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dc.contributor.authorKUMAR, SANTOSH-
dc.contributor.authorIndu, S.(SUPERVISOR)-
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-25T04:54:29Z-
dc.date.available2026-06-25T04:54:29Z-
dc.date.issued2026-05-
dc.identifier.urihttp://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/22905-
dc.description.abstractThe continuous scaling of integrated circuit (IC) technology toward advanced semiconductor nodes has introduced a growing class of design challenges centered on power delivery reliability. As supply voltages diminish with each process generation and transistor densities increase dramatically, maintaining a stable and well-regulated power supply across the entire chip has become one of the most demanding aspects of modern VLSI design. Among the various manifestations of power delivery degradation, supply noise — encompassing both static and dynamic voltage fluctuations across the power distribution network — stands as a primary threat to circuit functionality, timing closure, and long-term device reliability. This work investigates and implements three complementary power integrity enhancement techniques within a production-representative System-on-Chip (SoC) design environment. The study is conducted using RedHawk-SC, an industry-standard multi-physics sign-off tool, which provides comprehensive static and dynamic IR drop analysis, electromigration evaluation, and thermal co-simulation capability across advanced FinFET technology nodes. The first technique examined is the strategic insertion of decoupling capacitors (DeCAPs) into the power delivery network. Decoupling capacitors function as distributed local charge reservoirs that supply instantaneous current to switching circuit elements, bypassing the resistive-inductive impedance of the global power grid during transient events. Post-insertion analysis demonstrates a measurable reduction in worst-case IR drop from 156 mV to 146 mV, accompanied by a visible contraction of high-drop hotspot regions across the chip floorplan. The second technique involves the application of Smart Power/Ground (PG) fills using the Pegasus flow. The third technique introduces Super High-Density Metal-Insulator-Metal (SHDMIM) capacitors into the power mesh at the SoC level. Characterized by high capacitance density, ultra-low equivalent series resistance (ESR), low equivalent series inductance (ESL), and self-healing dielectric properties, SHDMIM capacitors address the low-frequency noise component that standard decap cells are unable to adequately filter. Integration of SHDMIM capacitors produced a 29.45% reduction in peak voltage fluctuation amplitude, a 57% improvement in post-transient settling time, and a 27.41% reduction in peak-to-peak SOC bump voltage — collectively indicating a significant enhancement in system-level power delivery stability.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesTD-8808;-
dc.subjectPOWER INTEGRITY ENHANCEMENTen_US
dc.subjectDECOUPLING CAPACITORSen_US
dc.subjectPOWER GRID OPTIMIZATIONen_US
dc.subjectADVANCED ICSen_US
dc.titlePOWER INTEGRITY ENHANCEMENT IN ADVANCED ICS USING DECOUPLING CAPACITORS AND POWER GRID OPTIMIZATIONen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
Appears in Collections:M.E./M.Tech. Electronics & Communication Engineering

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