Integrated Circuits and Microelectronics

Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

Course Description

  • Course Name

    Integrated Circuits and Microelectronics

  • Host University

    Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

  • Location

    Madrid, Spain

  • Area of Study

    Electronics Engineering, Systems Engineering

  • Language Level

    Taught In English

  • Prerequisites

    STUDENTS ARE EXPECTED TO HAVE COMPLETED:
    - Digital electronics (1st)
    - Electronic Components and Circuits (2nd)

  • Course Level Recommendations

    Upper

    ISA offers course level recommendations in an effort to facilitate the determination of course levels by credential evaluators.We advice each institution to have their own credentials evaluator make the final decision regrading course levels.

    Hours & Credits

  • ECTS Credits

    6
  • Recommended U.S. Semester Credits
    3
  • Recommended U.S. Quarter Units
    4
  • Overview

    Integrated circuits and microelectronic (252 - 15389)
    Bachelor in Telecommunication Technology Engineering
    Semester 2/Spring Semester
    3rd Year/Upper Division

    STUDENTS ARE EXPECTED TO HAVE COMPLETED:
    - Digital electronics (1st)
    - Electronic Components and Circuits (2nd)

    Competences and Skills that will be Acquired and Learning Results:

    In this subject, students will acquire the basic required knowledge to design integrated circuits:
    - Ability to design integrated circuits at a high level, understanding and make an appropriate use of design methodology
    - Ability to design, simulate and synthesize digital circuits usign Hardware Description Languages
    - Knowledge concerning integrated circuits technology and manufacturing processes
    - Ability to analyze and design integrated circuits at physical level
    - Knoledge concerning integrated circuit testing and the implications in the design process
    - Ability to quantify and improve circuit performance, power usage and reliability.
    - Knoledge concerning the computer aided design (CAD) techniques and tools available for digital integrated circuits design.

    Description of Contents/Course Description:

    1. Introduction to integrated circuits. Design methodology
    2. VHDL language: introduction and basic concepts
    - Design units: entity and architecture
    - Objects, operators
    - Statements: concurrent and sequential
    - Hierarchy and components
    3. Combinational and sequential circuit design using VHDL
    - Description of combinational circuits
    - Description of sequential circuits: registers, counters and Finite State Machines
    4. Circuit validation through simulation
    - Suggestions to validate a circuit in a convenient way
    - Description of test benches in VHDL
    - Automatic assessment
    - Simulation models
    5. Digital integrated circuit design at the register tranfer level
    - Serial architectures
    - Parallel architectures
    - Pipelined architectures
    6. Integrated circuit manufacturing and packaging
    - Design of logic gates at transistor level
    - Manufacturing process
    - Packages
    - Implementation types
    - Practical considerations in integrated circuit designs: clock trees, timing optimization, latch-up effect
    7. Integrated circuits at the physisca level
    - Layout design
    - Layout analysis
    8. Integrated circuit testing
    - Stuck-at fault model
    - Test vector generation
    - BIST
    - Scan-path

    Learning Activities and Methodology:

    The course will be developed through the following activities:
    1. Theoretical lectures. Their objective is to provide students with the required knoledge, and the realization of practical exercises to develop this knoledge in an applied way. Students will receive lecture notes and will have basic refference texts.
    2. Practical lectures in informatics rooms and laboratories. They have the objective of guiding students in the develoment of a practical case and the ue of simulation and synthesis tools. A mid-low complexity circuit will be designed and implemented in a programmable circuit.
    3. Student work: exercises and complementary readings, sugested by the teacher. Personal work.
    4. Exams

    Assessment System:

    The objective of assessment is to know the grade of accomplishment of learning objectives. Student work will be assessed in a continuous way, through exercises, practical work and exams.
    - Partial exams: 20%
    - Practical case development (classroom and laboratory): 25%
    (Attendance to laboratory sessions is compulsory)
    - Exercise to deliver: 5%
    - Final exam: 50% (minimum mark, 4 out of 10)

    Students not following the continuous assessment process, the exam will have a value of 60% for the ordinary exam and 100% for the extraordinary exam, following the university rules.

    Basic Bibliography:

    Abramovici, M., Breuer, M.A., Friedman, A.D.. Digital system testing and testable design. Computer Science Press. 1990
    B. Mealy, F. Tappero . "Free Range VHDL. The no-frills guide to writing powerful code for your digital implementations". open-source (http://www.freerangefactory.org/).
    J. M. Rabaey. Digital integrated circuits: a design perspective. Prentice Hall.
    R. Jacob Baker. "CMOS: Circuit Design, Layout and Simulation". Wiley-IEEE Press. 3rd edition, 2010
    Rubio, A. Altet J., Aragonés X., González J. L., Mateo D., Moll F.. Diseño de circuitos y sistemas integrados. Ediciones UPC. 2000
    Smith, D.J.. HDL chip design. Doone. 1997
    Weste, N., Eshraghian, K.. Principles of CMOS design. A systems perspective. Addison-Wesley. 1985

Course Disclaimer

Courses and course hours of instruction are subject to change.

ECTS (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System) credits are converted to semester credits/quarter units differently among U.S. universities. Students should confirm the conversion scale used at their home university when determining credit transfer.

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