Title :
Native-Conflict and Stitch-Aware Wire Perturbation for Double Patterning Technology
Author :
Shao-Yun Fang ; Szu-Yu Chen ; Yao-Wen Chang
Author_Institution :
Grad. Inst. of Electron. Eng., Nat. Taiwan Univ., Taipei, Taiwan
fDate :
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Double patterning technology (DPT), in which a dense layout pattern is decomposed into two separate masks to relax its pitch, is the most popular lithography solution for the sub-22 nm node to enhance pattern printability. Previous work focused on stitch insertion to improve the decomposition success rate. However, there exist native conflicts (NCs) which cannot be resolved by any kind of stitch insertion. A design with NCs is not DPT-compliant and may fail the decomposition, resulting in design for manufacturability redesign and longer design cycles. In this paper, we give a sufficient condition for the NC existence and propose a geometry-based method for NC prediction to develop an early-stage analyzer for DPT decomposability checking. Then, a wire perturbation algorithm is presented to fix as many NCs in the layout as possible. The algorithm is based on iterative 1-D compaction and can easily be embedded into existing industrial compaction systems. The algorithm is then further applied to further reduce the number of stitches required for the decomposition process. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm can significantly reduce the number of NCs by an average of 85% and reduce the number of stitches by an average of 39%, which may effectively increase the decomposition success rate for the next stage.
Keywords :
compaction; decomposition; geometry; integrated circuit layout; iterative methods; masks; nanolithography; nanopatterning; nanowires; perturbation techniques; DPT decomposability checking; DPT-compliant design; NC design; decomposition success rate; double patterning technology; geometry-based method; industrial compaction systems; iterative 1D compaction; layout pattern; lithography solution; manufacturability redesign; native-conflict; pattern printability; perturbation algorithm; stitch insertion; stitch-aware wire perturbation; Color; Layout; Minimization; Prediction algorithms; Prediction methods; Wires; Compaction; double patterning technology; lithography; native conflict; stitch minimization; wire perturbation;
Journal_Title :
Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCAD.2011.2179039