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Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

The document discusses how chiplet-based designs and heterogeneous integration are changing system design and analysis. As process nodes become more expensive, using multiple smaller chiplets in a package is a more cost-effective approach than a single monolithic chip. This requires new design methodologies and tools that can optimize designs at the system level, considering interactions between chips, the package, and printed circuit boards. System-level electrical and thermal analysis tools are needed to model these interactions and multi-physics effects. Chiplet-based designs allow reuse of IP across applications, reducing costs compared to designing full systems on the latest process nodes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views7 pages

Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

The document discusses how chiplet-based designs and heterogeneous integration are changing system design and analysis. As process nodes become more expensive, using multiple smaller chiplets in a package is a more cost-effective approach than a single monolithic chip. This requires new design methodologies and tools that can optimize designs at the system level, considering interactions between chips, the package, and printed circuit boards. System-level electrical and thermal analysis tools are needed to model these interactions and multi-physics effects. Chiplet-based designs allow reuse of IP across applications, reducing costs compared to designing full systems on the latest process nodes.

Uploaded by

Rajmohan Vijayan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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WHITE PAPER

Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are


Changing System Design and Analysis
By John Park, Product Management Group Director for Advanced
IC Packaging, Cadence

In the domain of electronic product design, solely relying on process shrink as the primary
driver of product innovation and improved system performance is no longer a viable
approach. The cost and complexity associated with advanced nodes has everyone looking
for alternatives to the traditional monolithic system on chip (SoC). The path most are taking
leads to the world of “More than Moore” and heterogenous integration. These heterogenous,
multi-chiplet architectures provide a much lower cost alternative to the latest design nodes,
while still providing a robust re-use model based on IP in the form of physically realized
chiplets. The package design now sits in the center of the universe for the next generation
of electronics.

Contents
Introduction..................................................................2
Chiplets and Heterogeneous Integration............3
Where Do We Go from Here?....................................4
The Evolution of Chiplets.........................................5
Tools and Flows for Heterogeneous
Integration....................................................................6
Conclusion....................................................................7
Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

Introduction
The semiconductor packaging industry is now poised to take on a larger, more significant role in electronic product design of
the future. To meet the market demand for these heterogenous, chiplet-based architectures (Figure 1), new system-level
design methodologies are required, targeting system-level power, performance, and area (PPA). When designers transition
from single monolithic devices to multi-chiplet architectures, the first challenge they face is how to plan, manage, and
optimize their top-level design and connectivity. A novel system-level design management solution is now required. This
platform must be capable of aggregating data from the integrated circuit (IC) designer, the package designer, and even the
board designer, for the purposes of system-level optimization and providing the top-level netlist for signoff connectivity
verification.

System in
PCB Board size/complexity reduction (SWaP) Package Disaggregated SoC SoC
(SiP)

Heterogenous

Chiplet
Chiplet
MCM/SiP Bare
Die Integration
Unpackaged Die Chiplet Chiplets
Bare

Chiplet
Die

Laminate Silicon
Substrate Substrate

PCB to MCM/SiP Benefits SoC to HI Benefits


 Smaller footprint  Reduced NRE costs
 PCB simplification  Shorter time to market
 Higher bandwidth  Larger than reticle size designs

3
 Lower power  More flexible IP use-model

Figure 1: Heterogeneous integration

Other challenges arise for the traditional package designer. The biggest challenge can be the transition from expertise in
layout of laminate substrates to layout of silicon substrates. In addition, silicon substrates (masks) require a formal physical
verification process that is new to most of today’s package designers.
And we can’t forget about the electrical and thermal analysis challenges that will arise. Here again, these tools have to
provide value at the system level. To do this, the tools have to support in-design and electrothermal signoff, for on-chip and
off-chip devices and interconnect (Figure 2). Cross-domain coupling effects must also be modeled.
When it comes to chip(let)-level thermal analysis, typically an on-chip(let) EM-IR solution is required to produce a detailed
thermal model. This chip(let)-level thermal model is then consumed by a system-level thermal analysis solution to include the
packaging and PCB (the largest natural heat spreader) along with any heatsinks in the design. The system-level thermal tool
then provides the engineer with thermal gradient information as well as thermal stress calculations. Additionally, an updated
chip(let) thermal map is generated. This map can then be fed back into the chip(let)-level EM-IR tool, which can then more
accurately perform chip power analysis and IR drop analysis. Here again, the importance of modeling at the system level is
paramount.

