Continue to Site

Welcome to EDAboard.com

Welcome to our site! EDAboard.com is an international Electronics Discussion Forum focused on EDA software, circuits, schematics, books, theory, papers, asic, pld, 8051, DSP, Network, RF, Analog Design, PCB, Service Manuals... and a whole lot more! To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

what is meant by parasitics in analog layouts?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Eceraj10

Newbie level 5
Joined
Apr 23, 2017
Messages
10
Helped
0
Reputation
0
Reaction score
0
Trophy points
1
Activity points
69
i am new to analog layouts? can anyybody help what is the parasitics &how to reduce parasitics in analog layouts??
 

Basically, parasitics occur when you have multiple conductors in close proximity. Due to effects such as electric fields originating on one conductor and terminating on others, or magnetic fields passing around multiple conductors, charges excited on one conductor will result in induced charges excited on others.

This is a generally considered a problem, since we want signals to stay on one line and not couple to adjacent lines. Reducing them is also a challenge. Spacing out the conductors will generally be the simplest and most effective solution, but there are other options, depending on your topology.
 

Good question. Because devices are not ideal, when you place whatever component (either passive or active) in your piece of silicon (chip), this comes with parasitic effects that might be or not frequency dependent.
That's one of the reasons that RF IC design is very tricky.
Parasitic devices can be categorized roughly as: parasitic capacitances, parasitic resistances and parasitic inductances. If you place a capacitor in your layout, for instance, this capacitor comes with a parasitic resistor in parallel, resulting in some leakage. If you place an inductor, the parasitics model is much more complicated. So, parasitics come to make your design more challenging and if you are very experienced you can take advantage of this knowledge in your design step.
How to reduce parasitics? Tricky question. If you have freedom to change the frequency of operation, reduce it. In general, the higher the frequency the higher parasitical effects.
If you are dimensioning MOS devices, roughly speaking, the lower the aspect ratio the lower the parasitic effects. However, in general you should dimension your MOS devices to attend your specs so you dont have that much degree of freedom. Moreover, during the layout phase, you also shall be aware of physical mismatching (another story).
I recommend you the book The Art of Analog Layout by Alan Hastings to give you further details and hopefully help you as well.
Good luck.
 

    Artist27

    Points: 2
    Helpful Answer Positive Rating
i am new to analog layouts? can anybody help what is the parasitics &how to reduce parasitics in analog layouts??

In general, "parasitics" are physical effects that have (usually) undesirable impact on circuit behavior and that are caused by circuit physical implementation (i.e. 3D structure, representing the circuit elements and their interconnections).

In physical implementation of ICs, the "nodes" - connection points between IC elements - are not discrete points, but 3D conducting objects, formed by metal wires and vias, that have non-zero resistance, capacitance (to other nets and to the ground), inductance (self- and mutual), etc.

Usually, parasitics can be classified into several groups:

1. resistance
2. capacitance
3. inductance

The order in which I placed these effects reflect their complexity (from low to high) - complexity to anticipate, predict, understand, simulate, analyze, and improve.

(1) Resistance is quite a local effect, where wire or via resistance does not depend on the presence or absence of neighboring wires and vias (this is not true for advanced technologies - such as 16nm, 10nm, 7nm, etc., and even at 20nm, 28nm, 40nm, 65nm technology nodes - where scaling and complexity of process manufacturing - lithography, etching, CMP, etc. make wire/via resistivity dependent on the "context" - i.e. the environment of the wires/vias).

Resistance of a piece of a wire can be simply calculated as R=rsh*L/W, where rsh is the sheet resistivity of the metal layer, L is the length, and W is the width.
Resistance of a via is R=rho*H/A, where rho

(2) Capacitance is a longer range effect, where electrostatic field between two nets (conductors) "couples" them, so that voltage applied to one net induces a voltage change and/or current and charge on coupled net.
However, electrostatic field is screened by neighboring nets, so capacitive coupling has a limited "range of action".

(3) In inductance (self- or mutual), magnetic field caused by a current in a wire or a loop couples to the current in another (or same) wire/loop, causing AC/transient voltage when current is changed in time.
There is no screening of the magnetic field in ICs, so this is the longest range effect, and everything is coupled to everything - most of these couplings are not important, but identifying which coupling are important (in an automated fashion) is not easy.

There may be other undesirable effects associated with the circuit operation and its physical realization - such as thermal, mechanical, chemical, etc. - but usually they are not referred to as "parasitics".

Regarding how to reduce parasitics - while basic steps are pretty straightforward (make the wire shorter and wider, for lower resistance, or shorter narrower for lower capacitance), there are a lot of trade-offs and constraints, and hence understanding and reduction of parasitics is an art.

Max
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top