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  • Bad silicon 'yields' a DFM solution

    Bad silicon 'yields' a DFM solution
    by Richard Goering

    Electronic Engineering Times
    April 25, 2005

    Santa Cruz, Calif. - A foundry's "bizarre" mistake led Alex
    Alexanian to start a company to help solve the toughest problem in
    design-for-manufacturability (DFM): getting information that foundries
    consider proprietary into designers' hands.

    Alexanian was chief executive officer of SRAM startup Mosaic Systems
    when it received a 0.13-micron chip that was dead-on-arrival from
    its foundry. Turned out the foundry forgot to put two metal layers
    on the chip. That got Alexanian to thinking that perhaps there was a
    "wrong setup" between design and manufacturing.

    In 2001 he founded E-Z-CAD, now known as Ponte Solutions Inc., a
    design-for-yield startup that this week will announce plans to bring
    statistical yield modeling into the IC design flow. If foundries go
    along, Ponte's encrypted models could end the reliance on long lists
    of design rules and provide a much more accurate way of calibrating
    designs for acceptable yields.

    Ponte is backed by $10 million in private investment and venture
    capital, and employs 60, including 49 R&D engineers in Alexanian's
    native Armenia. The company promises a "platform" for statistical
    yield modeling, a high-capacity data model and yield analysis tools,
    all for release this year.

    Alexanian is used to challenges. A graduate of the Faculty of Applied
    Mathematics in Armenia, he worked on a programmable logic controller
    project co-sponsored by the former Soviet Union and Great Britain.
    When the USSR dissolved, so did the project, and Alexanian moved with
    his family to California in 1994.

    He worked at Cadence Design Systems Inc., where he was a member
    of the consulting staff in the Silicon Ensemble group. In 1999 he
    left to launch Mosaic Systems, which produced working silicon but is
    no longer operating. Alexanian started E-Z-CAD with 27 people from
    Mosaic's R&D center in Armenia.

    E-Z-CAD spurned an acquisition offer from HPL Technologies Inc. in
    2002, which may have been fortuitous, given that HPL's CEO was
    charged a few months later with fabricating most of the company's
    revenue. Declining the offer meant Alexanian had to ask his team to
    go without pay for four months.

    They did. "That was the time we realized we really had a company," he
    said. Alexanian later succeeded in raising private funds, as well as
    funding from Telos Venture Partners, U.S. Venture Partners and Incubic.

    Alexanian is Ponte's president and CEO. His team includes two former
    directors of engineering from Monterey Design Systems-Ara Markosian,
    Ponte's CTO, and Sedrak Sargisian, its vice president of engineering.
    Arklin Kee, vice president of business development, co-founded
    Cadence. Nitin Deo, senior vice president of marketing, was with
    Magma Design Automation.

    There are many DFM startups today, but Ponte claims to have a
    distinctive angle: its rejection of "binary" design rules in favor of
    statistical yield models. "Today the EDA world interfaces with the fab
    with design rules," Alexanian said. "We believe that's going to change
    because of high pain." A 90-nanometer design rule deck might be more
    than 1,000 pages, he noted, and might include conflicting information.

    Ponte is developing a platform for statistical yield modeling that
    claims much better calibration with actual fab processes. These models
    will include random defects such as particle contamination, systemic
    defects such as etching and chemical-metal polishing violations,
    and parametric effects from process variations.

    Most important, they will be encrypted, so that tools can use the
    information but people outside the foundry can't see it. Ponte hopes
    this will induce foundries to provide yield data they won't release
    today. While a generic description of failure mechanisms will be
    public, foundry-specific parameters will not.

    Getting foundry information is the biggest problem for DFM vendors,
    said Gary Smith, chief EDA analyst at Gartner Dataquest. "The holy
    grail is a secure process model, one that can be used by the DFM
    vendors but can't be reverse-engineered," he said.

    Ponte expects statistical yield information to be integrated into
    design tools. For example, placement and routing tools can use the
    models to do more yield-friendly wire spacing or install redundant
    vias.

    Underlying Ponte's technology is a proprietary data model that can
    do "smart processing on billions of polygons, hierarchical or flat,
    in hours for large chips," Alexanian said. It will support standard
    interface formats so data can be exchanged with commercial EDA systems.

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