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Abstract

This paper discusses one of the key challenges of design-for-yield: namely, the difficulty in correlating observed behavior with modeled behavior. In order to achieve good parametric yield, the design process must account for a large number of sources of variability in the silicon, ranging from those inherent in the device and wire models themselves through approximations made in library modeling, extraction, tool algorithms and so on. The problem is further complicated by defects and systematic errors that can be present in early silicon but are expected to be fixed as part of the volume ramp. In addition, environmental factors such as temperature and power delivery must be understood, and variation in the measurement equipment must also be correctly accounted for. Examples are given for validating standard cell and memory based designs as well as a general methodology that can be used to enable chip bring-up.
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