Startup company promises a silicon compiler for embedded DRAM designs. The company has former Chromatics and LSI Logic engineers........
Posted: 3:00 p.m. EST, 3/11/98
Startup promises embedded DRAM compiler
By Richard Goering
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Taking aim at a major bottleneck for systems-on-silicon designs, a new provider of intellectual property (IP) promises to deliver a compiler later this year that can generate embedded DRAM for 0.25-micron and finer process technologies. If successful, Silicon Access Inc. will revolutionize what is today a painstaking, handcrafted process.
And embedded DRAM is not the only focus for the company, which will also offer SRAM, ROM, an I/O library and a standard-cell library. But embedded DRAM is clearly its most ambitious goal, given that DRAM today varies greatly between processes and designs, and must be hand-tuned to get acceptable performance and density.
On-chip DRAM is becoming increasingly attractive for low-power, high-speed applications in such areas as wireless telecommunications, graphics and portable computing. The market-research firm Dataquest Inc. predicts that the embedded DRAM market will soar from roughly $460 million in 1998 to $7.75 billion in 2001.
"In our view, there is a spectrum of applications for which embedded DRAM is an absolute necessity," said Perry Constantine, president and chief executive officer of Silicon Access Inc. (San Jose, Calif.). "You cannot have system-level integration without taking DRAM and putting it on-chip."
But that's not an easy process, he said. "Today, there are perhaps 100 expert DRAM designers in all of North America," Constantine said. "To do a proprietary architecture takes four to six months. We propose to develop a DRAM compiler that generates application-specific architectures within hours."
What's more, Constantine said, there will be no sacrifice in logic performance or in DRAM yield and density. In fact, he said, Silicon Access has developed a proprietary DRAM architecture that is "at least 50 percent faster" than any existing architecture. "It's more granular than what exists in the marketplace," he said, "and it won't waste any chip size or area."
The company's goals are quite a bit broader than the embedded DRAM compiler, due in the fourth quarter of 1998. "We want to be the largest provider of silicon-proven IP," said Constantine. The company has chosen to focus most of its initial efforts on memory, but is also offering a standard-cell library that's available today.
In addition to compilers, memory instances and libraries, Silicon Access will offer an extensive range of services, including cell development, memory-instance generation, design-flow support and physical layout. The company will sell to foundries, fabless semiconductor vendors and systems houses who do their own IC layout.
While the company's goals are ambitious, Silicon Access appears to have amassed a lot of ASIC, EDA and silicon expertise. Constantine was chief executive officer of LSI Logic Canada and executive vice president at Aspec Technology.
Michael Beunder, director of technology, was director of technology development at Compass. Greg Hackney, director of software development, was director of library development at Compass. Hing Wong, director of memory development, served with Chromatic Research and IBM, and has authored many publications on DRAM design.
The 20-person company is backed by venture capital from Norwest Ventures, and is heading for another round of financing in 60 days. Constantine declined to say how much money was raised.
Constantine revealed few details about the technology Silicon Access is developing. DRAM and logic require different processes, but he said the company will offer a true DRAM process embedded on top of a true logic process.
The compiler will produce single-transistor-cell DRAM blocks with up to 64 Mbits, Constantine said. It will provide logic models for synthesis, simulation and static timing analysis, as well as GDSII files for layout. The compiler could be licensed to customers or run by Silicon Access as a service. It will be tailored to the customer's process as part of the licensing relationship.
Constantine said Silicon Access is working with two foundries that have DRAM capability, but he declined to name them. In any event, the company promises "silicon-proven" IP, meaning that Silicon Access will run test chips and characterize them.
In addition to compilers, Silicon Access will provide instances of embedded DRAM, SRAM and ROM. These will be available in the second quarter. An I/O library, including hard cores for such functions as AGP, PCI and USB, is also slated for the second quarter.
A standard-cell library with more than 500 cells is available now, supporting TSMC and UMC 0.25-micron processes. Tom Kozas, Silicon Access director of marketing, said the library offers high density, a good variety of drive strengths for synthesis, and porosity for place and route tools.
The company has decided to focus all its products at technologies of 0.25 micron and below, Constantine said.
By working closely with pure foundries, and with customers who have their own layout tools, Silicon Access helps customers bypass the traditional ASIC business model. But Constantine said that ASIC companies will continue to find customers, and he said Silicon Access will sell to ASIC providers as they look for more intellectual property from external sources. |