Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. From the inception of microelectronics in 1959 until the early 1990´s, transistors dominated both the performance and cost of microchips while interconnects were of secondary importance. In recent years, this hegemony has reversed itself. Interconnects now tend to dominate microchip performance and cost with transistors relegated to the secondary role. As an example, for late 1980´s 1.0 μm technology, the intrinsic switching delay of an unloaded MOSFET approaches 10 ps while the response time of a 1.0 mm interconnect is approximately 1 ps. But, for early 2000´s 0.1 μm technology, the intrinsic delay of a MOSFET decreases to about 1.0 ps while the response time of a 1.0 mm interconnect increases to 100 ps. Concurrent with this signal wiring dilemma, clock frequency is increasing by 100X placing stringent new demands on the chip clock distribution network. Supply current is increasing by 60X while supply voltage scales downward by 5X thereby imposing a huge new burden on the power distribution network. Maximum total wire length per chip increases by 50X, while chip-to-package input-output interconnect count increases by 10X. The profound and pervasive nature of the interconnect problem demands a response. The central thesis of this response is that early XXI century opportunities for GSI will be governed by an interconnect dominated hierarchy of theoretical and practical limits whose five levels are codified as fundamental, material, device, circuit and system. Systematic exploration of this hierarchy of limits reveals salient opportunities for addressing the interconnect problem
Keywords :
ULSI; integrated circuit interconnections; monolithic integrated circuits; GSI interconnect; chip clock distribution network; clock frequency; gigascale integration; microchip performance; power distribution network; signal wiring; supply current; supply voltage scaling; Clocks; Costs; Current supplies; Delay effects; Frequency; Integrated circuit interconnections; MOSFET circuits; Microelectronics; Transistors; Wiring;