Instructor: Dr. Sheldon Tan
Office: ENGII 424
Email: stan@ee.ucr.edu
Office
Hours: Thursday 3:00pm – 4:00pm
by appointment.
Lecture: SPR 2344, Thursday 6:10pm – 9:00pm
Course Background and Description:
Circuit simulation
techniques are fundamental to the design and verification of today’s electronic
systems. The field of circuit simulation has seen
exciting development ever since the advent of integrated circuits. Modern
integrated circuits continually challenge circuit simulation algorithms and
implementations with the various verification problems they pose. As VLSI technology has advanced to the nano-scale regime, how to efficiently simulate all the
important new physic effects coming shrinking devices
is crucial to the design and verification of future VLSI systems.
This course presents the theoretical and practical
aspects of the building a circuit simulator, such as SPICE. It introduces numerical algorithms and
computer-aided techniques for the simulation of electronic circuits. Students
will learn the state of the art and future challenges in simulating and
analyzing electronic circuits. The course will provide students the knowledge
and foundations for future research into design and design automation of future
VLSI systems in general, and advanced simulation and modeling techniques for
nanometer VLSI designs
in particular. We will balance the classic simulation algorithms with new model
order reduction techniques for interconnect circuits. Theoretical and practical aspects of
important analyses techniques: circuit formulation methods, large-signal
nonlinear DC, small-signal AC and moment matching, transient, inductive
modeling and reduction techniques. Recent advances in timing, thermal, and RF
circuit analysis.
Who can take the course?
Both EE and CS
undergraduate and graduate students are welcome as circuit simulation and
modeling are important knowledge for efficiently design and verification of
today’s VLSI and nanometer systems and future bio-chips. The course covers
mathematics, circuit theory, graph theory, physics, device modeling, electrical
engineering and software development.
Announcements:
q
The
instruction will begin on April 5, 2007.
q
Final:
June 11-15 (Final week)
Homework:
(with potential due days)
Homework 1 (due April 19, 2007)
Homework 2
Homework 3
Homework 4
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Lecture notes are in UCR blackboard