Agenda - How to characterize and debug high speed digital

Transcription

Agenda - How to characterize and debug high speed digital
Agenda - How to characterize and debug high speed digital
links on your physical prototype – what part of your design
is eating up your Eye margins?
Part 2:
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Eye closure analysis
RJ/DJ separation
ISI/Equalization
RNDN separation
BER contour
Margin is not for free
Lower power (example MIPI Mphy)
Lower cost (PCB material etc.)
Higher speed or Robustness
Practical application of instrumentation
-> T&M contribution must be reduced (scope techniques to reduce jitter+ noise)
Separating receiver test from the Tx/channel
TX
Channel
RX
Capturing an eye diagram
The easiest way to get an overall idea of the quality of the serial signal
Trigger on Clock signal (if available) as the rough first pass to build Eye Diagram
Eye Diagram is the superposition in the middle of the screen of 3 bits
Multiple case combined form the Eye (000,001,010,011,100,101,110,111)
Preceding bits might impact the ones you’re seeing - this is called Inter Symbol Interferences
Use Clock Recovery with PLL Emulation on 8B/10B signal and memory folding to build eye
Building an Eye diagram the synchronous way: Explicit Clock used as Trigger
101 Sequence
011 Sequence
Overlay of all combinations
What represents “good enough”?
The eye-mask is the common industry approach to measure the eye opening
Failures usually occur at mask corners
• But what is cause of failure?
Violating USB FS 12Mb/s Eye Diagram
Good Displayport Eye Diagram
What Is jitter?
What are Inter-Symbol Interferences?
AGILENT SI Seminar 2012
by Pascal GRISON
ISI Jitter is coming from Signal Distorsions in Transmission Channel
Page 6
Impact of Tx De-Emphasis on Rx Signal
To reduce ISI at RX Side, Most TX implement De-Emphasis
AGILENT SI Seminar 2012
by Pascal GRISON
7
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Where does jitter come from?
Transmitter
Receiver
•Lossy interconnect (ISI)
•Impedance mismatches (ISI)
•Crosstalk (PJ)
•Thermal Noise (RJ)
•DutyCycle Distortion (DCD)
•Power Supply Noise (RJ, PJ)
•On chip coupling (PJ, ISI)
•Termination Errors (ISI)
Total jitter components
TJ: Total Jitter (convolution of RJ
(based on BER) & DJ, and measured in
peak-to-peak.
RJ: Random Jitter (rms)
DJ: Deterministic Jitter (peak-to-peak).
• PJ: Correlated & uncorrelated Periodic
Jitter (caused by cross-talk and EMI)
• DDJ: Data Dependent Jitter
• DCD: Duty Cycle Distortion (caused by
threshold offsets and slew rate
mismatches).
• ISI: Inter-Symbol Interference (caused by
BW limitation and reflections).
Jitter probability: BER
J pk - pk = J deterministic
=
n ´ s random
How do real time ‘scopes measure jitter?
NRZ
Serial
Data
Recovered
Clock
Jitter
Trend
Jitter
Spectrum
Units in Time
Units in Time
Jitter
Histogram
Why is Noise important?
Noise eats up margin
•By adding vertical noise
•By increasing jitter
Noise is a significant concern in real-time scopes:
• Wideband front end
• High-speed digitizer
Why is vertical noise floor important ?
Let’s consider theoretical signals with Zero jitter and fixed voltage noise
with three different edge speeds and crossing a Threshold at 50%
1)Voltage noise translates directly to Timing uncertainty (Jitter)
2)Higher Vertical Noise Floor translates to higher Timing uncertainty
3)At constant amplitude noise floor, slower edge speed translates to higher
Timing uncertainty
Noise sources
Probe
Probe Noise
Quantify your scope noise!:
• AC Vrms Measurement
• Histogram-standard deviation
• FFT
Amplifier
Attenuator
A/D
Noise
Quantization Noise
What about eye height closure?
Page 17
Technology Deployment
Agilent Private
September 22nd, 2008
Noise Analysis
Analyze the amplitude characteristics to
support receiver sensitivity design.
• Arbitrary location in the eye
• Noise component decomposition
• Extrapolation to specific target BER
• Analysis graphs ala Jitter Separation
• Removal of Oscilloscope Noise
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EZJit Complete Graphs
Ones and
Zeroes
Composite
Interference
Histograms
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EZJit Complete - ISI vs Bit: affect of channel on bit levels
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VdiVW measurement procedure
Ringback could cause the
measurement using the mask
corners to be incorrect.
Worst case
VdiVW – voltage must stay
above/below VdiVW for
TdiVW time.
Margin should really be the
min voltage in the entire
TdiVW range.
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Confidentiality Label
June 5, 2013
New Tests (tDIVW and vDIVW)
The smallest
margin to the
mask of the 6
timing points is
reported as
tDIVW
measurement
result.
The smallest
margin to the
mask of the 6
voltage points is
reported as
vDIVW
measurement
result.
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Confidentiality Label
June 5, 2013
DDR 4 tDIVW Margin to Mask Detail (up to 2133).
62.5ps
62.5ps
125ps
% Margin is then (Actual-Spec)/Spec*100% or
(118.8ps-62.5ps)/62.5ps * 100% = 90%
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Confidentiality Label
June 5, 2013
