Title: 10GHz Clock Distribution using Coupled Standingwave Oscillators
110GHz Clock Distribution using Coupled
Standing-wave Oscillators
- Frank OMahony (fomahony_at_stanford.edu)
- Advisor Professor S. Simon Wong
- Integrated Circuits Lab (ICL)
- Stanford University
2Outline
- I. Proposed 10GHz clock network
- II. Standing-wave oscillators (SWOs)
- III. Clock grids from coupled SWOs
- IV. 10GHz test chip results
- V. Simulated jitter and clock buffer
3Proposed 10GHz global clock network
- Global clock network distributes a 10GHz clock
through a grid of standing-wave oscillators
(SWOs) - SWOs are coupled together and sustain
synchronous, sinusoidal standing waves across the
chip - A single clock source coupled into one oscillator
injection-locks the entire grid - Clock buffers convert the signal to a digital
clock to drive the local networks - The combination of standing waves and coupled
oscillators enable low-skew, low-jitter clock
distribution
Single SWO
Clkinj
4Standing-wave grid waveform
- Standing waves
- ideally zero skew
- amplitude varies with position
5Standing wave oscillator (SWO)
- SWOs compensate for interconnect loss with
circuitry - Multiple, identically sized cross-coupled pairs
provide gain - Differential transmission lines form a
distributed tank - SWOs can be coupled together by connecting their
interconnects and injection locked to an external
source - These (effectively) lossless interconnects
sustain ideal standing-waves with zero skew
LC oscillator vs. standing-wave oscillator (SWO)
Conditions for oscillation at fclk
6SWO amplitude and skew
- A test chip confirmed low-skew for single SWO
- 8GHz clock (injection locked)
- 0.18µm CMOS process
- 90µm NMOS devices
- 80mW total power
- 4.1 mm TL resonator
Amplitude
Amplitude varies sinusoidally
Phase (ps)
Less than 1ps skew
7Coupled standing-wave oscillators
- Multiple SWOs can be coupled together to form a
grid by connecting their wires - Each SWO can be viewed as an injection-locked
oscillator - Networks of coupled oscillators have a
phase-averaging effect that reduces jitter - A single external clock reference can be injected
into one of the SWOs to lock the entire grid
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810GHz clock grid test chip
- Fabricated in a 0.18µm, 1.8V CMOS process with
six AlCu metal levels - Five cross-coupled pairs per SWO
- Differential microstrip transmission lines,14µm
wide, 4µm spacing, 3.5µm oxide thickness - Grid is tunable with MOS varactors, allowed for
intentional detuning of the grid - Clock receivers are not integrated due to the
performance limitations of the devices at 10GHz
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0.6mm
1.8mm
90µm/0.18µm cross-coupled pairs
9Skew measurements
- Tuned grid
- Entire grid is tuned with a single control
voltage - Worst-case skew 0.6ps
- Detuned grid
- One half of the grid is detuned by 1 (10.1GHz)
- Detuning causes a skew gradient across the grid
- Worst-case skew 3.3ps
- Maximum skew between two adjacent points 1.4ps
10Measuring sub-picosecond skew
- Fold clock grid so timing nodes close together
- Homodyne technique mixes the relative phase
information down to baseband - Achieves good phase sensitivity (17mV/ps) and
resolution (lt0.5ps) with careful on-chip delay
matching in the timing path
4a
2a
3a
1a
3b
4b
1b
2b
?ref
chip boundary
Voltmeter
11Jitter measurement
Tektronics CSA 803C
SWO clock grid injection-locked at 10.0 GHz
1.4ps rms jitter
HP83711B Signal Generator
Pad (to 50 ? CSA)
50?
Differential open-drain buffer
27µm0.18µm
1.5ps rms jitter
1210GHz test chip
13Jitter simulations for SWO grids
- Coupling together multiple SWOs reduces the
jitter caused by power supply variations - Each SWO in a grid is coupled with up to three
other SWOs - For the simulated case of a 10 power supply drop
at one cross-coupled pair, the jitter decreases
as the grid gets larger
Power supply noise 10 variation with 100ps step
14Clock buffer/converter
- Clock buffer delay must not depend on the
amplitude of the input, or it will add skew - LPF removes the harmonics that cause
amplitude-dependent skew - Simulated with a 2GHz clock (7 FO4 clock period)
using 0.18µm device models
Clk
Clk
Clock input
200mV
140mV
Vin
5.9ps skew (1.2 of clock cycle)
Sine-to-square converter
Limiting Amp and LPF
Clock output
15Conclusions
- Ideal, low-skew standing waves can be sustained
on-chip by compensating for interconnect losses. - Networks of standing-wave oscillators can be
coupled together to form a clock network with
favorable skew and jitter characteristics. - A standing-wave clock network is feasible in a
future technology for 10GHz clock distribution.
Current work
- Develop a simple model for the behavior of
networks of coupled standing-wave oscillators. - Compare the skew and jitter sensitivities of a
complete multi-GHz standing-wave clock
distribution to conventional clock networks.