four specific examples are described below with respect to

FIG. 4

, illustrating two types of astigmatism, vertical and horizontal. Optical astigmatism can cause vertical and/or horizontal lines to be imaged onto a silicon wafer less accurately than normal.




Case I(a)−vertical astigmatism, along axis x and y, Δx>0, Δy=0. For this example, for simplicity, the process dependent factors are assumed to be constant and are not shown. In this case,








β
h1t

=






12

W

+

Δ





x



L
+

Δ





y





=



12

W

+

Δ





x


L



,


β
v1t

=






12

W

+

Δ





y



L
+

Δ





x





=


12

W


L
+

Δ





x











β
h12t

=





12


(

W
+

Δ





x


)



L
+

Δ





y





=



12

W

+

12

Δ





x


L



,


β
v12t

=





12


(

W
+

Δ





y


)



L
+

Δ





x





=


12

W


L
+

Δ





x











β
current

=






6


(

W
+

Δ





x


)



L
+

Δ





y



+


6


(

W
+

Δ





y


)



L
+

Δ





x






=





(


6

W

+

6

Δ





x


)

L

+


6

W


L
+

Δ





x








,










thus,




β


v12t





v1t





current





h1t





h12t


, similarly, it can be proven that for Case I(b), where Δx<0, Δy=0,




β


h12t





h1t





current





v1t





v12t


. Thus it appears that β


current


, having an equal number of transistors oriented horizontally and vertically is less sensitive to vertical astigmatism than either of the two prior art methods.




Similarly, for Case II(a), horizontal astigmatism, where Δx=0, Δy>0,








β
h1t

=






12

W

+

Δ





x



L
+

Δ





y





=


12

W


L
+

Δ





y





,


β
v1t

=






12

W

+

Δ





y



L
+

Δ





x





=



12

W

+

Δ





y


L









β
h12t

=





12


(

W
+

Δ





x


)



L
+

Δ





y





=


12

W


L
+

Δ





y





,


β
v12t

=





12


(

W
+

Δ





y


)



L
+

Δ





x





=



12

W

+

12


(

Δ





y

)



L









β
current

=






6


(

W
+

Δ





x


)



L
+

Δ





y



+


6


(

W
+

Δ





y


)



L
+

Δ





x






=





6

W


L
+

Δ





y



+


(


6

W

+

6


(

Δ





y

)



)

L






,










thus,




β


h12t





h1t





current





v1t





v12t


, similarly, it can be proven that for Case II(b), where Δx=0, Δy<0,




β


v12t





v1t





current





h1t





h12t


, Thus it appears that β


current


, having an equal number of transistors oriented horizontally and vertically is less sensitive to horizontal astigmatism than either of the two prior art methods.




Astigmatism may have both horizontal and vertical aspects. Since β


current


is less sensitive to horizontal astigmatism, and β


current


is less sensitive to vertical astigmatism, therefore β


current


is less sensitive to a combined horizontal and vertical astigmatism.




For one embodiment, this structure, which is a fundamental building block, can be stepped and repeat in both X and Y directions to create stronger drivers. The basic twelve transistor structure shown in

FIG. 3A

below can be permutated by removing an even number of transistor legs to create other structures. For example T


9


-T


12


may be removed to create an O-ring device, as shown in

FIG. 3B. A

single pair of legs may also be used to generate four transistors, as shown in FIG.


3


C. Any even number of transistors may be set in this structure, such that half of the transistors are orthogonal to the other half of the transistors. By using such a layout of transistors, skew effects are minimized.




Common library elements which can not be placed to guarantee the same orientation for a specific gate, e.g. I/O cells for bond-wire designs, can use this layout method to eliminate gate orientation skew.




The T


4


driver can also reduce the modulations in threshold voltage, Vt, resulting from implant angle variations which can arise between orthogonally oriented transistors. It can be seen in both the saturated and non-saturated current equations, that variations in Vt will cause variations in driver current. These Vt variations also skew the behavior of the driver and minimizing these is beneficial to controlling overall circuit skew. Keeping the gate orientation of N/2 transistors orthogonal to the other half of transistors, forces all T


4


driver configuration to experience that same set of variations. In much the same way as with optical astigmatism, this minimizes the magnitude of Vt variance.





