Title: Low-power FinFET Circuit Design
1Low-power FinFET Circuit Design
- Niraj K. Jha
- Dept. of Electrical Engineering
- Princeton University
- Joint work with Anish Muttreja and Prateek Mishra
2Talk Outline
- Background
- Motivation Power Consumption
- FinFETs for Low Power Design
- Vth Control through Multiple Vdds (TCMS)
- Extension of TCMS to Logic Circuits
- Conclusions
3Why Double-gate Transistors ?
10 nm
Feature size
32 nm
Non-Si nano devices
Bulk CMOS
DG-FETs
Gap
- DG-FETs can be used to fill this gap
- DG-FETs are extensions of CMOS
- Manufacturing processes similar to CMOS
- Key limitations of CMOS scaling addressed through
- Better control of channel from transistor gates
- Reduced short-channel effects
- Better Ion/Ioff
- Improved sub-threshold slope
- No discrete dopant fluctuations
4Different Types of DG-FETs
Source (
Hollis, Boston University)
5What are FinFETs?
- Fin-type DG-FET
- A FinFET is like a FET, but the channel has been
turned on its edge and made to stand up
6FinFET 3-D Structure
Earliest FinFET processes both gates inherently
connected
Source (Ananthan, 2004)
7Independent-gate FinFETs
- Both the gates of a FET can be independently
controlled - Independent control
- Requires an extra process step
- Leads to a number of interesting analog and
digital circuit structures
8FinFET Width Quantization
- Electrical width of a FinFET with n fins W
2nh - Channel width in a FinFET is quantized
- Width quantization is a design challenge if fine
control of transistor drive strength is needed - E.g., in ensuring stability of memory cells
FinFET structure Ananthan, ISQED05
9Talk Outline
- Background
- Motivation Power Consumption
- FinFETs for Low Power Design
- Vth Control through Multiple Vdds (TCMS)
- Extension of TCMS to Logic Circuits
- Conclusions
10Motivation Power Consumption
- Traditional view of CMOS power consumption
- Active mode Dynamic power (switching short
circuit glitching) - Standby mode Leakage power
- Problem rising active leakage
- 40 of total active mode power consumption (70nm
bulk CMOS)
J. Kao, S. Narendra and A. Chandrakasan,
Subthreshold leakage modeling and reduction
techniques, in Proc. ICCAD, 2002.
11Low-power Design Techniques
- Standby mode
- Examples Sleep transistor insertion, clock
gating, minimum leakage vector application - Interfere with (disable/slow) circuit operation
- Do not address active mode leakage
- Active mode Circuit optimization
- Examples Gate sizing, Multiple Vdd/Vth
- Respect circuit operations and timing constraints
- Can be used to reduce active mode leakage
What opportunities do FinFETs provide us ?
12Talk Outline
- Background
- Motivation Power Consumption
- FinFETs for Low Power Design
- Vth Control through Multiple Vdds (TCMS)
- Extension of TCMS to Logic Circuits
- Conclusions
13FinFETs for Low-power Design
- FinFET device characteristics can be leveraged
for low-power design - Static threshold voltage control through
back-gate bias - Area-efficient design through merging of parallel
transistors - Independent control of FinFET gates also provides
novel circuit design opportunities
14Logic Styles NAND Gates
IG-mode NAND
SG-mode NAND
IG-mode pull up
pull up bias voltage
LP-mode NAND
IG/LP-mode NAND
LP-mode pull down
pull down bias voltage
15Comparing Logic Styles
Design Mode Advantages Disadvantages
SG Fastest under all load conditions High leakage (1µA)
LP Very low leakage (85nA), low switched capacitance Slowest, especially under load. Area overhead (routing)
IG Low area and switched capacitance Unmatched pull-up and pull-down delays. High leakage (772nA)
IG/LP Low leakage (337nA), area and switched capacitance Almost as slow as LP mode
Average leakage current for two-input NAND gate
(Vdd 1.0V)
16FinFET Characteristics
Simulated Id Vs. Vgs characteristics for FinFETs
at varying back-gate reverse biases
- LP-mode leakage is 10 times lower than SG-mode
- LP-mode delay (8 1/Ion) is twice that of SG-mode
- IG-mode Ion is not much better than LP-mode
- Ioff is a strong function of back-gate reverse
bias but Ion is not
17Back-gate Bias Voltage
- Value of back-gate bias voltage affects speed and
leakage - Heuristic compare LP-mode inverter delay and
leakage - Bias values
- Pull-down -0.2 V
- Pull-up Vdd .18V (1.18V). Adjusted to match
delays
Delay and leakage power variation with back-gate
bias voltage for LP-mode FinFET inverter
18Technical Challenges in FinFET-based Circuit
Design
- Wide variety of logic styles possible (can be
used simultaneously) - No comprehensive circuit-level comparisons
available - Circuit synthesis challenges
- Industry-standard standard cell-based synthesis
is often suboptimal - FinFET width quantization is based on solving a
convex integer formulation - Complex
- Does not handle all logic styles
B. Swahn and S. Hassoun, Gate sizing FinFETs
vs 32nm bulk MOSFETs, in Proc. DAC, 2006
19Our Approach
- Construct FinFET-based Synopsys technology
libraries - Extend linear programming based cell selection
for FinFETs - Use optimized netlists to compare logic styles at
a range of delay constraints
D. Chinnery and K. Keutzer, Linear programming
for sizing, Vdd and Vt assignment, in Proc.
