Publication | Closed Access
The modeling, characterization, and design of monolithic inductors for silicon RF IC's
543
Citations
28
References
1997
Year
EngineeringVlsi DesignMicrostrip ComponentsLarge Scale IntegrationSilicon Rf IcElectromagnetic CompatibilityPhysical Design (Electronics)Rf SemiconductorAdvanced Packaging (Semiconductors)Computational ElectromagneticsElectronic PackagingElectronic Circuit3D Ic ArchitectureElectrical EngineeringHigh-frequency DeviceComputer EngineeringComputer OptimizationMicroelectronicsMonolithic InductorsRf Subsystem
The results of a comprehensive investigation into the characteristics and optimization of inductors fabricated with the top-level metal of a submicron silicon VLSI process are presented. A computer program which extracts a physics-based model of microstrip components that is suitable for circuit (SPICE) simulation has been used to evaluate the effect of variations in metallization, layout geometry, and substrate parameters upon monolithic inductor performance. Three-dimensional (3-D) numerical simulations and experimental measurements of inductors were also used to benchmark the model accuracy. It is shown in this work that low inductor Q is primarily due to the restrictions imposed by the thin interconnect metallization available in most very large scale integration (VLSI) technologies, and that computer optimization of the inductor layout can be used to achieve a 50% improvement in component Q-factor over unoptimized designs.
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