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Browsing by Author "Brandtner, Thomas"

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    An Analog/Mixed-Signal SoC-Package Co-Design Methodology for Early Stage Signal Integrity Assessment Exploiting the Potential of Machine Learning Models
    (Università della Calabria, 2020-04-30) Settino, Francesco; Crupi, Felice; Palestri, Pierpaolo; Brandtner, Thomas; Koffler, Harald
    The development of new generation System-on-Chip (SoC) is mainly driven by the demand of an ever increasing number of functionalities at reduced cost and time-to-market. This is enabled by re-using specialized functional blocks, generally referred as intellectual property (IP) blocks. However, each block (analog, digital, analog mixed-signal) is typically designed and optimized independently either inhouse or by a third-party vendor. This leads to an increased design complexity, making the integration of the analog mixed-signal (AMS) blocks very challenging. As the switching behavior (di/dt and dv/dt) of the chip signals increases due to higher clock frequency, the package and board interconnects start to contribute significantly to the overall system-level performance. Signal integrity is a main issue in package designs due to the parasitic effects of capacitive/inductive coupling between potential aggressor and victim signals. In general, fast switching signals can induce unwanted disturbances into sensitive signals due to crosstalk effects even via off-chip interconnects, which may degrade significantly the overall system-level performance. A SoC for automotive applications typically requires several high accuracy analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), which are key blocks to sense and process the external inputs in order to quickly react at system-level (especially for safety requirements). However, those ADCs need to be integrated in a complex environment that comprises many different IP blocks (e.g. power converter or high-speed interfaces) at high switching frequency that can act as potential aggressors. Hence, next generation of SoC will face a significantly higher number of aggressor-victim couples. On the other hand, more accurate mixed-signal circuitries such as voltage monitoring will be required especially for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) application due to safety requirements. Reliable and accurate prediction of the system-level behavior by chip-packageboard co-design is essential to achieve “right first time” solutions. A machine learning approach can save significant time considering the main challenges in performing system-level simulations, mainly related to circuit complexity and convergence issue due to the integration of the package model (typically S-parameter data). This research work focuses on the development of a methodology exploiting machine learning algorithm to enable optimized SoC-Package co-design right from the early stage of the development cycle. The main target is to detect potential specification violation issues at system-level that may occur due to signal integrity challenge at package-level, providing guidelines for package design, and a quick feedback for the chip design development towards the optimization of the overall chip-package-board system, optimizing development cycles and time-to-market for competitive products.

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