ISLPED, 2005.
20Power Consumption of Optimized Circuits
Estimated total power consumption for ISCAS85
benchmarks Vdd 1.0V, a 0.1, 32nm FinFETs
Available modes
- Leakage power savings
- 120 a.t. (68.5)
- 200 a.t. (80.3)
- Total power savings
- 110 arrival time (a.t.) (34)
- 200 a.t. ( 47.5)
21Optimized Circuit Constitution
Fraction of cells in different FinFET modes in
power-optimized FinFET circuits
Available modes
- SG-mode cells are largely replaced by cells in
other modes - SG-mode cells only needed on critical paths
- Utilization of IG/LP-mode cells is higher than IG
cells - Result of unmatched delay and higher leakage of
IG-mode cells compared to IG/LP-mode cells
22Area Requirements for Optimized Circuits
18.8
18.0
23Talk Outline
- Background
- Motivation Power Consumption
- FinFETs for Low Power Design
- Vth Control through Multiple Vdds (TCMS)
- Extension of TCMS to Logic Circuits
- Conclusions
24 Future of Interconnect Power
- Interconnect power dissipation is projected to
dominate both dynamic and static power - Assorted projections from literature-
- Interconnect switched capacitance may be 65-80
of total on-chip switched capacitance at the 32nm
node 1 - In power-optimized buffered interconnects at
50nm, leakage power consumption may be gt 80 of
total interconnect power 2
1 N. Magen et al., Interconnect Power
Dissipation in a Microprocessor, System-level
Interconnect Prediction, 2004 2 K. Banerjee
and A. Mehrotra, Power Dissipation Issues in
Interconnect Performance Optimization for Sub-180
nm Designs, Symp. VLSI Circuits, 2002
25Gate Coupling
- Linear relationship between threshold voltage and
back-gate voltage in the subthreshold region - Stronger than the square root relationship
between body bias and threshold effect
observed in bulk-CMOS
26Dual-Vdd FinFET Circuits
- Conventional low-
- power principle
- 1.0V Vdd for critical logic, 0.7V for
off-critical paths - Our proposal overdriven gates
- Overdriven FinFET gates leak a lot less!
1.08V
1V
Leakage current
Vin
27TCMS
- Using only two Vdds saves leakage only in P-type
FinFETs, but not in N-type FinFETs - Solution
- Use a negative ground voltage (VHss) to
symmetrically save leakage in N-type FinFETs - VddH gt VddL
- VssH lt VssL
VddH
VddL
VddH 1.08V
VddL 1.0V
VssH -0.08V
VssL 0.0V
VssH
VssL
TCMS buffer
28Voltage Level Conversion
- Static leakage in multiple-Vdd designs
- Low-Vdd inputs must be up-converted to high-Vdd
before being used to drive high-Vdd inverters to
avoid static leakage - Dedicated level converters inserted between
buffers must be sized prohibitively large in
order to avoid delay penalties 1. - Level conversion is built into high-Vdd inverters
through the use of high-Vt FinFETs
1. K. H. Tam and L. He, Power-optimal Dual-Vdd
Buffered Tree Considering Buffer Stations and
Blockages, DAC 2005
29Exploratory Buffer Design
- Size of high-Vdd inverters kept small to minimize
leakage in them - Wire capacitances not driven by high-Vdd
inverters - Output inverter in each buffer overdriven and its
size (and switched capacitance) can be reduced - High- and low-Vdd inverters alternate, providing
maximum opportunities for power savings
30Link Design
- SPICE simulation to minimize power consumption in
TCMS link while remaining within 1 of the delay
of the single Vdd link
Parameter Single Vdd TCMS Change
Link length(lopt) 0.199mm 0.199mm 0
Inverter widths (s1, s2) 42, 84 30, 50 -36.5
Delay (ps) 12.19 12.27 0.65
Power (µW) 1080 647 -40
31Interconnect Synthesis
- Problem Insert buffers on a given wiring tree to
meet a given delay bound while minimizing total
power consumption - Two types of buffers considered
