Integrated circuit
An integrated circuit (IC) or often referred to as a microchip or simply chip is a miniaturized electronic circuit (consisting mainly of semiconductor devices, as well as passive components) which has been manufactured on a thin substrate of semiconductor material. As of 2004, typical chips are of size 1 cm2 or smaller, and contain millions of interconnected devices, but larger ones exist as well.
Among the most advanced integrated circuits are the microprocessors, which control everything from computers to cellular phones to digital microwave ovens. Digital memory chips are another family of integrated circuit that is crucially important to the modern information society.
Introduction
The integrated circuit was made possible by experimental discoveries which showed that semiconductor devices could perform the functions of vacuum tubes and by mid-20th-century technology advancements in semiconductor device fabrication. The integration of large numbers of tiny transistors onto a small chip was an enormous improvement over the manual assembly of vacuum tubes and circuits using discrete components. The integrated circuit's mass production capability, reliability, and ease of adding complexity prompted the use of standardized IC's in place of designs using discrete transistors which quickly pushed vacuum tubes into obsolescence. There are two main advantages of ICs over discrete circuits - cost and performance. The cost is low because the chips, with all their components, are printed as a unit by photolithography and not constructed a transistor at a time. While cost of designing and developing a complex integrated circuit is quite high, when spread across typically millions of production units the individual IC cost is minimized. The performance of ICs is high because the small size allows short traces which in turn allows low power logic (such as CMOS) to be used at fast switching speeds.
ICs have consistently migrated to smaller feature sizes over the years, allowing more circuitry to be packed on each chip - see Moore's law. As the feature size shrinks, almost everything improves - the cost and the power consumption go down, and the speed goes up. Since these gains are apparent to the end user, there is fierce competition among the manufacturers to use finer geometries. This process, and the expected progress over the next few years, is well described by the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors, or ITRS.
Only a half century after their development was initiated, integrated circuits have become ubiquitous. Computers, cellular phones, and other digital appliances are now inextricable parts of the structure of modern societies. That is, modern computing, communications, manufacturing and transport systems, including the Internet, all depend on the existence of integrated circuits. Indeed, many scholars believe that the digital revolution brought about by integrated circuits was one of the most significant occurrences in the history of mankind.
==Classification and complexity==
Integrated circuits can be classified into analog, digital and mixed signal (both analog and digital on the same chip).
Digital integrated circuits can contain anything from one to millions of logic gates, flip-flops, multiplexers, and other circuits in a few square millimeters. The small size of these circuits allows high speed, low power dissipation, and reduced manufacturing cost compared with board-level integration. Analog integrated circuits perform analog functions like amplification, active filtering, demodulation, mixing, etc. Analog ICs ease the burden on circuit designers by having expertly designed analog circuits available instead of designing a finicky analog circuit from scratch.
The growth of complexity of integrated circuits follows a trend called "Moore's Law", first observed by Gordon Moore of Intel. Moore's Law in its modern interpretation states that the number of transistors in an integrated circuit doubles every two years. By the year 2000 the largest integrated circuits contained hundreds of millions of transistors. It is difficult to say whether the trend will continue (see technological singularity).
Manufacture
Fabrication
Main article: Semiconductor fabrication.
The semiconductors of the periodic table of the chemical elements were identified as the most likely materials for a solid state vacuum tube by researchers like William Shockley at Bell Laboratories starting in the 1930s. Starting with copper oxide, proceeding to germanium, then silicon, the materials were systematically studied in the 1940s and 1950s. Today, silicon monocrystals are the main substrate used for integrated circuits (ICs) although some III-V compounds of the periodic table such as gallium arsenide are used for specialised applications like LEDs, lasers, and the highest-speed integrated circuits. It took decades to perfect methods of creating crystals without defects in the crystalline structure of the semiconducting material.
Semiconductor ICs are fabricated in a layer process which includes these key process steps:
- Imaging
- Deposition
- Etching
The main process steps are supplemented by doping, cleaning and planarisation steps.
A mono-crystal silicon wafer (or for special applications, silicon on sapphire or gallium arsenide wafers) are used as the substrate. Photolithography is used to mark different areas of the substrate to be doped or to have polysilicon, insulators or metal (typically aluminium) tracks deposited on them.
