Title of Presentation - University of California, Santa Barbara

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Interconnects in 50-100 GHz
Integrated Circuits
M.J.W Rodwell, S. Krishnan, M. Urteaga,
Z. Griffith, M. Dahlström, Y. Wei, D. Scott, N.
Parthasarathy, Y-M Kim, S. Lee
University of California, Santa Barbara
[email protected] 805-893-8044, 805-893-3262 fax
Outline
• Introduction
• Transmission line characterization for
on-wafer device measurements
• Monolithic millimeter-wave ICs
• Mixed-signal medium-scale ICs
High-speed InP Heterojunction Bipolar Transistors
Apply scaling approaches of Si-devices with material
advantages of III-V systems to realise ultra-fast transistors
Previous research: Transferred-substrate HBT technology
Current research: Highly scaled mesa-HBT technology
Why is the wiring environment important to us?
Accurate device measurements require controlled ZO
Monolithic Millimeter-wave IC design
Ultra-high frequency mixed-signal IC design
Transferred-substrate HBTs
• Substrate transfer process permits
simultaneous scaling of emitter-base
and collector-base junction widths
• Maximum frequency of oscillation

f max 
f / 8RbbCcb
• Record values of measured transistor
power gain at 110 GHz, record values
of extrapolated fmax (> 1 THz)
Vce = 1.2 V
Ic=6 mA
25
U
Gains, dB
• Process provides mirostrip wiring
environment with thin (5 mm) low loss
BCB dielectric (er= 2.7)
30
20
0.4 mm x 6 mm emitter,
0.7 mm x 9 mm collector,
MSG
15
H
10
21
5
0
10
100
Frequency,GHz
1000
Ultra Wideband mesa-HBTs
UCSB / IQE
Mattias Dahlstrom (UCSB)
Amy Liu (IQE)
• Highly Carbon-doped InGaAs base
enables low base contact resistance,
short Ohmic transfer length Lt ~ 0.1 mm
• Allows aggressive scaling of basemesa width in traditional mesa-HBT
structure
• Record fmax (> 400 GHz) for
mesa-HBT device
30
25
21
Gain (dB) H , U
• Incorporate coplanar waveguide
(CPW) or microstrip wiring
environment with backend processing
20
15
f =282 GHz
t
10
f
=480 GHz
max
5
0
10
10
10
11
frequency (GHz)
10
12
On-wafer Device
Measurements
High-frequency Device Measurements
• Commercial vector network
analyzers available to 350 GHz
• UCSB capabilities: DC-50 GHz,
75-110 GHz, 140-220 GHz
• Accurate S-parameter
measurements require accurate
on-wafer calibration
• Line-Reflect-Line calibration is
preferred for submicron device
measurements
UCSB 140-220 GHz VNA Measurement Set-up
On-wafer Device Measurements
• Submicron HBTs have very low Ccb
(< 5 fF)
230 mm
230 mm
• Characterization requires accurate
measure of very small S12
• Standard 12-term VNA calibrations
do not correct S12 background error
due to probe-to-probe coupling
Transistor Embedded in LRL Test Structure
Solution
Embed transistors in sufficient length
of on-wafer transmission line to
reduce coupling
Line-Reflect-Line calibration to place
measurement reference planes at
device terminals
Corrupted 75-110 GHz measurements due to
excessive probe-to-probe coupling
Line-Reflect-Line Calibration
• LRL does not require accurate characterization of Open or
Short calibration standards
• LRL does require accurate characterization of transmission
line characteristic impedance
• LRL does require single-mode propagation environment
Transferred-substrate process provides ideal wiring
environment for on-wafer device measurements
Mesa-HBT technology presents challenges to realizing
single-mode environment to 220 GHz
Transferred-substrate HBT Measurements
• Substrate-transfer provides wellmodeled microstrip wiring
environment with thin dielectric (5 mm)
• Conductors must be narrow for
ZO = 50W : high resisistive losses
• LRL calibration is referenced to Line
standard ZO
• Must correct for complex ZO,
particularly at low frequencies
R  j L
ZO 
G  j C
S11
S22
freq (6.000GHz to 40.00GHz)
Transistor S-parameters
with (red) and without (blue)
complex ZO correction
Mesa-HBT Measurements
• CPW wiring is incorporated with minimal
backend processing
•Must avoid coupling to parasitic modes
+V
+V
+V
-V
0V
0V
+V
S11
0V
Microstrip mode
Slot mode
S22
kz
freq (75.00GHz to 110.0GHz)
Substrate modes
Mesa-HBT measurement corrupted
from CPW excitation of parasitic
modes in 75-110 GHz band
Monolithic
mm-Wave ICs
Monolithic mm-Wave Integrated Circuits
MIMICs have applications in
• Point-to-point mm-wave links (60 GHz, 90 GHz…)
• Automotive radar (46 GHz, 77 GHz…)
• Planetary exploration, atmospheric sensing (140-220 GHz)
Transmission line tuning networks require low-loss interconnects with
precisely controlled impedance and velocity
Transmission Line Options
• Microstrip with semiconductor substrate dielectric
• Coplanar Waveguide (CPW)
• Thin-film dielectric Microstrip
Microstrip Wiring with Semiconductor Dielectric
Microstrip wiring with semiconductor dielectric is
extensively used in MIMICs
Requires thinning of substrate thickness to minimize
through-wafer via inductance
Via inductance 12 pH for
100 mm substrate, j7.5W @ 100 GHz
Substrate mode coupling
Synchronous coupling into TM0 mode at
f S ,TM 0,min 
106
h er 1
“Handbook of Microwave Integrated Circuits”
R. Hoffman, Artech House, 1987
kz
CPW Wiring
Frequently used for high frequency MIMIC designs
Substrate must still be thinned to avoid coupling to
substrate modes, h < 0.12ld .
