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Is this a good way to place dummy transistors ? (Read 829 times)
DoYouLinux
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Is this a good way to place dummy transistors ?
Sep 27th, 2007, 1:57am
 
Hi all,

I am designing a 7 GHz ring oscillator and looking for a good practical way to place dummy transistors for each functional transistor.

As shown in the attached figure, for example, in case that I have a functional transistor having a size of 10/0.18 (5/0.18 with 2 fingers) and I would like to add dummy transistors to this functional transistor. Is it correct that I just add two independent (isolated) transistors, each having a size of 5/0.18 and all terminals are grounded (for NMOS) to both sides of the functional transistor ? Then, as shown in the layout, the distance between the dummy transistors and the functional transistors have to kept as small as possible, right ?

Thank you very much in advance,

DYLinux
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Dummy_transistor.jpg
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Stefan
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #1 - Sep 27th, 2007, 2:06am
 
Two kind of thins must be thought of :
1) matching hardware to model
2) matching hardware to hardware

The first one depends on the process and design kit you're using. For a single fingered transistor you're idea would be correct. Check with your Design Kit manual to find out (if possible) how your transistor was characterized.

The second one might be of more importance when designing a ring oscillator.
Each stage should match perfectly to each other, while occupying as small area as possible (otherwise you'd typically prefer an LC-Osc).
I'd therefore recommend to not use single transistors as dummys, but to share source/drain between dummy transistor and active transistor.
That would mean that you just add another "channel/gate/source" combination to either side of your active transistor.
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Berti
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #2 - Sep 27th, 2007, 7:05am
 
Dear Stefan,

in general I agree with you. But be aware of multifinger layout when using 130nm and below, where mechanical stress due to STI becomes
an issue (the threshold voltage will depend on the distance between the poly gate and the STI).
It is therefore recommend to use a single transistor for each device for good matching.

Regards
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DoYouLinux
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #3 - Sep 27th, 2007, 12:16pm
 
Thank you very much Stefan and Berti  ;)

What I am still wondering is that:

1) In case that I connect the dummy transistors to each side of a functional transistor (sharing the source/drain region), what about the gate ? Is it necessary to connect the gate of the dummy to the gate of the functional transistor ? Or can I just ground the gate (for NMOS) to deactivate the dummy ?

2) Since my design is working at very high frequency, so if possible, I do not want to attach the dummy transistors to the functional transistor (trying to avoid further loading the functional transistor with more parasitic capacitance). Due to this concern, can I still place the dummy transistors separately from the function transistor and ground all terminals as shown in the figure ? To avoid the edge effect, I agree that sharing the drain/source region would be better, but concerning the contribution of capacitance from the dummy devices, would it also be possible to use separate dummy devices to avoid this contribution ?

Thank you very much to you all again  :)

DYLinux
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HdrChopper
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #4 - Sep 27th, 2007, 12:43pm
 
Hi Stefan,

I would ground the gate so that there is no change for any leakage current to flow through the dummies. In addition, avoiding such gate from being connected to the active transistor gate would help you reduce parasitic capacitances, which I bet are critical considering the speed you are working at.
Same idea for drain/source contacts. I would not tie them together.

Hope this helps

tosei
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Keep it simple
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RobG
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #5 - Sep 28th, 2007, 12:38pm
 
I may be missing something, but I think you would be better off sharing drains of the dummies with the "functional" transitor.  This is easy to do since they are connected to ground.  In other words, use a single diffusion with four gate stripes and five sets of contacts.

I'm not sure what this will buy you, however, since you only have one "functinoal" transistor.  Ideally, all the matched transistors should be within the same group of dummies.

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carlgrace
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #6 - Oct 2nd, 2007, 10:15am
 
Berti,

Considering the STI stress, using a single fingered device will not give best matching, in fact all it will do is subject the device to the maximum stress condition.  To remove STI stress you need enough dummies such that each finger sees a similar distance to the oxide definition (OD) edge.  For 90nm for example, it is about 3 um, so you would need enough dummies so each finger is more than 3 um from the OD edge... in this case you would get minimum stress.

Carl
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Stefan
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #7 - Oct 3rd, 2007, 3:05am
 
Although (if supported by your design kit) the easiest way would be to use standard-cell single transistors which are readily characterized using guard ring and everything... you wouldn't need to care about placing dummies then, although you might have to use some more space ...
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Berti
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #8 - Oct 3rd, 2007, 4:58am
 
Hi Carl and Stefan,

of course, placing dummies next to every device or using a kind of standard-cell single transistor would eliminate the
stress issue. But are you guys really doing this in your layouts?
I guess the layout would become much larger .. and parasitics, too.
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RobG
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #9 - Oct 3rd, 2007, 8:38am
 
carlgrace wrote on Oct 2nd, 2007, 10:15am:
Berti,

Considering the STI stress, using a single fingered device will not give best matching, in fact all it will do is subject the device to the maximum stress condition.  To remove STI stress you need enough dummies such that each finger sees a similar distance to the oxide definition (OD) edge.  For 90nm for example, it is about 3 um, so you would need enough dummies so each finger is more than 3 um from the OD edge... in this case you would get minimum stress.

Carl



Carl - I've never worked with STI (shallow trench isolation)... how did you arrive at 3um?  And, for the scenario you mention, would the STI "ring" around the transistors be the OD that you refer to?

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carlgrace
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #10 - Oct 3rd, 2007, 12:25pm
 
Berti,

Yes I am doing this in 65 nm analog design.  It is a must... not only does it help with stress, it also helps with brutal poly fill requirements.  The parasitics aren't much really if you are careful.

Carl
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carlgrace
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #11 - Oct 3rd, 2007, 12:27pm
 
Rob G,

I came to the 3um number by simulating Vt and Iref shift in devices with varying amounts of dummies until the vt converged.  If you can handle more mismatch, you can handle smaller distance to the OD edge.

yes, OD is the edge of the oxide definition... this is where the STI is applied.

Carl
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Stefan
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #12 - Oct 4th, 2007, 12:11am
 
@Berti : That really depends on the application you're targeting. if you want to be able to (nearly) accurately predict the oscillating frequency (without demands for highest frequency), the use of standard cells is quite common. Yes, interconnects do give you more parasitics then, but depending on transistor size, they're still negligible.
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Berti
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #13 - Oct 4th, 2007, 12:58am
 
Hi Stefan, when talking of oscillation frequency you assume an oscillator design?
... and what's about post-layout simulation taking into account the vth-shift?

and Carl, using single devices and making sure that the distance from poly
to the OD-edge is the same for every device, also the influence of stress should
be the same for each device. And devices would still match.?...

Thank you for explanations.

Regards
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carlgrace
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Re: Is this a good way to place dummy transistors
Reply #14 - Oct 4th, 2007, 10:23am
 
Berti,  

You are correct.  However, to do this you cannot share source/drain or use multi finger device, so you may have additional parasitics in some cases that are not worth the trade off.  In this case the devices would be in their own little OD islands... it may solve STI issue, but with lower packing density it would be hard to meet poly fill requirement without adding dummy poly.  In that case, you may as well add the dummy devices and save the cost and area!

Carl
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