- For a CMOS process, for example, a transistor is formed by the criss-crossing intersection of striped layers. The stripes can be monocrystalline substrate, doped layers, perhaps insulator layers or polysilicon layers. Some etched vias to the doped layers might interconnect layers with metal conducting tracks.
- The criss-crossed checkerboard-like (see image above) transistors are the most common part of the circuit, each checker forming a transistor.
- Resistive structures, meandering stripes of varying lengths, form the loads on the circuit. The ratio of the length of the resistive structure to its width, combined with its sheet resistivity determines the resistance.
- Capacitive structures, in form very much like the parallel conducting plates of a traditional electrical capacitor, are formed according to the area of the "plates", with insulating material between the plates. Owing to limitations in size, only very small capacitances can be created on an IC.
- More rarely, inductive structures can be simulated by gyrators.
Since a CMOS device only draws current on the transition between logic states, CMOS devices consume much less current than bipolar devices.
A memory device is the most regular type of integrated circuit; the highest density devices are thus memories; but even a microprocessor will have memory on the chip. (See the regular array structure at the bottom of the first image.) Although the structures are intricate – with widths which have been shrinking for decades – the layers remain much thinner than the device widths. The layers of material are fabricated much like a photographic process, although light waves in the visible spectrum cannot be used to "expose" a layer of material, as they would be too large for the features. Thus photons of higher frequencies (typically ultraviolet) are used to create the patterns for each layer. Because each feature is so small, electron microscopes are essential tools for a process engineer who might be debugging a fabrication process.
Each device is tested before packaging. The wafer is then cut into small rectangles called dice. Each die is then connected into a package using aluminium (or occasionally gold) wires which are welded to pads, usually found around the edge of the die. After packaging, the devices go through final test on very expensive automated testers, which can account for over 25 percent of the cost of fabrication. As of 2005, a fabrication facility (commonly known as a semiconductor fab) costs over a billion US Dollars to construct, because much of the operation is automated. The most advanced processes employ the following techniques:
- The wafers are up to 300 mm in diameter (wider than a common dinner plate).
- Use of 90 nanometer or smaller chip manufacturing process. Intel, IBM and AMD are using 90 nanometers for their CPU chips and Intel has started using a 65 nanometer process.
- Copper interconnects where copper wiring replaces aluminium for interconnects.
- Low-K dielectric insulators.
- Silicon on insulator (SOI)
- Strained silicon in a process used by IBM known as Strained silicon directly on insulator (SSDOI)
Packaging
The earliest integrated circuits were packaged in ceramic flat packs, which continued to be used by the military for their reliability and small size for many years. Commercial circuit packaging quickly moved to the dual in-line package (DIP), first in ceramic and later in plastic. In the 1980s pin counts of VLSI circuits exceeded the practical limit for DIP packaging, leading to pin grid array (PGA) and leadless chip carrier (LCC) packages. Surface mount packaging appeared in the early 1980s and became popular in the late 1980s, using finer lead pitch with leads formed as either gull-wing or J-lead, as exemplified by Small-Outline Integrated Circuit. A carrier which occupies an area about 30 – 50% less than an equivalent DIP, with a typical thickness that is 70% less. This package has "gull wing" leads protruding from the two long sides and a lead spacing of 0.050 inches.
Small-Outline Integrated Circuit (SOIC) and PLCC packages. In the late 1990s, PQFP and TSOP packages became the most common for high pin count devices, though PGA packages are still often used for high-end microprocessors.
Ball grid array (BGA) packages have existed since the 1970s.
Traces out of the die, though the package, and into the printed circuit board have very different electrical properties, compared to on-chip signals. They require special design techniques and need much more electric power than signals confined to the chip itself.
History; origins and generations
The birth of the IC
The integrated circuit was first conceived by a radar scientist, Geoffrey W.A. Dummer (born 1909), working for the Royal Radar Establishment of the British Ministry of Defence, and published in Washington, D.C. on May 7, 1952. Dummer unsuccessfully attempted to build such a circuit in 1956.
The first integrated circuits were manufactured independently by two scientists: Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments filed a patent for a "Solid Circuit" made of germanium on February 6, 1959. Kilby received patents US3138743, US3138747, US3261081, and US3434015. Robert Noyce of Fairchild Semiconductor was awarded a patent for a more complex "unitary circuit" made of Silicon on April 25, 1961. (See the Chip that Jack built for more information.)
Noyce credited Kurt Lehovec of Sprague Electric for the principle of p-n junction isolation caused by the action of a biased p-n junction (the diode) as a key concept behind the IC.Template:Fn
SSI, MSI, LSI
The first integrated circuits contained only a few transistors. Called "Small-Scale Integration" (SSI), they used circuits containing transistors numbering in the tens.
SSI circuits were crucial to early aerospace projects, and vice-versa. Both the Minuteman missile and Apollo program needed lightweight digital computers for their inertially-guided flight computers; the Apollo guidance computer led and motivated the integrated-circuit technology, while the Minuteman missile forced it into mass-production.
These programs purchased almost all of the available integrated circuits from 1960 through 1963, and almost alone provided the demand that funded the production improvements to get the production costs from $1000/circuit (in 1960 dollars) to merely $25/circuit (in 1963 dollars).
The next step in the development of integrated circuits, taken in the late 1960s, introduced devices which contained hundreds of transistors on each chip, called "Medium-Scale Integration" (MSI).
They were attractive economically because while they cost little more to produce than SSI devices, they allowed more complex systems to be produced using smaller circuit boards, less assembly work (because of fewer separate components), and a number of other advantages.
Further development, driven by the same economic factors, led to "Large-Scale Integration" (LSI) in the mid 1970s, with tens of thousands of transistors per chip.
LSI circuits began to be produced in large quantities around 1970, for computer main memories and pocket calculators.
VLSI
The final step in the development process, starting in the 1980s and continuing on, was "Very Large-Scale Integration" (VLSI), with hundreds of thousands of transistors, and beyond (well past several million in the latest stages).
For the first time it became possible to fabricate a CPU on a single integrated circuit, to create a microprocessor. In 1986 the first one megabit RAM chips were introduced, which contained more than one million transistors. Microprocessor chips produced in 1994 contained more than three million transistors.
This step was largely made possible by the codification of "design rules" for the CMOS technology used in VLSI chips, which made production of working devices much more of a systematic endeavour. (See the 1980 landmark text by Carver Mead and Lynn Conway referenced below.)
ULSI, WSI, SOC
To reflect further growth of the complexity, the term ULSI that stands for "Ultra-Large Scale Integration" was proposed for chips of complexity more than 1 million of transistors. However there is no qualitative leap between VLSI and ULSI, hence normally in technical texts the "VLSI" term covers ULSI as well, and "ULSI" is reserved only for cases when it is necessary to emphasize the chip complexity, e.g. in marketing.
The most extreme integration technique is wafer-scale integration (WSI), which uses whole uncut wafers containing entire computers (processors as well as memory). Attempts to take this step commercially in the 1980s (e.g. by Gene Amdahl) failed, mostly because of defect-free manufacturability problems, and it does not now seem to be a high priority for industry.
The WSI technique failed commercially, but advances in semiconductor manufacturing allowed for another attack on the IC complexity, known as System-on-Chip (SOC) design. In this approach, components traditionally manufactured as separate chips to be wired together on a printed circuit board are designed to occupy a single chip that contains memory, microprocessor(s), peripheral interfaces, Input/Output logic control, data converters, and other components, together composing the whole electronic system.
Other developments
In the 1980s programmable integrated circuits were developed. These devices contain circuits whose logical function and connectivity can be programmed by the user, rather than being fixed by the integrated circuit manufacturer. This allows a single chip to be programmed to implement different LSI-type functions such as logic gates, adders and registers. Current devices named FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays) can now implement tens of thousands of LSI circuits in parallel and operate up to 400 MHz.
The techniques perfected by the integrated circuits industry over the last three decades have been used to create microscopic machines, known as MEMS. These devices are used in a variety of commercial and defense applications, including projectors, ink jet printers, and are used to deploy the airbag in car accidents.
In the past, radios could not be fabricated in the same low-cost processes as microprocessors. But since 1998, a large number of radio chips have been developed using CMOS processes. Examples include Intel's DECT cordless phone, or Atheros's 802.11 card.
