• DocumentCode
    2667979
  • Title

    A power grid analysis and verification tool based on a Statistical Prediction Engine

  • Author

    Tsiampas, M.K. ; Bountas, D. ; Merakos, P. ; Evmorfopoulos, N.E. ; Bantas, S. ; Stamoulis, G.I.

  • Author_Institution
    Nanotropic S.A., Athens, Greece
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    12-15 Dec. 2010
  • Firstpage
    839
  • Lastpage
    842
  • Abstract
    Voltage drops are one of the most stringent problems in modern IC implementation, which is exacerbated by the ever decreasing transistor sizes and interconnect line widths. In order to find the true worst case voltage drop that a power net of a design might suffer, the designer would have to check the voltage drops that occur from the simulation of all possible input vector pairs of a design. This is a prohibitive amount of simulations for modern ICs that have hundreds of inputs. Consequently, designers face two basic challenges, fast and accurate estimation of worst case voltage-drop and accurate modeling of the power distribution network. In this paper we present a voltage-drop aware tool for power grid analysis and verification based on a statistical engine, which can estimate the true worst case voltage drops on a design with a typical confidence level of 99%. The statistical engine is based on extensions to the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) which is a pertinent field of statistics for the estimation of the unknown maximum of a related population from one (or more) of its samples. The paper shows how the statistical engine can take input from gate-level simulation of digital logic, combined with transient simulation of the power and ground network with inductance-aware (RLCK) models. Using these techniques, a designer can estimate the true worst case voltage drop on each and every contact of the power and ground distribution network of a digital design, using a relatively small amount of input vectors, thus greatly reducing the turnaround time for power integrity verification.
  • Keywords
    integrated circuit interconnections; power aware computing; statistical analysis; extreme value theory; gate-level simulation; inductance-aware models; interconnect line widths; power grid analysis; statistical prediction engine; verification tool; voltage-drop aware tool; worst case voltage drops; Indium phosphide; Silicon; IR-drop; Power Integrity; Power Rail Analysis; SoC; Voltage Drop;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Electronics, Circuits, and Systems (ICECS), 2010 17th IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Athens
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-8155-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICECS.2010.5724643
  • Filename
    5724643