FIG. 3A

illustrates an exemplary layout of a T


4


driver. The driver includes twelve transistors T


1


to T


12




390


arranged symmetrically along four legs


310


-


325


. The legs


310


-


325


are arranged in a bilaterally symmetric format. The legs


310


-


325


form the gates of transistors T


1


to T


12


. For one embodiment, the legs


310


-


325


are polysilicon. Alternatively, the legs


310


-


325


may be metal, or another conductive material. The legs


310


-


325


are placed on a substrate (not shown). The substrate includes source


330


and drain sections


340


, in an alternating pattern. Thus, for example, all corners and the center section may be source sections


330


, while the other sections are drain sections


340


. Around each crossing of the legs


310


-


320


is a non-diffused area


350


. The interconnections between the sources are not shown. For one embodiment, the sources may be tied together and the drains may be tied together, using metal layers.




Thus, for example, one transistor, T


1




390


, is circled, including a portion of leg


310


and adjacent source


330


and drain


340


areas. Transistor T


1




390


shares a source with transistor T


8


, and a drain with transistor T


2


. The gate area of the transistor T


1




390


is defined by the edge of the structure and the non-diffused area


350


.

FIGS. 3B and 3C

illustrate permutations of this design, with fewer numbers of transistors. Similarly, additional transistors may be added to the system, while balancing the number of transistors.





FIG. 4

is a layout illustrating optical astigmatism. For simplicity, the system is described as being horizontally oriented, such that the diffusion area extends horizontally. The first figure shows a vertical astigmatism, where Δy>0, and Δx=0. The second figure shows horizontal astigmatism, where Δx>0, and Δy=0. Of course, astigmatism may involve both an x and a y component, but this is not shown in FIG.


4


.





FIGS. 5A-C

illustrate top, side, and perspective views of the substrate on which a transistor layout according to the present invention may be implemented. For one embodiment, the substrate is a silicon substrate. Alternatively, ceramics, sapphire, or other materials may be used for the substrate.





FIGS. 6A-C

illustrate top, side, and perspective views of the substrate after a first layer of a conductor


510


has been deposited. This conductor


510


forms the gate for the transistor. For one embodiment, the stage shown at

FIGS. 6A-C

is achieved by a two step process, initially depositing a layer of conductor


510


, and then etching away the material


510


. For one embodiment, a layer of silicon dioxide (SiO2)


515


is deposited on the substrate prior to the conductor


510


deposition. For another embodiment, another material may be used in place of the silicon dioxide. This SiO




2




layer


515


is removed with the conductive layer


510


, leaving a layer of SiO




2




layer


515


underneath the conductor layer


510


. For one embodiment, the conductor


510


is a metal layer. For another embodiment, the conductor


510


is a polysilicon layer. Alternative materials may be used.





FIGS. 7A-C

illustrate top, side, and perspective views of the substrate after a diffusion step. The diffusion step creates the source and drain regions


520


. For one embodiment, the step further dopes the gate


510


. The diffusion step creates non-diffused areas


525


, centered around the intersection of gates


510


.

FIG. 9

illustrates a diffusion plate


910


that may be used to create the diffusion areas shown in FIG.


7


C. With this step a complete transistor is formed, with the gate area


515


surrounded on either side by a source


530


and drain


540


contact.





FIGS. 8A-C

illustrate top, side, and perspective views of the substrate after contact windows are established. The contact windows


530


,


540


permit the transistor to be hooked up to other devices. This figure does not show the interconnections between the source and drain contacts of each transistor. However, by interconnecting the source and drain areas appropriately, various circuits may be created.




In this way, a symmetric set of drivers is manufactured, with transistors in both directions.




In the foregoing specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense.