Reference: Riaziat, M. et al. “ Propagation Modes and Dispersion Characteristics of Coplanar Waveguide”
IEEE MTT, March 1990 .
Through-wafer vias or multiple-wire bonds are necessary
in packaged ICs to prevent parallel plate waveguide modes
for L > ld /2
L
Thin-dielectric Microstrip Wiring
Wiring and Ground planes on IC top surface separated by
a few microns of thin dielectric
Planarising spin-on-polymers offer low dielectric constant, low microwave loss
Low ground access inductance, low dispersion, low mode
coupling, due to thin substrate thickness
… but thin dielectrics result in narrow conductor widths
and high resistive losses
Ground Plane
Low er
Via
Via
S.I. Substrate
Cross-section of Transferred-substrate HBT
Thin-dielectric Wiring Environment
Transferred-substrate Microstrip Wiring
Properties
• 5 mm BCB substrate er = 2.7
Passive Element Matching Network
for Single-stage Amplifier
• 50 W line W = 12.5 mm,
Loss 1 dB/mm @100 GHz
• 4mm x 4mm vias allows dense integration
Excellent agreement between
measurement and CAD simulations of
microstrip matching networks seen to
200 GHz
S11
S21
S22
freq (140.0GHz to 220.0GHz)
Red- Simulation
Blue- Measurement
IC Results: 140-220 GHz Small-Signal Amplifiers
8
6
dB
4
2
0
-2
Single-transistor amplifier
6.3 dB gain @ 175 GHz
-4
140
150
160
170
180
190
200
210
220
frequency, GHz
Cell Dimensions: 0.69mm x 0.35 mm
15
10
dB
5
0
-5
Three-transistor amplifier
8.5 dB gain @ 195 GHz
-10
140
150
160
170
180
190
frequency (GHz)
200
210
220
Cell Dimensions: 1.6mm x 0.59 mm
IC Results: W-band Power Amplifiers UCSB
Yun Wei
20
Common-base PA
10
Psat=16 dBm @ 85 GHz
Pout
8
10
6
5
4
0
2
T
15
G , dB
P1dB=14.5 dBm
Pout, dBm
GT
GT=8.5 dB
Total Emitter Area AE = 128
mm2
-5
0
-15
-10
-5
0
5
10
15
Pin, dBm
Cascode PA
15
10
GT
GT=8.2 dB
Total Emitter Area AE = 64 mm2
8
6
GT, dB
P1dB=9.5 dBm
Pout
10
Pout, dBm
Psat=12.5 dBm @ 90 GHz
Cell Dimensions: 0.5mm x 0.4 mm
5
4
0
-5
-15
2
-10
-5
0
Pin, dBm
5
0
10
Cell Dimensions: 0.5mm x 0.4 mm
Mixed-Signal ICs
High Frequency Mixed-Signal ICs
Applications
• Long haul fiber optic transmission ICs (40 Gb/s, 80 Gb/s. 160 Gb/s ??)
