3 D Ics
3 D Ics
3 D Ics
com
1. INTRODUCTION
The three dimensional (3-D) chip design strategy exploits the vertical
dimension to alleviate the interconnect related problems and to facilitate
heterogeneous integration of technologies to realize system on a chip (SoC)
design. By simply dividing a planar chip into separate blocks, each occupying a
separate physical level interconnected by short and vertical interlayer
interconnects (VILICs), significant improvement in performance and reduction
in wire-limited chip area can be achieved.
1
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
2
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
SoC designs are often driven by the ever-growing demand for increased
system functionality and compactness at minimum cost, power consumption, and
time to market. These designs form the basis for numerous novel electronic
applications in the near future, in areas such as wired and wireless multimedia
3
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
4. Although SoC designs typically reduce the number of I/O pins compared to a
system assembled on a printed circuit board(PCB), several high performance
SoC designs involve very high I/O pin counts , which can increase the cost per
chip
4
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
3D ARCHITECTURE
5
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
ADVANTAGES OF 3D ARCHITECTURE
6
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
7
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
It is well known that most of the heat energy in integrated circuits arises
due to transistor switching. This heat energy is typically conducted through the
silicon substrate to the package and then to the ambient by a heat sink .With
multi layer device designs, devices in the upper layer will also generate a
significant fraction of the heat .Furthermore, all the active layers will be insulated
from each other by layers of dielectrics (LTO, HSQ, polyamide, etc.) which
typically have much lower thermal conductivity than Si .Hence ,the heat
dissipation issue can become even more acute for 3-D ICs and can cause
degradation in device performance ,and reduction in chip reliability due to
increased junction leakage, electro migration failures ,and by accelerating other
failure mechanisms.
8
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
9
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
found in appliances; such chips would be about one tenth as expensive as current
ones.
11
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
Disks are inexpensive, but they requires drives that are expensive bulky
,fragile and consume a lot of battery power . Accidentally dropping a drive or
scratching a disk can cause significant damage and the potential loss of valuable
pictures and data. Flash and other non volatile memories are much more rugged,
battery efficient compact and require no bulky drive technologies . Dropping
them is not a problem they are however much more expensive. Both require the
use of a pc.
The ideal solution is a 3-D memory that leverages all the benefits of non
volatile media, costs as little as a disk, and is as convenient as 35 mm film and
audio tape.
12
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
7. APPLICATIONS
13
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
Similar flash memory cards from other companies cost around Rs.1900 or
more-though consumers can erase and rerecord data on them, unlike the matrix
cards. As a result of their price, consumers buy very few of them. Thomson, by
contrast , expects to market its write-once cards in retail outlet such as Wal-
Mart.
The first Technicolor cards will offer 64 MB of memory; version with 128
MB and 192 MB will appear later. The first 3-D chips will contain 64 MB.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is producing the chips on behalf of
matrix.
14
3-D ICs www.seminarson.com
9. CONCLUSION
15