Claims
  • 1. A layout for an even number of transistors N, comprising:a first half of the transistors (N/2) having gates oriented along a first axis; a second half of the transistors (N/2) having gates oriented along a second axis orthogonal to the gates of the first half of the transistors; a plurality of legs, the legs forming the gates of the N transistors; and a common non-diffused area shared by at least two intersections of the legs.
  • 2. The layout of claim 1, wherein the transistor layout is bilaterally symmetric along both the X and Y axis.
  • 3. The layout of claim 1, wherein the plurality of legs are arranged in a bilaterally symmetric format.
  • 4. The layout of claim 3, further comprising:diffused areas forming sources and drains; and an area at which any of the plurality of legs cross, the area being a non-diffused area.
  • 5. The layout of claim 3, wherein the plurality of legs form a tic-tac-toe pattern.
  • 6. The layout of claim 5, whereinthe tic-tac-toe pattern defines square areas between the legs; and the source and drain areas alternate in the square areas.
  • 7. The layout of claim 5, wherein the tic-tac-toe pattern is repeated to form a larger layout.
  • 8. The layout of claim 5, wherein at least four intersections of the plurality of legs forming the tic-tac-toe pattern share a common non-diffused area.
  • 9. The layout of claim 1, used for an integrated circuit, wherein the gate orientation reduces skew effects due to mask alignment and gate orientation.
  • 10. A symmetric transistor layout comprising:an even number of transistor legs, laid out in an intersecting pattern, forming a bilaterally symmetric base; a plurality of source areas and drain areas defined by rectangles bordered by two or more transistor legs; undiffused areas surrounding each intersection of the legs, a common undiffused area shared by at least two intersections of the legs; and a plurality of transistors defined by a portion of a leg forming a gate and the source and drain areas on either side of the leg forming a source and a drain.
  • 11. The symmetric transistor layout of claim 10, wherein the plurality of transistors is an even number of transistors.
  • 12. The symmetric transistor layout of claim 11, wherein a first half of the transistors are oriented along a first axis and a second half of the transistors are oriented along a second axis orthogonal to the first axis.
  • 13. The symmetric transistor layout of claim 10, wherein the legs form a tic-tac-toe pattern.
  • 14. The layout of claim 13, wherein at least four intersections of the legs forming the tic-tac-toe pattern share a common undiffused area.
  • 15. A layout for an even number of transistors, comprising:a bilaterally symmetric base of transistor gates; a plurality of source areas and drain areas adjacent to the transistor gates; and undiffused areas surrounding each intersection of the transistor gates, a common undiffused area shared by at least two intersections of the gates.
  • 16. The layout of claim 15, wherein half the transistor gates are oriented along a first axis and a second half of the transistor gates are oriented along a second axis orthogonal to the first axis.
  • 17. The layout of claim 15, wherein the bilaterally symmetric base of transistor gates includes a plurality of legs, each leg defining one or more transistor gates.
  • 18. The layout of claim 17, wherein the plurality of legs form a tic-tac-toe pattern, wherein the source and drain areas alternate in quadrilateral areas defined by the plurality of legs.
  • 19. The layout of claim 18, wherein the tic-tac-toe pattern may be repeated to form a larger layout.
  • 20. The layout of claim 18, wherein at least four intersections of the plurality of legs forming the tic-tac-toe pattern share a common undiffused area.
Parent Case Info

This application claims the benefit of Provisional application Ser. No. 60/151,813, filed Aug. 30, 1999.

US Referenced Citations (11)
Number Name Date Kind
5404033 Wong et al. Apr 1995 A
5510999 Lee et al. Apr 1996 A
5796624 Sridhar et al. Aug 1998 A
5887002 Cooke et al. Mar 1999 A
5898194 Gheewala Apr 1999 A
5923569 Kumashiro et al. Jul 1999 A
5965925 Kornachuk et al. Oct 1999 A
5990502 Park Nov 1999 A
6269199 Maloney Jul 2001 B1
6323985 Maloney Nov 2001 B1
6333656 Schober Dec 2001 B1
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
Mathias et al., “Flag: A flexible layout generator for analog MOS transistors”, Jun. 6, 1998, Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal, vol.: 33 Issue, pp.: 896-903.
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/151813 Aug 1999 US