City
San Jose
Country
United States
Deadline Paper
Start Date
End Date
Abstract

Growing digitization of integrated circuits has contributed to making system&#8211;on&#8211;chips ever more complex&#046; Yet, it does not prevent that a substantial portion of a chip consists of analog and mixed&#8211;signal (AMS) circuits that provide critical functionality like signal conversion&#046; Aggressive scaling of IC technologies, as well as advancing the integration of heterogeneous physical domains on chip, substantially complicates the design of AMS components&#046; On the one hand, their modeling and design becomes extremely complex&#046; On the other hand, their interplay with the rest of the system&#8211;on&#8211;chip challenges design, verification and test&#046; The new technology trends bring up enormous challenges and opportunities for AMS design automation&#046; This is reflected by an increase in research activity on AMS CAD worldwide&#046; The purpose of this workshop is to report recent advances on AMS CAD and motivate new research topics and directions in this area&#046;<br>The workshop puts the focus on the following topics:<br>1&#046; Design verification and test<br>The embedding of AMS components in system&#8211;on&#8211;chips challenges the verification of overall system performance with the clash of two completely different worlds&#046; New methods for verification and test of AMS components shall be presented and discussed&#046;<br>2&#046; Statistical design<br>Ever increasing variability in manufacturing requires efficient methods for design and verification of high&#8211;sigma designs&#046; Where are we and were should be go? The workshop will discuss recent trends from application point of view&#046;<br>3&#046; Constraints and layout design<br>AMS layout is one of the last frontiers where design automation has not yet found its way into industrial application: industrial analog layout is still mostly “polygon pushing”&#046; But recently, strong research effort has been spent to improve analog layout automation&#046; We will review and discuss new layout approaches&#046;<br>4&#046; Analog benchmarks reloaded<br>At ISCAS`84, several researchers made an attempt to provide benchmarks for analog design&#046; 30 years after, analog design automation still lacks reproducibility of algorithmic results by the community&#046; We want to discuss pro and con of analog benchmarks and consider a potential initiative to create a benchmark suite for analog design problems&#046;<br>