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Architecture and Design of a Simultaneously Bidirectional Single-ended High Speed Chip-to-Chip Interface

Author(s):
Robert Drost
Report Number: Date Published: Available Formats:
TR-2002-107 February 2002 Portable Document Format (PDF)
Postscript (PS)
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Abstract
A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Electrical Engineering and the Committee on Graduate Studies of Stanford University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

Advances in integrated circuit technologies permit faster clocking speed and increased logic density in chips. However, advances in chip packaging technologies have not kept pace; hence the number of input/output pins and input/output bandwidth per chip has increased less rapidly. The resulting disparity creates the need for more bandwidth per pin. Single-ended signalling and simultaneous bidirectional signalling methods may each increase the bandwidth per pin by a factor of two. However, using these signalling methods poses challenges in compensating for additional noise sources and reduced noise rejection ratios.

This work presents the architecture, circuit techniques, and test results for a single-ended simultaneously bidirectional interface capable of a total throughput of 8 Gigabits per second per pin. The interface addresses the noise reduction challenges by utilizing a pseudo-differential reference with noise immunity approaching that of a fully differential reference. Furthermore, noise generation is reduced by on-chip termination, and low-skew near-end outgoing signal echo cancellation. A test chip in a 0.35 micron digital CMOS technology uses these techniques for an eight bit wide single-ended voltage-mode simultaneous bidirectional interface and achieves a performance of 8 Gigabit per second per pin.

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