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Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

Finite Boundary Finite


Method of
Element Element Difference
Moments
Method Method Method

Tec Solv
hn er
olo
gi
es
Electro- Circuit/Power Heat Fluid Solid
Magnetics Analysis Transfer Dynamics Mechanics

System Design,
Multi-Physics Optimization &
Electrical Signoff

t
y ou
Chip(let) Packaging PCB a s
/L
s i g n orm
D e latf
P

Figure 2: System-level electrothermal analysis

To summarize, the slowdown of Moore’s Law was well anticipated and prompted many leading-edge companies to look
towards going beyond it. Recouping non-recurring engineering (NRE) costs for low-volume chip production when designing a
complex SoC at the latest node became almost impossible for small-scale companies. Department of Defense (DoD)
companies realized this early and are leading the way in finding design alternatives for single monolithic SoCs. Today’s
advanced IC packaging is about adding value to end products and contributing to improved PPA. Electronic product design
companies are leveraging packaging technologies to create value and differentiation from their competitors, with multi-
chip(let) solutions focusing on a “More than Moore” vision. In other words, when cost and low volume came into play, the
system in package (SiP) became the ideal alternative to designing an advanced-node monolithic SoC. Gordon Moore foresaw
this possibility of the disaggregated design approach and predicted that “It may prove to be more economical to build large
systems out of smaller functions, which are separately packaged and interconnected.”

Chiplets and Heterogeneous Integration


A chiplet is a physically realized and tested (hardened) IP with a standard communication interface manufactured in a silicon
wafer to reduce cost by increasing the manufacturing yield and reusability across applications. The chiplet-based archi-
tecture allows designers to leverage IP without regard to the node or technology on which it is manufactured. Designers can
focus solely on their IP or the value-add they bring to the design. These chiplet-based designs can be built on different
materials such as silicon, glass, and even laminate. The result is a high-performance pseudo-SoC built at a lower cost in less
time. The reusability of chiplet helps in cost reduction during design and improving yield.
The term “heterogeneous integration” has been widely adopted to describe a disaggregated SoC architecture built from
multiple chiplets (Figure 3). A chiplet-based design is like a SiP except for multiple IP in the form of chiplets are integrated on
a single substrate instead of the usual SiP approach of integrating multiple bare dies (including 3D stacking) on a single
substrate. But it is also similar to designing a small PCB, as each chiplet will be built with a common/known communication
interface such as PCI Express® (PCIe ®), HBM, or AIB. The value proposition that heterogeneous integration offer is:
f Flexibility in picking the best process node for the IP—especially for SerDes I/O, RF, and analog IP that do not need to be on
the “core” process node
f Better yield due to small die size
f Shorter IC design cycle and integration complexity by using pre-existing chiplets

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Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

f High-performance 3D die stacking techniques for better integration with the chip system and power/performance
integration
f Accelerated speed
f Lower development cost offered by modular integration
f Lower manufacturing costs by purchasing known-good die (KGD)
f Volume manufacturing cost advantage when the same chiplet(s) are used in many designs

Figure 3: Disaggregated SoC

Many leading semiconductor manufacturers are exploring this space. The Intel CO-EMIB heterogenous packaging platform
allows deploying EMIB and Foveros together in the same package. Intel Omni-Directional Interconnect (ODI) allows
top-packaged chips to communicate with other chips horizontally, similar to EMIB, or vertically, through TSVs, similar to
Foveros. TSMC’s Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate (CoWoS) is another platform for heterogeneous integration.

Where Do We Go from Here?


Even though designs are being built today with multiple chiplets, most chiplet-based designs are developed at vertically
integrated companies that are designing both the chiplets and the modularized or disaggregated SoCs. To move chiplet-based
architectures into the mainstream, chiplets need to become widely available, and the vision of commercialized chiplets will
require IP providers to devise a suitable business model. One way to propel this vision is the development and documen-tation
of chiplet standards, such as I/O pitch, communication interface and corresponding “compliance kit,” and thermal power
model. Several organizations, including U.S. government programs and standards bodies such as Open Compute Project/Open
Domain-Specific Architecture (OCP/ODSA), are actively working towards closing the chiplet gap.
It is exciting that the ecosystem is changing. Large semiconductor foundries are now offering their versions of advanced
packaging, and many ways of supporting design teams like reference flows and process design kits (PDKs) are becoming part of
the design environment. These concepts have been typically lacking in the packaging community as a whole. Cadence has
worked with many of the leading foundries and outsourced semiconductor assembly and test companies (OSATs) to develop

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Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

multi-chip(let) packaging reference flows and package assembly design kits. The acceptability of lower performance, higher
power consumption, and a larger area of chiplet-based architectures by a generation of SoC engineers who have put in
tremendous value on the ideal PPA (Table 1) is still a question that we need to wait and watch.

Monolithic SoC Chiplet-Based

Cost High

Effort High

Risk High

Power Acceptable?

Performance Acceptable?

Area Acceptable?

