The paper “Mismatch Compensation Technique for Inverter-Based CMOS Circuits” by  Przemyslaw Mroszczyk and Vasilis F. Pavlidis from ExaNoDe partner University of Manchester was accepted for the isQED 2018 conference.

Abstract:

This paper presents the design of a low swing transceiver for chip-to-chip communication in 2.5-D integrated systems using a passive interposer. High speed and low power operation is achieved through a new dynamic low swing tunable transmitter (DLST-TX) and inverter-based tunable receiver (INVT-RX) circuits. The novelty of the proposed solution lies in the digital trimming for PVT corners and random parameter variability allowing significant reduction of the voltage swing down to 120 mV with single ended signaling. The compensation method has negligible impact on the circuit performance and silicon area, not typically achievable by device geometry scaling. The proof-of-concept transceiver is implemented in a 65 nm CMOS technology and exhibits up to 4× higher energy efficiency at 1 Gb/s speed for 2.5 mm long chip-to-chip interconnect, as compared to state-of-the-art full swing communication schemes operating under the same conditions. The transceiver is suitable for parallel interfaces in 2.5-D integrated systems.