Lecture 2 - Evolution of VLSI
Lecture 2 - Evolution of VLSI
Lecture 2
Evolution of VLSI
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The First Computing System
Abacus
(3000 B.C. – 300 A. D.)
by Chinese
and Mesoamerican
ENIAC
(1946)
by U.S.A.
5
The First Transistor: A Revolution
Transistor
(1948)
by Bell Labs
Integrated Circuit
(1958)
by TI
4004 CPU
(1971)
by Intel
Size: ~ 9mm2
2.3 K transistors @10μm
Speed: 1MHz
Design team: 3
8
The Pentium 4 CPU
MOSFET
Interconnect
P4 CPU (2002)
Size: ~217mm2, 42M @ 0.18μm
Speed: 2GHz
Design team: 1000
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The Cell Processor
Used in PS3 and other
applications
8 processor cores
Low-power and high-
speed
Cell BE (2006)
Size: ~221mm2, 234M @ 90nm
Speed: 4GHz
Design team: STIR
10
Moore’s Law
15
14
13
LOG2 OF THE NUMBER OF
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
Electronics Magazine
5
4
3
2
1
0 April 19, 1965
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
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VLSI Today
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Evolution in Complexity
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Driving Forces
Technology scaling
‒ Semiconductor device shrinks by 0.7x / generation
Circuit and design
“Cleverness”
Functions per chip doubles every generation; chip cost
does not increase significantly
‒ Cost of a function decreases by 2x
On the other hand:
‒ Design population does not double every two years…
‒ Productivity per designer decreases due to complexities
of design and team management
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Productivity Trends
Logic Transistor per Chip (M)
10,000
10,000,000 100,000
100,000,000
Logic Tr./Chip Source: Sematech
1,000
1,000,000 10,000
10,000,000
100,000 1,000,000
Productivity
10 58%/Yr. compounded 100
10,000 Complexity growth rate 100,000
1,0001 10
10,000
x x
0.1
100 1
1,000
xx
x
21%/Yr. compound
xx Productivity growth rate
x
0.01
10 0.1
100
0.001
1 0.01
10
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
Profound impact on the way VLSI is designed
‒ Exploit different levels of abstraction
‒ Automated design with CAD tools
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Design Abstraction
SYSTEM
Out
put M h=
2 3; BL
BL#
MODULE k = h; h
k
>3; h<
+ Y S Eh
LT
M 3; W R IT E E N
1
sapchg#
GATE W R IT E
DATA
YSELB
DEVICE
G
S D
n+ n+
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Quiz 2
Answer
Moore’s law is NOT a natural law. It only gives an overall
picture and guidance to our VLSI industry. Limited by
fundamental physics and economics, Moore’s law may
become invalid soon.
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