- TCMS buffers
- Dual-Vdd buffering scheme
- A van Ginneken-style dynamic programming buffer
insertion algorithm developed
Y. Hu et al, Fast Dual-Vdd Buffering based on
Interconnect Prediction and Sampling, SLIP 2007
32Power Savings
Power component Savings
Dynamic power -29.8
Leakage power 57.9
Total power 50.4
- Benchmarks are nets extracted from real layouts
and scaled to 32nm - http//dropzone.tamu.edu/zhouli/GSRC/fast_buffer_
insertion.html
33Fin-count Savings
- Transistor area is measured as the total number
of fins required by all buffers - TCMS can save 9 in transistor area
34Talk Outline
- Background
- Motivation Power Consumption
- FinFETs for Low Power Design
- Vth Control through Multiple Vdds (TCMS)
- Extension of TCMS to Logic Circuits
- Conclusions
35Traditional Dual-Vdd Dual-Vth Schemes
- Logic gates on the critical path driven with
high-Vdd and low-Vth those on the non-critical
path with low-Vdd and high-Vth - Exponential increase in leakage current
- Overhead of level converter delay and power
36TCMS Extension
- Overdriven gates are faster
- Overdriven gates leak less
-
37Logic Library Design
- FinFETs connected to input-a cannot
- exploit TCMS
- FinFETs connected to input-b have high
- static leakage
- FinFETs connected to input-a
- follow TCMS
- FinFETs connected to input-b
- cannot exploit TCMS
38Logic Library Design (Contd.)
- Level conversion may be used to restore signal
to VddH - Level converters not an attractive option in
TCMS - Level conversion can be built into logic gates
through the use of - high-Vth FinFET
39Logic Library Design (Contd.)
- Two-input NAND gate of a given size has five
design variables - Supply voltage
- Gate input voltage for input-a
- Gate input voltage for input-b
- Vth for FinFETs connected to input-a
- Vth for FinFETs connected to input-b
40Logic Library Design (Contd.)
- 32 NAND gate modes possible
- Certain combinations not allowed (High-Vdd gate
with low-Vth transistors - cannot have high input voltage swings)
- 25 NAND and NOR gate modes
- 7 INV gate modes
- For each NAND, NOR and inverter mode X1, X2,
X4, X8 and X16 sizes
41Optimization Flow
Delay-minimized netlist from Design Compiler
Phase I Divide into alternate levels of high
(odd) and low (even) Vdd gates
Phase II Linear programming formulation
TTmax
no
yes
yes
?P ? ?
no
42Experimental Setup
- Switching activity at primary inputs set to 0.1
- Temperature 75oC
- Technology node 32nm
- Nominal-Vdd (1.0V,0V), High-Vdd (1.08V,-0.08V)
- Nominal-Vth (0.29V,-0.25V),
- High-Vth (0.45V,-0.40V)
- Cell libraries characterized using HSPICE based
on PTM1 in Synopsys-compatible format - Interconnect delay and load modeled
- 5 sizes for logic gates X1, X2, X4, X8 and X16
1http//www.eas.asu.edu/ptm/
43Applying Methodology to c17
Delay-minimized netlist Power 283.6uW (leakage
power 10.3uW, dynamic power 273.3uW) Area 538
fins
Power-optimized netlist Power 149.9uW (leakage
power 2.0uW, dynamic power 147.9uW) Area 216
fins
44Multi-Vdd Multi-Vth (1.3Tmin)
45Multi-Vdd Single-Vth (1.3Tmin)
46Fin-count Savings (1.3Tmin)
47Conclusions
- FinFETs are a necessary step in the evolution of
semiconductors because bulk CMOS has difficulties
in scaling beyond 32 nm - Use of the back gate leads to very interesting
design opportunities - Rich diversity of design styles, made possible by
independent control of FinFET gates, can be used
effectively to reduce total active power
consumption - IG/LP mode circuits provide an encouraging
tradeoff between power and area - TCMS able to reduce both delay and subthreshold
leakage current in a logic circuit simultaneously