Advanced Model Order Reduction Techniques in VLSI Design

As VLSI technology advances into the sub-100nm regime with increased operating frequency and decreased feature sizes, the nature of the VLSI design has changed significantly. One fundamental paradigm change is that parasitic interconnect effects dominate both the chip s performance and the design s complexity growth. As feature sizes become smaller, their electromagnetic couplings become more pronounced. As a result, their adverse impacts on circuit performances and powers will become more significant. Signal integrity, crosstalk, skin effects, substrate loss and digital and analog substrate couplings are now adding severe complications to design methodologies already stressed by increasing device counts. It was observed that today s high performance digital design essentially becomes analog circuit design [24] as there has been a need to observe a finer level of detail.
In addition to dominant deep submicron effects, the exponential increase of device counts causes a move in the opposite direction: we need to increase the increasing design abstraction levels to cope with the design capacity growth. It was widely believed that behavioral and compact modeling for the purpose of synthesis, optimization, and verification of the complicated system-on-a-chip are viable solutions to address these challenging design problems [66].
In this book, we focus on the compact modeling of on-chip interconnects and general linear time invariant systems (LTI) because interconnect parasitics, which are modeled as linear RLCM circuits [1.1], are the dominant factors for complexity growth. Unchecked parasitics from on-chip interconnects and off-chip packaging will de-tune the performance...