DocumentCode
400798
Title
SILCA: fast-yet-accurate time-domain simulation of VLSI circuits with strong parasitic coupling effects
Author
Li, Zhao ; Shi, C. J Richard
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
9-13 Nov. 2003
Firstpage
793
Lastpage
799
Abstract
We propose a new circuit analysis method, namely Semi-Implicit Linear-Centric Analysis (SILCA), for efficient SPICE-accurate transient simulation of deep-submicron VLSI circuits with strong parasitic coupling effects introduced by interconnect lines, common substrate, power/ground networks, etc. SILCA is based on two linear-centric techniques. First, a new semi-implicit iterative numerical integration scheme is developed, which applies dynamic time step control accounting for stiff systems and meanwhile keeps constant equivalent conductance for capacitor/inductor companion models. Its convergence and stability properties are characterized. Second, to achieve constant linearized conductance for nonlinear devices during nonlinear iteration process, a successive variable chord method is introduced as an alternative of the Newton-Raphson method and the rank-one update technique is implemented for fast LU factorization. With these techniques, SILCA reduces the number and cost of required LU factorizations dramatically. Experimental results on substrate and power/ground networks have demonstrated that SILCA yields SPICE-like accuracy with an over 80X reduction in LU factorization cost, and an about 20X overall CPU time speedup over SPICE3 for circuits with tens of thousands elements, and the efficiency increases further with the size of a circuit.
Keywords
Newton-Raphson method; SPICE; VLSI; absolute stability; circuit simulation; coupled circuits; integration; iterative methods; linear network analysis; LU factorization; Newton-Raphson method; SILCA; SPICEtransient simulation; VLSI circuits; capacitor/inductor companion models.; circuit analysis method; constant linearized conductance; convergence properties; dynamic time step control; linear centric techniques; nonlinear devices; nonlinear iteration process; power/ground networks; semi-implicit iterative numerical integration scheme; semi-implicit linear centric analysis; stability properties; stiff systems; strong parasitic coupling effects; time domain simulation; variable chord method; very large scale integrated circuits; Analytical models; Circuit analysis; Circuit simulation; Costs; Coupling circuits; Integrated circuit interconnections; Power system interconnection; Time domain analysis; Transient analysis; Very large scale integration;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Aided Design, 2003. ICCAD-2003. International Conference on
Conference_Location
San Jose, CA, USA
Print_ISBN
1-58113-762-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCAD.2003.159767
Filename
1257899
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