CMOS Layout Design Rules - Girish Gidaye
CMOS Layout Design Rules - Girish Gidaye
2
Different Layers
Polysilicon
N-diffusion
P-diffusion
Metal
Contact
Design Rules
Design rules are a set of geometrical specifications that
dictate the design of the layout masks
A design rule set provides numerical values
For minimum dimensions
For minimum line spacings
Design rules must be followed to insure functional
structures on the fabricated chip
Design rules change with technological advances
•The physical mask layout of any circuit to be manufactured using a particular process
must conform to a set of geometric constraints or rules, which are generally called
layout design rules.
•These rules usually specify the minimum allowable line widths for physical objects on-
chip such as metal and polysilicon interconnects or diffusion areas, minimum feature
dimensions, and minimum allowable separations between two such features.
• If a metal line width is made too small, for example, it is possible for the line to break
during the fabrication process or afterwards, resulting in an open circuit.
•If two lines are placed too close to each other in the layout, they may form an unwanted
short circuit by merging during or after the fabrication process.
•The main objective of design rules is to achieve a high overall yield and reliability while
using the smallest possible silicon area, for any circuit to be manufactured with a
particular process.
Why we need design rules?
Design rules are supposed to prevent unworkable,
unreliable, or hard to implement constructs
Design rules are introduced to preserve the integrity of
topological features on chip: to prevent separate, isolated
features from accidentally short circuiting, or thin
features from opening, or Contacts from slipping
outside the are a to be contacted
Each piece of fabrication equipment used in the IC
manufacturing process has limited accuracy.
We need rules to ensure that the inaccuracy in the
fabrication will not result in malfunction IC.
There are limitations to the precision with which individual
processing steps can be performed
and with which separate processes can be aligned.
Interface between designer and process engineer
Polysilicon Aluminum
Design Rules Classification
Minimum width
Minimum spacing
Surround
Extension
Types of Design Rules
Scalable Design Rules
Lambda rules, which specify the layout constraints in terms of a
single parameter (λ) and, thus, allow linear, proportional scaling
of all geometrical constraints
Based on scalable “coarse grid” -λ(lambda)
The unit of lambda is micrometer
Idea: reduce λ value for each new process, but
keep rules the same
Key advantage: portable layout
Key disadvantage: not everything scales the same
Not used in “real life”
Scalable Design Rules
Absolute Design Rules(Non-scalable or Micron Rules)
Micron rules, in which the layout constraints such as
minimum feature sizes and minimum allowable feature
separations, are stated in terms of absolute dimensions in
micrometers
Based on absolute distances (e.g. 0.75μm)
Tuned to a specific process (details usually
proprietary)
Complex, especially for deep submicron
Layouts not portable
(Non-scalable or Micron Rules
Design Rules
LAYOUT OF NMOS AND PMOS
17
CMOS WELL RULE
SCMOS RULE FOR ACTIVE
NMOS λ- DESIGN RULES
N + DIFFUSION MASK
SR. DESCRIPTION LAMDA
NO.
1 Diffusion Width 2
2 Diffusion Spacing 2
IMPLANT MASK
SR. DESCRIPTION LAMDA
NO.
1 Implant Gate Overlap 1.5 or 2
OR
OR
OR
OR
Vdd N-well
CMOS contact
Inverter
Vin Vout
Demarcation
line
Schematic Gnd
P-well
Stick diagram contact
Vdd
Vdd
N-well
Vin
Vout
Vin Vout
Gnd Gnd
Implementation of Boolean Equation
Vou
t
N-SIDE
(pull-down network)
Implementation of NAND, NOR and Boolean
Equations using CMOS
N-well
Stick Diagram
VDD
contact
A B
Vout
A
B
Gnd
P-well
contact
Vdd
Layout Diagram
Vdd A B
A B
Vout Vout
A
A
B
B
Gnd
Gnd
2 I/P NOR GATE USING
CMOS LOGIC
2 I/P NOR GATE USING
CMOS LOGIC
Complex Boolean Equations
Complex Boolean Equations
Complex Boolean Equations
Complex Boolean Equations
Y
W X
O/P
W Y
X
VDD
Y Y
W X
W X
O/P
W Y
W
Y X
X
GND
VDD
Draw circuit diagram
and stick diagram for C
the following
expression B
A
C
B D
VDD
C C
B B
A A
D
D
O/P
A
A
C
C
B D B D
GND
Implementation of Inverter, NAND, NOR
and Boolean Equations using NMOS logic
NMOS Inverter
CMOS Inverter
Vin
Stick Diagram
VDD
Vout
Buried
contact
Vin
Vin
Gnd
VDD
VDD
Implant
NMOS Inverter
Buried
Vout contact
Vout
Vin
Vin
Vin
Gnd
Gnd
Implementation of NAND, NOR and Boolean
Equations using NMOS
NMOS logic
CMOS logic
Stick Diagram
VDD
Implant
Vout
Buried
contact
A
Gnd
VDD
VDD Implant
Buried
Vout contact
Vout
A A
B B
Gnd
Gnd
NMOS logic
CMOS logic
VDD
Vout
A B
Gnd
VDD
VDD Implant
Buried
contact
Vout
Vout
A B
A B
Gnd
Gnd
CMOS logic NMOS logic
VDD
Vout
A B
D E C
Gnd
CMOS logic NMOS logic
VDD
Vout
B C
D E A
Gnd
VDD
Vout
O/P
W
W Y Y
X
X
Gnd
VDD
Vout
A
A
C
C B D
B D
Gnd
When a transistor is formed?
Design rules
min. line width of polySi and diffusion 2
drain and source have min. length and width of 2
And
PolySi extends in the gate region…
The polySi of the gate extends 2 beyond the gate area on to the field
oxide to prevent the drain and source from shorting.
diffusion
short
• Diffusion Problems
no overlap overlap
Depletion Transistor
We need depletion implant
2
Butting Contact
Advantage:
No buried contact mask required and avoids associated
processing.
Butting Contact
Problem: Metal descending the hole has a tendency to fracture at
the polySi corner, causing an open circuit.
Metal
Insulating
Oxide
n+ n+
2
Contact Area
2
Buried Contact
The buried contact window surrounds this contact by in all directions to
avoid any part of this area forming a transistor.
Separated from its related transistor gate by to prevent gate area from
being reduced.
Buried Contact
Here gate length is depend upon the alignment of the buried contact
mask relative to the polySi and therefore vary by .
PolySi
2 Channel length
Buried contact 2
Diffusion
Contact Cut
Contact cut – any gate: 2apart
Why? No contact to any part of the gate.
4
2
Contact Cut
2