Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Matching concept in Microelectronics
1. Presentation - 3
TALLINN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY
Course : Communicative Electronics
Subject : Microelectronics (IED3030)
Harish Kumar Singh – 177319IVEM
2. Matching
Pair of device having same property
- Resistor Matching
- Capacitor Matching
- Bipolar Transistor Matching
- Diodes Matching
- MOS Transistor Matching
3. MOS Transistor Matching
Analog Circuits use Matched transistor ! Where?
• Differential pair want voltage matching
• Current mirrors want current matching
MOS transistor can be optimized either for
voltage matching or for current matching, but
not for both ! Why?
4. Voltage Matching
Consider M1 and M2 operate equal drain
current. Then possible voltage mismatch:
Offset Voltage:
Vt : difference between threshold voltages of two transistor
k : difference between two transistor transconductances
Vgst: effective gate voltage of first transistor
k2 : 2nd device transconductance
To minimize offset voltage:
- Use large W/l and low operating current
- Vgst < 0.1 volts preferable
6. Geometric Effects on Matching
• Increased Gate Area minimizes impact of local
fluctuations
Large transistors match more precisely.
• Longer channels reduce line width variations
and channel length modulation
Long-channel transistors match more precisely.
• Gate Area, Oxide thickness, Channel length
modulation, Orientation.
7. • Threshold Voltage mismatch
Svt : Standard deviation of Vt
Cvt : Constant
Weff, Leff : Effective channel dimensions
• Transconductance Mismatch
As the area of device increase, mismatch with pair
reduce
8. Orientation
• Si wafer is under stress due to processing.
• The stress produces anisotropic effect on the carrier
mobility, etc.
• Different orientation cause different stress effect on
the transconductance
• Stress-induced mobility variation by several %
• For example, tilted wafer induce as much as 5% in
matching errors.
9. Contact Placement Effect on Matching
• Contacts in the active Gate region cause
mismatch in Vt !
• Reason : Metal silicide penetrate through gate
region and enter to oxide, alert the function of
gate electrode
• Solution: Gate contacts must be outside the
active region, on thick field-oxide.
10. Thermal Effects
• Current matching primly depends on
Transconductance matching.
• Transconducatance directly proportional to
carrier mobility, which exhibit large temperature
coefficient.
• Use of common-centroid layout technique to
over come this effect.
• Locating match component
equal distance from power
dissipating component
improve matching
11. Stress Effect
• The fabrication under high temperatures may
leave residual stresses in chip
• Packaging can cause stress in chip
• Different orientation have cause different stress
on device
• Solutions
Keep critical matched devices in centre of chip or on
centerlines
Avoid using corners for matched devices
Use common-centroid layout technique
12. Common Centroid Technique
• We have to match two components A and B (
A and B can be anything like capacitor, resistor
or transistor). Lets split A and B into 4 small
components i.e. A1-A4 and B1-B4.
• Common centroid Technique: Placing
components such that bothcomponents have
same centroid.
13. Example of common centroid technique
(W/L)M1= 2(W/L)
An alternative approach of M1 M1 M2 M2 M1
M1
14. Checklist of Matching Techniques
• 1. Same dimensions
• 2. Same structure (do not match nFETs with
pFETs)
• 3. As large as possible
• 4. Close to one another
• 5. Same orientation
• 6. Laid out in a common-centroid arrangement
• 7. Surrounding circuits should be similar
• 8. Same temperature
15. Contact Placement for Matching
• Contacts shift relative to the device result in
device mismatch
• Example : Horseshoe layout for resistors cause
mismatch if contacts shift horizontally, one
resistor increases while the other decreases.
16. Buried Layer Shift
• The buried layer is diffused into the substrate
prior to the growing of the epitaxial layer.
• Due to anisotropic growth of the epi, alignment
marks shift.
• Solution:
Higher temperatures to obtain more isotropic growth
Lower deposition rates
Lower pressure
17. Resistor Placement
• Base resistor in epi tube are influenced by adjacent
diffusions.
• R1 and R4 have isolation well next to them.
• R2 and R3 have other base resistor next to them,
provide symmetrical environment
• Value of R1 and R4 will mismatch to R3 and R4
• Use dummy resistor. R1 and R4 is dummy resistor for
R2 and R3
18. Tub Bias Affects Resistor Match
• Voltage of a resistor relative to its epi tub
influences resistance.
• Two resistor in same tub will mismatch if are
at different voltage.
• Example:
19. Contact Resistance Upsets Matching
• Contact resistance can upset resistor matching when
resistor values differ
R = Rd + 2Rc
• Contact resistance becomes significant when resistance
values are small
• Large resistor ratios, where one of the resistor values is
small, can be cause mismatch by contact resistance.
• Example : Consider R1 >> R2, resistor ratio is given by
If R1 >> Rc
Thee ratio depends on the contact resistance RC.
20. • Matching of large resistor ratios is improved
by composing the larger resistor from
segments of smaller resistor.
• Example: If R1 = N(Rd2 + 2Rc)
Resistor ration,
• The ratio equals 1/N, independent of the
contact resistance.
22. Electrostatic Discharge Protection
(ESD)
• The human body capacitance of 150 pF is
charged to 4 KV
• Oxide damage is becoming more of a concern
as gate oxide thickness and it breaks down at
a few tens of volts.
• Integrated circuits may have to pass the
human body model (HBM) test.
23. • ESD current is absorbed by a large
transistor triggered by a low voltage
zener. Zener capacitor speeds turn
on in response to fast ESD transients.
• The n-type deep buried layer and the p-type
isolation (iso) form a pn junction that breaks
down at about 12 V and can carry the large
ESD currents.