Semiconductor devices are typically formed of a plurality of layers deposited on a wafer and include various circuitry to perform desired functions. On a semiconductor die, which is an independent portion of a wafer having a complete design, on-die capacitance is used to suppress high frequency noise that is generated by certain circuitry. For example, many circuits include an input/output (IO) buffer that may generate such noise due to the high-speed switching of the buffer. Typically, on-die capacitance surrounds each IO buffer block to ensure noise compliance. Conventionally, the on-die capacitance which surrounds each IO block cannot be altered as it affects the entire die form factor, and die size shrinkage is near impossible (especially near tape out time of a design), unless the IO buffer has serious performance issues. Therefore, a conventional design usually carries more than required amounts of on-die capacitance. This is an overhead in design cost and a waste of silicon real estate.
In various embodiments, a semiconductor device may be designed to include on-die capacitance located substantially around a periphery of virtually all other circuitry of the semiconductor device. In various embodiments, such a capacitance may be referred to as a moat on-die capacitance, as it substantially surrounds the circuitry of the die. While the scope of the present invention is not limited in this regard, various embodiments may be implemented in a chipset component, such as a chipset to be coupled between a processor of a system and various other components such as system memory, IO devices, other peripheral components and so forth. More specifically, in some embodiments a moat on-die capacitance may be designed around the four edges of a die to provide an opportunity for flexibility and easy alteration/shrinkage of the entire die size uniformly.
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After designing such a circuit, various simulations may be performed to determine parameters for operation of the designed chip. For example, various simulations with regard to performance, timing considerations, noise considerations and so forth may be run. Based on such simulations it may be determined that based on circuit performance, as well as noise and/or power considerations, the moat capacitance may be trimmed (block 30). More specifically, it may be determined that suitable performance can be achieved without the designed amount of moat capacitance. Accordingly, the design may be updated to reduce the amount of on-die capacitance, e.g., by trimming the size of the die in at least one of the edges. Thus the moat capacitance may be updated to be of a substantially sufficient amount to meet a noise margin or specification of a device, yet not exceed this amount or size. Accordingly, there is not more than a required amount of on-die capacitance. In some embodiments all four edges may be trimmed and in other implementations two or three of the edges may be trimmed. Thus in certain embodiments, trimming operations may be realized in two dimensions (i.e., vertical and horizontal).
After the design is completed, the semiconductor device may be fabricated including the on-die moat capacitance (block 40). For example, various well-known semiconductor manufacturing techniques may be performed to deposit and pattern various layers including conductive and non-conductive layers. In various embodiments, the on-die capacitance may be formed of alternating layers of metal and insulation material (i.e., a metal-insulator-metal (MIM) capacitance), although the scope of the present invention is not limited in this regard. For example, in other embodiments, on-die capacitance may be formed of one or more layers of a dielectric material such as a relatively high dielectric constant (high-k) material. In yet other embodiments, an on-die moat capacitance may be formed of scalable thick or thin gate oxides. While shown with this particular implementation in the embodiment of
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Accordingly, the amount of on-die capacitance silicon needed to obtain an optimal amount of capacitance for various semiconductor devices may be realized. In this way, a power decoupling solution may be tailored to actual IO buffer performance and noise suppression without re-layout and prolonging design timelines is effected.
Input/output (I/O) devices, such as I/O devices 365 and 370, are coupled to a south bridge 334 of chipset 330 through one or more I/O interconnects. In one embodiment, the interconnects may be Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) interconnects, and I/O device 370 is a network interface card. In one embodiment, I/O device 365 is a serial advanced technology attachment (SATA) device such as a hard disk, a compact disk (CD) drive, or a digital video disc (DVD) drive. In this embodiment, a SATA host controller may be located within south bridge 334 of the chipset 330 to allow I/O device 365 to communicate with the rest of the computer system.
While the present invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of this present invention.
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20090001512 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |