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Evaluation of using active circuitry for substrate noise suppression

Published:11 March 2007Publication History

ABSTRACT

The performance of system-on-chips can be severely degraded if noisy circuits interfere with sensitive circuits through the common silicon substrate. Many methods have been proposed to suppress such substrate noise, ranging from designing circuits that generateless noise to using guard bands to prevent noise from reaching the sensitive parts. In this paper we have investigated a proposed method for substrate noise suppression using active circuitry, and compared it with two passive methods; resistive grounding and capacitive decoupling. Published results indicate that active noise suppression outperforms passive noise suppression. However, these results are based on simulations using over simplified substrate models, like single node or resistor T-models. In this paper we confirm these previous results, but we also show that when using a more realistic substrate model these advantages disappear! We claim that there is no noticeable difference between active noise suppression and DC grounding; these two methods are comparable and better than capacitive decoupling. The substrate resistivity in system-on-chip solutions typically result in large substrate resistances that decrease the efficiency of active decoupling compared to simple DC grounding.

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    • Published in

      cover image ACM Conferences
      GLSVLSI '07: Proceedings of the 17th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI
      March 2007
      626 pages
      ISBN:9781595936059
      DOI:10.1145/1228784

      Copyright © 2007 ACM

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      Publication History

      • Published: 11 March 2007

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