Table 1: Hurdles for chips to move to mainstream design

The Evolution of Chiplets


The transition to a chiplet-based architecture is a more subtle change if you consider the evolution of semiconductor
packaging over nearly five decades (Figure 4), with heterogeneously designed integrated multi-chip products along for most
of that time. EDA companies started to develop tools for advanced packaging in the early 1990s, around the time the ball grid
array (BGA) provided a high-performance, small form-factor option to the mechanical lead frame package.
Multi-chip modules (MCM) date back to the 1960s, which is still common for some applications. The term SiP began to replace
the term MCM in the late 1990s as wafer-level testing became ubiquitous, and the KGD problem that plagued MCM design
started to become less of an issue. This is also about the time that package designers started stacking die, which clearly
shows that 3D stacking is not new to package designers. In the early-mid 2000s, RF modules started to move to the laminate
BGA packages that are very common in today’s smartphones and watches. Moving to the current generation of advanced
multi-chip packaging, silicon substrates now provide a high-density alternative to organic substrates with the introduction of
through-silicon vias (TSVs). The earliest example of leveraging TSV-based silicon interposer technology was the re-parti-
tioned Xilinx FPGA. Today, this technology is most commonly referred to as 2.5D-IC packaging.
Ten years ago, semiconductor foundries extended back-end design into silicon-based advanced packaging solutions. The
foundry-based approach of high-density RDL also drove renewed interest in fan-out wafer-level packaging (FOWLP) and now,
with support for multiple dies, interest is at an all-time high. Additionally, to further increase bandwidth, 3D-IC packaging,
meaning wafer-on-wafer or chip-on-wafer stacking, has a new life.
The chiplet trend (Figure 4) shows that next-generation chiplet-based technologies are just a new way of partitioning logic
that aligns nicely with advancements in package manufacturing technologies.

System in 2.5D-IC Heterogeneous Integration Monolithic


Package (Silicon Ultra-High-Density Bump-Less (Disaggregated SoC) 3D-IC
RF Module RDL/FOWLP 3D-IC Photonics
(SiP) Interposer)

1998 2004 2010 2016 2018 Now Future

Figure 4: Evolution of advanced multi-chip(let) packaging technologies

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Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

Tools and Flows for Heterogeneous Integration


The transition to a chiplet-based approach introduces new challenges in EDA tools for both chip designers and package
designers. Package designers are required to familiarize themselves with requirements such as layout versus schematic (LVS)
and smart metal balancing for performing layout and verification of silicon substrates. Chip designers must handle require-
ments for defining and managing top-level connectivity when moving from designing a single device to designing and/or
integrating multiple devices. Testing is another area that changes significantly when designing multiple chiplets in a 3D stack.
For example, testing the chiplet in the top of the stack that may not have any connections to the outside world. The bottom
line is that laying-out and verifying designs with multiple chiplets will introduce new challenges for both the IC design team
and the package designers. Design tools and methodologies that have been extended to support multiple chiplets play a
crucial role in the success or failure of the project.
From an EDA tool provider perspective, it is important to develop cross-domain design flows that provide users with a
platform to seamlessly plan, design, analyze, and verify across chiplet, interposer, package substrate, and board. This
platform should provide many unique capabilities for designing multi-chiplet-based packages (Figure 5), starting with a single
logical hierarchical representation of the complete multi-chiplet design, from the transistor level of each chiplet up to the full
system-level design. This system-level schematic is the basis for seamless LVS and functional verification that ideally
includes layout parasitics across chiplets, interposers, and package substrates. It should even extend to the PCB if the
user desires.

Schematic-Driven Multi-PDK Design Cross-Platform Layout On-Chip/Off-Chip EM/Thermal Modeling


-
Single systemlevel hierarchal schematic to Seamless Virtuoso/Allegro cross-platform co- Seamless integration with multiple EM extraction
-
drive multichip(let) design and verification design of chips, chiplets, packages, and modules engines with automated schematic stitching and
simulationflow
simulation flow

Multi-Chip(let) Layout

Seamless Layout/Device Parasitic Model Stitching

Chip(let) Layout

Figure 5: Multi-chip(let) complete design solution

A novel approach to chiplet/package co-design can also be enabled as part of this holistic, system-level design platform.
Finally, multiple electromagnetic field solvers, including finite element method (FEM) and method of moments (MoM), must be
integrated into the flow, allowing streamlined device modeling and layout parasitic extraction for both on-chiplet and
off-chiplet geometries. There should be automation that seamlessly stitches the electrical models back into the golden
hierarchical system-level schematic. Such a platform would provide designers with an easy way to transition into the world of
chiplet-based architectures.

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Chiplets and Heterogeneous Packaging Are Changing System Design and Analysis

Conclusion
From the system-level design framework discussed above, the user should be able to design and/or import multiple chips or
chiplets across any technology or node. The designer would then instantiate each chiplet schematic symbol into the top
system-level schematic, where additional package-/board-level devices could easily be added from the system-level library.
This schematic serves multiple purposes, including system-aware functional simulation, and maybe most importantly, it
provides the golden netlist required to perform LVS checking of the complete system-level design. This methodology gives
the designer system-level signoff confidence at the same level they have when signing off on their chiplet.

Cadence is a pivotal leader in electronic design and computational expertise, using its Intelligent
System Design strategy to turn design concepts into reality. Cadence customers are the world’s
most creative and innovative companies, delivering extraordinary electronic products from chips
to boards to systems for the most dynamic market applications. www.cadence.com

© 2020 Cadence Design Systems, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide. Cadence, the Cadence logo, and the other Cadence marks
found at www.cadence.com/go/trademarks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cadence Design Systems, Inc. All other
trademarks are the property of their respective owners. 15370 12/20 SA/DM/PDF

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