VLSI Technology: History, Usage and Design Process
VLSI Technology: History, Usage and Design Process
VLSI Technology
VLSI refers to an integrated circuit technology with numerous devices on a single chip. The remarkable
growth of the electronics industry is primarily due to the advances in large-scale integration technologies.
With the arrival of VLSI designs, the number of possibilities for ICs in control applications,
telecommunications, high-performance computing, and consumer electronics as a whole continues to rise.
Presently, technologies like smartphones and cellular communications afford unprecedented portability,
processing capabilities, and application access due to VLSI technology. The forecast for this trend
indicates a rapid increase as demands continue to increase.
1. Front-End Design: This includes digital design using a hardware description language, for example,
Verilog, System Verilog, and VHDL. Furthermore, this stage encompasses design verification via
simulation and other verification techniques. The entire process also incorporates designing, which starts
with the gates and continues through to design for testability.
2. Back-End Design: This consists of checking the manufacturability of the chip. It involves placement,
routing, clock tree synthesis, timing closure, LVS/DRC checks and a mask creation that can be delivered
to the fabrication unit for manufacturing.
3. Fabrication: This consists of the processes involved in manufacturing a chip out of a piece of silicon.
The entire design process follows a step-by-step approach, and the following are the front-end design
steps:
The following are the back-end design steps for hardware development:
Physical Design: In this step, we create the layout by converting the netlist into a
geometrical depiction. This step also follows some preconceived static rules, such as the
lambda rules, which afford precise details of the ratio, spacing between components, and
size.
The following are the steps followed in a foundry for manufacturing a chip:
Wafer Processing: This step utilizes pure silicon melted in a pot at 1400º C. Then, a small
seed comprising the required crystal orientation is injected into liquefied silicon and
gradually pulled out, 1mm per minute. We manufacture the silicon crystal as a cylindrical
ingot and cut it into discs or wafers before polishing and crystal orientation.
Lithography: This process (photolithography) includes masking with photo etching and a
photographic mask. Next, we apply a photoresist film on the wafer. A photo aligner then
aligns the wafer to a mask. Finally, we expose the wafer to ultraviolet light, thus
highlighting the tracks through the mask.
Etching: Here, we selectively remove material from the surface of the wafer to produce
patterns. With an etching mask to protect the essential parts of the material, we use
additional plasma or chemicals to remove the remaining photoresist.
Ion Implantation: Here, we utilize a method to achieve a desired electrical characteristic in
the semiconductor, i.e., a process of adding dopants. The process uses a beam of high-
energy dopant ions to target precise areas of the wafer. The beam's energy level determines
the depth of wafer penetration.
Metallization: In this step, we apply a thin layer of aluminum over the entire wafer.
Assembly and Packaging: Every one of the wafers contains hundreds of chips. Therefore,
we use a diamond saw to cut the wafers into single chips. Afterward, they receive electrical
testing, and we discard the failures. In contrast, those that pass receive a thorough visual
inspection utilizing a microscope. Finally, we package the chips that pass the visual
inspection as well as recheck them.
VLSI technology is ideally suited to the demands of today's electronic devices and systems. With the
ever-increasing demand for miniaturization, portability, performance, reliability, and functionality, VLSI
technology will continue to drive electronics advancement.