On-chip Interconnect

On-chip interconnect today is based on copper/low-k wiring – in today’s chips, there can be more than 100 km of copper wires.

TSMC’s leading edge technologies use a novel copper gap-fill solution to enable the fabrication of smaller conductor lines. Newly-developed materials and processes allow significant reduction in line and via resistance to improve chip performance. A comprehensive suite of innovations on integration scheme, low-k material, and low-k process with selective deposition further enhance both performance (through capacitance reduction) and reliability. Beyond copper interconnect, explorations of single metallic elements, binary and ternary alloys, and 2D materials for future interconnect materials are underway both within TSMC and with our academic partners.

  • Heterogeneous Integration of a Compact Universal Photonic Engine for Silicon Photonics Applications in HPC

    2021
    One of the prominent challenges for widespread adoption of Si photonics (SiPh) technology is the availability of an integration platform that can simultaneously meet a wide range of power, performance, and cost criteria in different applications. As a result, there is a diversity of Si photonics integrated solutions proposed or demonstrated, but none is considered as a common solution. In this paper, we will first survey industry proposed photonic engine (PE) structures in monolithic, 2D, 2.5D, and 3D on their strengths and weaknesses. We will then propose a compact and universal PE structure- COUPE (COmpact Universal Photonic Engine) that could consolidate different requirements onto the same integration platform. COUPE has the EIC-PIC integration with the electrical interface designed to minimize the EIC-PIC coupling loss. Compared with industry proposed PE technology, COUPE can provide low insertion loss for both grating coupler (GC) and edge coupler (EC). For either GC or EC, the COUPE is a solid structure without cavities or mechanically weak parts, thus enabling low insertion loss without contamination or mechanical concerns. COUPE also has the flexibility to be integrated easily with host ASIC to form a co-package structure. The COUPE integration scheme can meet the most demanding system requirements and pave the way for silicon photonics based wafer level system integration (WLSI) for high performance computing (HPC) applications. authors: Hsing-Kuo Hsia, C.H. Tsai, K.C. Ting, F.W. Kuo, C.C. Lin, C.T. Wang, S.Y. Hou, W.C. Chiou, Douglas C. H. Yu