Title :
Course development in IC manufacturing
Author :
De Gyvez, Jose Pineda
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
fDate :
11/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A traditional curriculum in electrical engineering separates semiconductor processing courses from courses in circuit design. As a result, manufacturing topics involving yield management and the study of random process variations impacting circuit behaviour are usually vaguely treated. The subject matter of this paper is to report a course developed at Texas A&M University, USA, to compensate for the aforementioned shortcoming. This course attempts to link technological process and circuit design domains by emphasizing aspects such as process disturbance modeling, yield modeling, and defect-induced fault modeling. In a rapidly changing environment where high-end technologies are evolving towards submicron features and towards high transistor integration, these aspects are key factors to design for manufacturability. The paper presents the course´s syllabus, a description of its main topics, and results on selected project assignments carried out during a normal academic semester
Keywords :
educational courses; electronic engineering; integrated circuits; network synthesis; IC manufacturing; USA; circuit design; course development; curriculum; defect-induced fault modeling; design for manufacturability; electrical engineering; process disturbance modeling; project assignments; random process variations; semiconductor processing; syllabus; technological process; transistor integration; university; yield management; Chemical technology; Circuit faults; Circuit synthesis; Design engineering; Isolation technology; Manufacturing processes; Microelectronics; Process design; Semiconductor device manufacture; Semiconductor process modeling;
Journal_Title :
Education, IEEE Transactions on