Key industrial and academic data
Notable ICs
- The 555 common multivibrator subcircuit (common in electronic timing circuits)
- The 741 operational amplifier
- 7400 series TTL logic building blocks
- 4000 series, the CMOS counterpart to the 7400 series
- Intel 4004, the world's first microprocessor
- The MOS Technology 6502 and Zilog Z80 microprocessors, used in many home computers
Manufacturers
A list of notable manufacturers; some operating, some defunct:
- Alcatel
- AMD (Advanced Micro Devices; founded by ex-Fairchild employees)
- Analog Devices
- ATI Technologies (Array Technologies Incorporated; acquired parts of Tseng Labs in 1997)
- Agere Systems (formerly part of Lucent, which was formerly part of AT&T)
- Atmel (co-founded by ex-Intel employee)
- Commodore Semiconductor Group (formerly MOS Technology)
- Fairchild Semiconductor (founded by ex-Shockley Semiconductor employees: the "Traitorous Eight")
- Freescale Semiconductor (formerly part of Motorola)
- GMT Microelectronics (formerly Commodore Semiconductor Group)
- IBM (International Business Machines)
- Infineon Technologies (formerly part of Siemens)
- Intel (founded by ex-Fairchild employees)
- MOS Technology (founded by ex-Motorola employees)
- Mostek (founded by ex-Texas Instruments employees)
- National Semiconductor (aka "NatSemi"; founded by ex-Fairchild employees)
- Nordic Semiconductor (formerly known as Nordic VLSI)
- NEC Corporation (formerly known as Nippon Electric Company)
- NVIDIA (acquired IP of competitor 3dfx in 2000; 3dfx was co-founded by ex-Intel employee)
- Philips
- PMC-Sierra (from the former Pacific Microelectronics Centre and Sierra Semiconductor, the latter co-founded by ex-NatSemi employee)
- Renesas (joint venture of Hitachi and Mitsubishi Electric)
- Rohm
- STMicroelectronics (formerly SGS Thomson)
- Texas Instruments
- VIA Technologies (founded by ex-Intel employee) (part of Formosa Plastics Group)
- Xilinx (founded by ex-ZiLOG employee)
- ZiLOG (founded by ex-Intel employees) (part of Exxon 1980–89; now owned by TPG)
VLSI conferences
- IEDM – IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting
- DAC – Design Automation Conference
- EDS – IEEE EDS Meetings Calendar
- EDS – IEEE EDS Sponsored, Cosponsored & Topical Conferences
- CAS – IEEE Circuits and Systems Conferences
- ISSSC – IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference
VLSI journals
- ED – IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices
- EDL – IEEE Electron Device Letters
- CAD – IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems
- JSSC – IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits
- VLSI – IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems
- CAS II – IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems II: Analogy and Digital Signal Processing
- SM – IEEE Transactions on Semiconductor Manufacturing
- SSE – Solid-State Electronics
- SST – Solid-State Technology
- TCAD – Journal of Technology Computer-Aided Design
See also
- Computer engineering
- Clean room
- Current mirror
- Electrical engineering
- Electronics
- Emitter-Coupled Logic (ECL)
- Integrated circuit vacuum tube
- Ion implantation
- Mixed-mode integrated circuit
- Transistor-transistor logic (TTL)
- Microcontroller
- Moore's law
- Semiconductor manufacturing
- Simulation
- Sound chip
- SPICE, HDL, ZIF, Automatic test pattern generation
References
Academic:
- Mead, C. and Conway, L. (1980). Introduction to VLSI Systems. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-04358-0.
- Kang, S. and Leblebici, Y. (2002). CMOS Digital Integrated Circuits Analysis & Design. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0072460539.
- Hodges, D.A., Jackson H.G. and Saleh, R. (2003). Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0072283653.
Patents:
- Template:Anb Kurt Lehovec's patent on the isolation p-n junction: US patent 3 029 366 awarded on April 10, 1962, filed April 22, 1959. Robert Noyce credits Lehovec in his article – "Microelectronics", Scientific American, September 1977, Volume 23, Number 3, pp. 63–9.
External links
General:
- EMLabs.info – International list of Universities and Research Groups engaged in embedded systems development.
Patents:
- US3138743 – Miniaturized electronic circuit – J. S. Kilby
- US3138747 – Integrated semiconductor circuit device – J. S. Kilby
- US3261081 – Method of making miniaturized electronic circuits – J. S. Kilby
- US3434015 – Capacitor for miniaturized electronic circuits or the like – J. S. Kilby