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    This blog discusses all things related to mixed-signal PHY IP such as the latest trends, design challenges and anything that may be controversial.

    I built my first crystal radio at about the age of ten (had help with the soldering iron) and have been dabbling in the analog electronics field ever since. The "James Brown of Analog": I do like James Brown and have I been working in the electronics industry for many years. I’m also a big fan of Reggae and Ska and spent my youth listening to John Peel on Radio 1. Ken Boothe is the greatest singer. Running is a passion. Squaw Valley is the best place to ski. Ever!

    - Navraj Nandra

Mimicking digital scaling trends for analog IP – kind of

Posted by Navraj Nandra on October 29th, 2009

USB scaling_web

Unlike digital transistors, scaling does not happen so readily or cleanly with analog blocks. The motivation to scale is driven by the fact that digital transistors scale quadratically with each process generation. There are many reasons that analog does not scale as readily. Mostly this is related to the fact the the I/O devices and passives, typically used extensively in analog circuits, do not scale from node to node.  So, is there any hope in benefiting from the process node scaling that we see in digital transistors?

The diagram above shows three generations Synopsys’ USB 2.0 PHY. As you can see we have managed to scale the design from the original 180 nm to today’s 28 nm version. Getting there wasn’t as simple as re-targeting standard cell libraries, followed by running automatic place and route. Scaling was achieved for this analog/mixed-signal IP and this was done by number of different design techniques.

The parameterized transistors cells were technology node optimized and much of the high speed analog circuitry was pushed to the low voltage core domain. The smaller technology nodes do have a higher poly sheet resistance per unit area and this helps in making the resistors smaller as well. The I/O voltage also scales from 3.3V to 1.8 V in 28 nm – this provides benefits in more efficient capacitor designs making the low pass filter in the PLLs, for example, much smaller. Of course you need to make due consideration to leakage, linearity and breakdown voltages.

So scaling can happen in analog too – but it is more than a push button operation.

More information on Synopsys’ latest USB 2.0 PHY on http://synopsys.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=745

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2 Responses to “Mimicking digital scaling trends for analog IP – kind of”

  1. James says:

    What was the size decrease in terms of die area for each node transition?

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