EE 260 Winter 2019: Advanced VLSI Design Methodology for Emerging Applications
Instructor
Sheldon Tan (stan@ece.ucr.edu)
Office Hours: Thursday 3:00 to 4:00pm (better by appointment).
Office: WCH 424
Lecture
Wed: 12:40pm to 2:00pm
Watkins Hall Room 1117
Teaching Assistants
Zeyu Sun (zsun007@ucr.edu)
Office Hour: Tuesday 11:00am to 12:00 p.m (TA will attend each course, so better by appointment right after class)
TA Office Room: TBA
Prerequisite
TBD
Course Description
The course will introduce the advanced topics in modern VLSI IC design techniques and methodologies specially for emerging applications emerging applications such as machine/deep learning, quantum/Ising computing, cyber and hardware security.
Course Background and Description
The first working silicon transistor was invented at Bell lab in 1954 by Morris Tanenbaum and commercially produced by Texas Instrument in 1954 and it has been 62th anniversary of the invention. Today's integrated circuit (IC) becomes a part of every aspect of our daily lives. This course will cover many advanced VLSI design techniques and methodologies ranging from the VLSI reliability, VLSI thermal/power aware design and management for IoTs, Advanced VLSI modeling and simulation techniques, and design techniques for many emerging applications such as machine/deep learning, quantum/Ising computing, cyber and hardware security. This course has a large emphasis paper survey and presentations of many important techniques.
Who can take the course?
Both EE and CS undergraduate and graduate students are welcome as VLSI design are fundamental knowledge and skills for hardware implementation of today's complicated systems.
Course Topics and calendars
- 1. Electromigration modeling and analysis techniques
- 2. EM-aware optimization and management at the circuit and system levels
- 3. Advanced circuit simulation and modeling techniques
- 4. Thermal modeling and analysis techniques
- 5. Dynamic thermal/power/reliability management and optimization
- 6. Power delivery network and decoupling
- 7. Emerging adiabatic Ising computing, approximate and stochastic computing
- 8. Hardware security and mitigation techniques
- 9. VLSI architecture and circuit design for machine/deep learning
Reference book
Lecture notes and related papers.
Grading
Paper survey and presentations : 50%
Final project, project report and project presentation: 50%
All of them will be graded on the scale of 0 to 100 with 100 being the maximum score.
Project
Each student (can form a team with no more than 2 people) need to work on a project in this course. The topics need to be approved by instructor.
VLSI Design Tutorial
https://github.com/sheldonucr/ee260_lab
Assignment
Home works assignment will be issued through iLearn