Title
Moore meets Maxwell
Abstract
Moore's Law has driven the semiconductor revolution enabling over four decades of scaling in frequency, size, complexity, and power. However, the limits of physics are preventing further scaling of speed, forcing a paradigm shift towards multicore computing and parallelization. In effect, the system is taking over the role that the single CPU was playing: high-speed signals running through chips but also packages and boards connect ever more complex systems. High-speed signals making their way through the entire system cause new challenges in the design of computing hardware. Inductance, phase shifts and velocity of light effects, material resonances, and wave behavior become not only prevalent but need to be calculated accurately and rapidly to enable short design cycle times. In essence, to continue scaling with Moore's Law requires the incorporation of Maxwell's equations in the design process. Incorporating Maxwell's equations into the design flow is only possible through the combined power that new algorithms, parallelization and high-speed computing provide. At the same time, incorporation of Maxwell-based models into circuit and system-level simulation presents a massive accuracy, passivity, and scalability challenge. In this tutorial, we navigate through the often confusing terminology and concepts behind field solvers, show how advances in field solvers enable integration into EDA flows, present novel methods for model generation and passivity assurance in large systems, and demonstrate the power of cloud computing in enabling the next generation of scalable Maxwell solvers and the next generation of Moore's Law scaling of systems. We intend to show the truly symbiotic growing relationship between Maxwell and Moore!
Year
Venue
Keywords
2012
DATE
design flow,high-speed computing,multicore computing,field solvers,cloud computing,design process,law scaling,high-speed signal,incorporating maxwell,next generation,paradigm shift,scalability,integrated circuit design,complex system,finite difference,moore s law,mpi,maxwell equations,computational modeling,inductance,integrated circuit,circuit extraction,cpu,electromagnetics,chip,boundary element method,parallel processing,finite element,electromagnetic field solvers,maxwell s equations,method of moments,computer model,multicore processing
Field
DocType
ISSN
Inductance,Computer science,Parallel computing,Electromagnetics,Circuit extraction,Electromagnetic field solver,Design flow,Multi-core processor,Maxwell's equations,Scalability
Conference
1530-1591
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
3
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Raul Camposano138889.69
Dipanjan Gope295.96
Stefano Grivet-Talocia322.61
Vikram Jandhyala48120.28