DocumentCode :
3500133
Title :
The feasibility of Carbon Nanotubes for power delivery in 3-D Integrated Circuits
Author :
Khan, Nauman H. ; Hassoun, Soha
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Tufts Univ., Medford, MA, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
Jan. 30 2012-Feb. 2 2012
Firstpage :
53
Lastpage :
58
Abstract :
Increased power density and package asymmetry pose challenges in designing power delivery networks for 3-D Integrated Circuits (ICs). The increased resistivity of Cu wires due to scaling has shifted attention to alternate interconnect technologies. Continued and significant innovations in CNT manufacturing at CMOS-compatible temperatures with quality low-resistive contacts promise to enable the use of CNT as a replacement. We investigate in this paper the feasibility of using CNTs for power delivery in 3-D ICs. We evaluate the use of CNTs as Through-Silicon Vias (TSVs) and as wiring for global power delivery grids, fabricated on interposer dies. We assume the CNT interconnect has a mix of single- and multi-walled CNTs with 30% metallic nanotubes. We design a 3-D system-level comparative framework that utilizes select traces from SPEC benchmarks to evaluate improvements of CNTs over Cu. Our results emphasize how CNTs can significantly improve power delivery for 3-D integrated circuits. Using CNTs for on-chip power grid and for TSVs reduces the number of TSVs by 71% when compared to a Cu implementation. For the same substrate area dedicated to power-TSVs, CNTs improve the maximum and average IR drop by 98% and 40%, respectively. Improvements in the Ldi/dt drop are 47% and 18%, respectively.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; carbon nanotubes; copper; electrical resistivity; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit interconnections; nanotube devices; three-dimensional integrated circuits; wires (electric); 3D IC; 3D integrated circuits; 3D system-level comparative framework; CMOS-compatible temperatures; CNT interconnect; CNT manufacturing; SPEC benchmarks; TSV; carbon nanotubes; copper implementation; copper wire resistivity; global power delivery grids; interconnect technologies; interposer dies; low-resistive contacts; metallic nanotubes; multiwall CNT; on-chip power grid; package asymmetry; power delivery network design; power density; single-wall CNT; through-silicon vias; wiring; Copper; Inductance; Kinetic theory; Power grids; System-on-a-chip; Through-silicon vias;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Design Automation Conference (ASP-DAC), 2012 17th Asia and South Pacific
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
ISSN :
2153-6961
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0770-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ASPDAC.2012.6165010
Filename :
6165010
Link To Document :
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