• Digital radio: ADCs, DACs, etc… > 10 Gb/s sampling rates
Medium scales of integration (1000-10,000 transistors)
Wiring requirements for mixed-signal ICs
• Low common-lead ground-return inductance
• Controlled characteristic impedance for CAD simulation
• Low line-to-line coupling in densely packed ICs
• Low eeff for time-delay sensitive circuits
Problems with top-side CPW Wiring for 100 GHz Digital
CPW for long interconnects only
Unknown ZO for most wires
 CAD modeling difficult
 Implement circuit design
techniques to minimize effects
Circuit Cross-talk
Densely packed internal wires with
large large fringing fields
Excitation of surface wave or
parallel-plate modes couple circuits
 CAD modeling difficult
Ground Inductance
Discontinuous ground planes
Wire bonds to package ground
~0.3 pH/mm inductance
 Signal distortion, Ground
Bounce, Ringing
Problems with Coplanar Waveguide Packaged ICs
Lbond/n
Peripheral grounding allows
parallel plate mode resonance
InP die dimensions must be
<0.4mm at 100GHz
…or thin wafer and add Vias
Csub
Bond wire inductance
resonates with through-wafer
capacitance at
1
o 
CsubLbond / n
Problems with Substrate Microstrip Wiring
for 100 GHz Digital
Via Inductance too big
12 pH for 100 um substrate
j7.5W @ 100 GHz
 must thin substrate
Via spacing too large
~100 um for 100 um substrate
 not dense enough for digital
 must thin substrate
Line Spacing too large
fringing fields  line coupling
W> 3h typically required
 not dense enough for digital
 must thin substrate
Thin semiconductor substrates: breakage, lapping to 35 um ?!
Best solution: microstrip on spin-on polymer dielectrics.
Top-side Thin-dielectric Microstrip Wiring for 100 GHz digital
Low via inductance
0.6 pH for 5 mm substrate
j0.4W @ 100 GHz
Ground Plane
Low er
Via
Via
Small Via dimensions
4 mm x 4 mm; dense integration
Low line-to-line coupling
Dense integration
Low eeff, high wave velocity
Low time-of flight delays
Well-controlled ZO
Good for CAD modeling
S.I. Substrate
Drawbacks
• Added process complexity/cost
• Capacitive low impedance lines
• Lower current carrying capacity with
narrow conductors
• Substrate and parallel plate modes
still present for packaged ICs
Packaging Thin-dielectric Microstrip Circuits
BCB (5 um thick)
plated top-surface ground plane
circuits
thinned (75 um)
semi-insulating
InP substrate
circuits
via
< ld /2
via
plated back-surface ground plane
solder bond
package ground
Thinned wafer with substrate Vias: Kills ground bounce & substrate modes
Wafer lapped & thinned to 75 um
Vias to backside ground plane & package ground
200 mm via spacing suppresses all DC-200 GHz substrate resonant modes
IC Results: 87 GHz HBT Master-Slave Latch
UCSB
PK Sundararajan,
Zach Griffith
Static frequency division to 87 GHz
InP /InGaAs/InP mesa-DHBT Technology
Wiring Process Flow
Two-levels of topside interconnects, NiCr resistors, MIM capacitors
Spin 6 mm BCB dielectric
Via etch/planarization etchback to 5 mm
Patterned Au electroplating of IC ground planes, and probe pads.
87 GHz input, 43.5 GHz output
-0.06
-0.08
V
out
(Volts)
-0.1
-0.12
-0.14
-0.16
-0.18
-0.2
22
22.02 22.04 22.06 22.08
time (nsec)
22.1
22.12 22.14
IC photograph before and after
plating ground plane
IC Results: 8 GHz SD ADC
UCSB
PK Sundararajan,
Zach Griffith
Technology
InP /InGaAs/InP mesa-DHBT
400 Å base, 2000 Å collector,
9 V BVCEO, 200 GHz ft, 180 GHz fmax
2.5 x 105 A/cm2 operation
Thin-dielectric microstrip wiring
Design
simple 2nd-order gm-C topology
comparator is 87 GHz MSS latch
integration by capacitive loads
3-stage comparator, RTZ gated DAC
975 kHz FFT bin size
8 GHz clock rate
65.5 MHz signal
64:1 oversampling ratio
Results
133 dB (1 Hz) SNR at 74 MHz
equivalent to ~8.8 bits at 200 MS/s
IC photograph before and after plating ground plane
Conclusions
High performance III-V devices require high performance
wiring environments
Accurate on-wafer device measurements require known ZO
with single-mode propagation
MIMIC designs require well-modeled wiring with low
ground access inductance
Mixed-signal ICs require high-levels of integration and a
low eeff wiring environment
Wafer thinning is required to avoid substrate and
parallel-plate modes in packaged ICs