Synopsys has announced an acceleration of development on its yield learning platform designed to speed up ramp up of chips made using Samsung Foundry’s 7LPP (7 nm low power plus) process and newser technologies. The Yield Explorer is a complex yield learning platform that is designed to analyze product layouts, fab data, and product test data in order to find weak spots and enable engineers to improve yields of various chips. Eventually, the Yield Explorer will be enhanced for Samsung’s 5 nm, 4 nm, and 3 nm nodes.

Production of modern chips is an extremely complex process that takes several months to accomplish and involves thousands of steps. Actual yields of chips depend on quality of their designs as well as their power and performance requirements. Therefore, to improve yields of a particular silicon chip, multiple things have to be analyzed to identify systematic yield limiters, and this is exactly what Synopsys’ Yield Explorer does.

The Yield Explorer is a complex set of programs that analyzes data from three sources using advanced machine learning and data visualization techniques. First up, Yield Explorer analyzes product design, including layout and static timings. Secondly, the complex analyzes fab data, including inspection and metrology. Thirdly, the platform considers various product test data, such as binning, system level testing.

Synopsys' Yield Explorer at a Glance
Source Feature
Product design data Layout, netlist, test diagnosis, static timing analysis
Fab data Inspection, metrology, wafer acceptance test (WAT)
Product test data Bin, parametric, system-level test

Keeping in mind that silicon design is a property of the designer, whereas information about peculiarities of fab operations and characteristics is confidential, the platform that analyzes yields enables secure collaboration between the foundry and customer.

At present, Samsung Foundry and Synopsys offer Yield Explorer for designs produced using 10LPE, 10LPP, 8LPP, 8LPU, and 7LPP fabrication technologies (10 nm, 8 nm, and 7 nm nodes). Compatibility with 7LPP enables the two companies to leverage the platform to 5LPE, 4LPE (and possibly to 6LPP) processes. Furthermore, there is a plan to use Yield Explorer for chips made using 3GAE technology that uses gate all around MBCFET transistors based on silicon nanosheets.

"The secure collaboration model using Yield Explorer has greatly helped us to work efficiently with key customers to achieve target production yields quickly. We look forward to expanding this cooperation with Synopsys as we ramp up production on our 5-nanometer technology node."

- JY Choi, vice president of the Foundry Design Technology Team at Samsung Electronics

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Source: Synopsys

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  • surt - Thursday, July 4, 2019 - link

    Of course they have more bugs. Bugs are proportional to features. And those features exist because a product manager worked with users to find out what they need. You just aren't their target market.
  • FullmetalTitan - Friday, July 5, 2019 - link

    Customer engineers at a foundry might have limited access to these type of tools (such as simplified reporting tools, without as much detail), but the actual users are the failure analysis engineers, the process engineers looking for improvement targets, and the integration engineers trying to identify hidden weak points in layout or design rules. Not sure what Ray is basing his comment on, unless he has worked for multiple foundries.
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Thursday, July 4, 2019 - link

    The announcement isn't anything new, it's their new more aggressive focus.
  • Wardrop - Thursday, July 4, 2019 - link

    Now supporting Windows XP. Hooray
  • danjw - Friday, July 5, 2019 - link

    "process and newser technologies." I think you meant "newer".
  • SydneyBlue120d - Thursday, July 11, 2019 - link

    Can we expect better Exynos SOC then? :D

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