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Discover innovative tools that pave the way from circuit and
physical design to fabrication processing Nano-CMOS Design for
Manufacturability examines the challenges that design engineers
face in the nano-scaled era, such as exacerbated effects and the
proven design for manufacturability (DFM) methodology in the midst
of increasing variability and design process interactions. In
addition to discussing the difficulties brought on by the continued
dimensional scaling in conformance with Moore's law, the authors
also tackle complex issues in the design process to overcome the
difficulties, including the use of a functional first silicon to
support a predictable product ramp. Moreover, they introduce
several emerging concepts, including stress proximity effects,
contour-based extraction, and design process interactions. This
book is the sequel to Nano-CMOS Circuit and Physical Design, taking
design to technology nodes beyond 65nm geometries. It is divided
into three parts: Part One, Newly Exacerbated Effects, introduces
the newly exacerbated effects that require designers' attention,
beginning with a discussion of the lithography aspects of DFM,
followed by the impact of layout on transistor performance Part
Two, Design Solutions, examines how to mitigate the impact of
process effects, discussing the methodology needed to make
sub-wavelength patterning technology work in manufacturing, as well
as design solutions to deal with signal, power integrity, WELL,
stress proximity effects, and process variability Part Three, The
Road to DFM, describes new tools needed to support DFM efforts,
including an auto-correction tool capable of fixing the layout of
cells with multiple optimization goals, followed by a look ahead
into the future of DFM Throughout the book, real-world examples
simplify complex concepts, helping readers see how they can
successfully handle projects on Nano-CMOS nodes. It provides a
bridge that allows engineers to go from physical and circuit design
to fabrication processing and, in short, make designs that are not
only functional, but that also meet power and performance goals
within the design schedule.
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