dc.description.abstract |
ESD (Electrostatic Discharge) protection circuits are widely used in the semiconductor
industry generally as on-chip solution to protect main circuit or Design Under Test
(DUT) against electrostatic discharge. This electrostatic charge can be accumulated due
to number of reasons such as mis-handing of machinery equipment, charge transfer from
human body etc. If this charge is not bypassed, then it might result in the permanent
failure of core integrated circuits or DUTs. Therefore, some effcient circuit design must
be placed to discharge this high ESD stress. Typically, Electrostatic charge is in the
range of kV, hence large sized devices are needed to discharge this high voltage. In
addition to this, bias voltage stress above 1.8 V may lead to device breakdown in lower
technology nodes such as 16 nm FINFET technology in spite of its unique advantage of
allowing high speed operation with low power consumption. The major design challenges
in designing ESD protection circuits are clamp area, which is the major area hungry
block, high inrush current due to large sized devices, hot insertion problem and false
triggering issues.In the state of art, existing ESD protection circuit are not able to survive for high voltage in sub-micron technology as it may lead to oxide breakdown due to low thickness.
Further, these circuits are more sensitive to the hot insertion. In order to mitigate these
design challenges, high voltage tolerant cascoded ESD protection circuit is proposed
with a supply voltage of 3.3 V using 16 nm FINFET technology for devices such as
ash drives, mobile devices etc. This circuit is designed keeping all constraints in mind
such that the voltage stress across any device should not go beyond 1.8 V, which is
breakdown voltage for the device. This ESD protection circuit can support 4 kV HBM
and least inrush current in normal power on condition for speci_cation of 10 mA per
instance. This proposed design has reduced the clamp area around 38 % and static
current approximately 4 times as compared to the baseline circuit. This design supports
plug and play feature, which generally su_ers from hot insertion problem. Simulation
results shows that the proposed design is robust against PVT variations |
en_US |