As the industry has advanced, process variation in deep sub-micron chip manufacturing has become more and more significant. Process variation can cause more than a 30% variation in circuit performance, and cause even a larger power consumption variation. Presently, how process variation causes performance variation and power consumption variation is one of the most important problems in deep sub-micron chip making.
A large amount of time margins are usually added to the design flow to compensate for the delay fluctuation which is caused by process variation. However, this compensation method (i.e., adding time margins) can only ensure that the circuit will function. It does not compensate for power consumption variation. As such, process variation impacts performance and power consumption and typically performance and power consumption are not optimized.
An object of an embodiment of the present invention is to provide an on-chip substrate voltage controller which compensates for process variation.
Another object of an embodiment of the present invention is to provide an on-chip substrate voltage controller which measures the impact of process variation supply voltage variation and temperature deviation on circuit performance and applies an appropriate substrate bias to adjust chip performance and power consumption.
Briefly, and in accordance with at least one of the foregoing objects, an embodiment of the present invention is to provide an on-chip substrate voltage controller which includes a plurality of chains of interconnected loaded ring oscillators connected to a multiplexer, where the multiplexer is configured to average the outputs from all the chains of interconnected loaded ring oscillators. An output of the multiplexer is connected to a comparator, such as a phase detector. The comparator also receives an output from a PLL, and is configured to compare the output of the multiplexer to the output of the PLL. An output of the comparator is connected to the controllable voltage regulator. The controllable voltage regulator receives a voltage in as well as the output of the comparator, and applies a substrate bias depending on what is received from the comparator.
The organization and manner of the structure and operation of the invention, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
While the invention may be susceptible to embodiment in different forms, there is shown in the drawings, and herein will be described in detail, a specific embodiment of the invention. The present disclosure is to be considered an example of the principles of the invention, and is not intended to limit the invention to that which is illustrated and described herein.
An embodiment of the present invention provides an on-chip substrate voltage controller which measures the impact of process variation supply voltage variation and temperature deviation on circuit performance and applies an appropriate substrate bias to adjust chip performance and power consumption.
MOS transistor performance and power consumption are a function of substrate bias.
The controller 10 includes a plurality of interconnected loaded ring oscillators 12, arranged in a plurality of chains, placed in key places inside a chip. The plurality of chains of interconnected loaded ring oscillators 12 are connected to a multiplexer 14, and the multiplexer is configured to average outputs from all of the chains. An output 16 of the multiplexer 14 is connected to a comparator 18, such as a phase detector. The comparator 18 also receives an output 20 from a PLL 22 (i.e., a PLL controlled standard frequency, which does not fluctuate with the process variation), and is configured to compare the output 16 of the multiplexer 14 to the output 20 of the PLL 22. An output 24 of the comparator 18 is connected to a controllable voltage regulator 26 which applies an appropriate substrate bias 28 to adjust chip performance and power consumption (the feedback loop being represented in
As such, the present invention provides an on-chip PVT variation monitor with on-chip substrate bias controller which form a feedback loop to automatically compensate the performance fluctuation caused by process variation. The method handles the performance variation issue together with the power consumption variation issue, therefore addressing one of the most important problems in deep sub-micron chip making.
While an embodiment of the present invention is shown and described, it is envisioned that those skilled in the art may devise various modifications of the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims.