Defect characterization for scaling of QCA devices [quantum dot cellular automata ]
Author(s) -
Jing Huang,
Mariam Momenzadeh,
Mehdi Baradaran Tahoori,
Fabrizio Lombardi
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
19th ieee international symposium on defect and fault tolerance in vlsi systems, 2004. dft 2004. proceedings.
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.1109/dft.2004.24
In this paper, we present the impact of scaling on defects that may arise in the manufacturing of quantum dot cellular automata (QCA) devices. This study shows how the sensitivity to manufacturing processing variations changes with device scaling. Scaling in QCA technology is related to cell dimension/size and cell-to-cell spacing within a Cartesian layout. Extensive simulation results on scaling of QCA devices, such as the majority voter, the inverter and the binary wire, are provided to show that defects have definitive trends in their behavior. These trends relate cell size (l) to the smallest cell-to-cell spacing (d) for erroneous behavior in the presence of different defects (such as misalignment and displacement); their impact on the correct functionality of QCA devices is extensively discussed. It is shown that in most defect cases, the scaling relationship between l and d is linear, albeit with different slopes.
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