DDR 4 Eye Margin to Mask
(2400 and greater)
BER contour 1E-12
At DDR4/2400 and above the extrapolated BER contour is used.
Since direct measurement beyond 1e-7 is extremely slow a standard dual Dirac
model is used to compute the contour from actual measured waveforms.
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Confidentiality Label
June 5, 2013
DDR 4 Eye Margin to Mask
(2400 and greater)
Margin is really calculated the
same, to BER contour rather
than direct measurement.
TdiVW margin = min time from
mask corner
VdiVW margin = min voltage
from mask corner
Margin = (Actual-Spec)/Spec
*100%
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Confidentiality Label
June 5, 2013
Where is the Receiver – Transmitter boundary?
2) Want to see here
Driver
Trace
Vias
PCB Trace
1) Measure here?
4) Want to see here
Die
Package
Card
Receiver
Backplane
Die
Package
Card
3) Measure here?
Specify here!
JITR: New Meas in HS Buses
May 2013
Summary – Tx Channel Characterization
• Tx Channel characterization is all about the ‘eye’
• ALL measurements essentially measure noise.
• ISI is the dominant issue at high data rates.
• Rj is a dominant source of jitter (14x S.D.) in measurements.
• Rj is proportional to Voltage noise.
• Wideband measurement systems are inherently prone to
noise.
• Moving the reference plane can significantly simplify electrical
layer testing.
Page 28
Technology Deployment
Agilent Private
September 22nd, 2008
Q-Series Acquisition System
Each Board Implements 80 GSa/s
Faraday Caged
Front-End Module
CMOS A/D
Converter
Memory
Controller
Standard
DDR-2
Acquisition
Memory
640 Gb/s at this interface
(320 lanes at 2 Gb/s each)
Analog Signal Path
6 Custom ASICs in Proprietary Indium Phosphide Process
Sampling Demux
Preamp
Probe Amplifier
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~2 mm2, 100 devices, 1 Watt
Adjustable RIN
Adjustable common-mode VOUT
Thermal compensation
Calibration Generator
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~4 mm2, 150 devices, 2 Watts
Adjustable RIN
Selectable gain and bandwidth
Thermal compensation
Trigger
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~6 mm2, 350 devices, 7 Watts
Adjustable aperture
Adjustable delay and skew
ISI compensation
ADC Buffer Amp
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~4 mm2, 350 devices, 2 Watts
Internal oscillator
Adjustable calibration signal
Adjustable edge speed
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~4 mm2, 450 devices, 2 Watts
Adjustable threshold
Adjustable hysteresis
Thermal compensation
• ~3 mm2, 50 devices, 1 Watt
• Adjustable RIN
• ISI compensation
Compound Semiconductor Choices
Material Properties
Parameter
SiGe
GaAs
InP
(depends on alloy
composition)
Energy gap (eV)
0.9
1.42
1.34
Mobility (cm²/V·s)
3300
8500
5400
300K Max electron
velocity (107 cm/s)
1
2
2.5
Critical field (V/µm)
20
40
50
Compared to other semiconductors,
Indium Phosphide has:
1. Highest electron velocity
 higher device speed
2. Highest critical field
 higher voltage swings and power
BVceo versus Ft for Bipolar Technologies
InP SHBT & GaAs
UM
BVceo (Volts)
InP DHBT
HB2A
Velocium
GCS
Lucent
TRW
HB2B
SFU (Agilent)
Si &SiGe
NTT
HRL
IBM
0
50
Hitachi
100
AG100
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IBM
Conexant
150
NTT
200
Ft (GHz)
250
300
Custom Packaging Technology
Used for Front-End and Probe Amplifier Multichip Modules
Front view with lid
Custom Packaging Technology
Construction Details
Conductive silicone
substrate-to-PCB attach
Coaxial Connector
AluminaSubstrate
Substrate
Ceramic
IC
Laminate Substrate
Metal Lid
Host PCB
Conductive silicone
lid-to-substrate attach
Back view with
SMPM connectors
Custom Packaging Technology
Integrated Coaxial Transmission Lines
Single-ended
preamp input
10 GHz
differential
sample clock
Custom A/D Architecture
80 x 250 MSa/s Conversion with 80 Lanes of 2 Gb/s Outputs
Agilent’s 90000 Q-series Oscilloscope
Real-time Bandwidth: 4 channels @ 33 GHz, 2 channels @ 63 GHz
5-chip Module
Probe Amp
ADC Amp
Trigger IC
Input Preamp
InP
Chipset
Sampling DeMux
Acquisition Board
Calibration IC
Differentiating Technology…
• High bandwidth InP chipset
in Agilent’s proprietary “HB2B Process”
• Proprietary epitaxial material
• Packaged in Agilent’s proprietary “QuickFilm” modules
Enables Differentiating Performance…
• Analog bandwidth to 63 GHz
• Industry leading low-noise and superior signal integrity
In The World’s Fastest and Most Accurate Scope…
RealEdge
Technology
Lab measurement summary
System
Design
Interconnect
Design
Active Signal
Analysis
Compliance
Test
HSD Design: To optimise mutually
HSD Lab Verification: To prove trade-off
exclusive cost, power consumption and
decisions through margin analysis and
robustness tradeoffs
compliance test
This requires you to:

Fully understand your Rx chain requirements (for which you need Symbol error rate awareness and accurate jitter injection…)

Tighten design margins as far as possible on timing/power/cost tradeoff for maximum product competitiveness (for which you need
smallest possible contribution from measurement system)
Agilent calibrated jBERT and low noise/jitter ‘Scope technology lets you sign off most competitive designs!