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Dive into the research topics where Alina Deutsch is active.

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Featured researches published by Alina Deutsch.


IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques | 1997

When are transmission-line effects important for on-chip interconnections?

Alina Deutsch; G.V. Kopcsay; P.J. Restle; H.H. Smith; G. Katopis; Wiren D. Becker; P.W. Coteus; C.W. Surovic; Barry J. Rubin; R.P. Dunne; T. Gallo; Keith A. Jenkins; L.M. Terman; R.H. Dennard; G.A. Sai-Halasz; B.L. Krauter; D.R. Knebel

Short, medium, and long on-chip interconnections having linewidths of 0.45-52 /spl mu/m are analyzed in a five-metal-layer structure. We study capacitive coupling for short lines, inductive coupling for medium-length lines, inductance and resistance of the current return path in the power buses, and line resistive losses for the global wiring. Design guidelines and technology changes are proposed to achieve minimum delay and contain crosstalk for local and global wiring. Conditional expressions are given to determine when transmission-line effects are important for accurate delay and crosstalk prediction.


Proceedings of the IEEE | 2001

On-chip wiring design challenges for gigahertz operation

Alina Deutsch; Paul W. Coteus; Gerard V. Kopcsay; Howard H. Smith; Byron Krauter; Daniel C. Edelstein; Phillip J. Restle

This paper reviews the status of present day on-chip wiring design methodologies and understanding. A brief explanation is given of the fundamental transmission-line properties that should be considered for accurate prediction of crosstalk, common-mode noise and clock skew. The deficiencies of RC-circuit representation are highlighted and design guidelines are given for using modeling and simulation techniques that have been previously used for package interconnections. Such techniques are believed to teach designers how to make better use of available technologies and help them architect systems that operate with many-GHz clock rates.


Ibm Journal of Research and Development | 1990

High-speed signal propagation on lossy transmission lines

Alina Deutsch; Gerard V. Kopcsay; Vincent Ranieri; J. Cataldo; Eileen A. Galligan; William S. Graham; R. McGouey; Sharon L. Nunes; J. Paraszczak; John J. Ritsko; Russell J. Serino; D.-Y. Shih; Janusz Stanislaw Wilczynski

This paper addresses some of the problems encountered in propagating high-speed signals on lossy transmission lines encountered in high-performance computers. A technique is described for including frequency-dependent losses, such as skin effect and dielectric dispersion, in transmission line analyses. The disjoint group of available tools is brought together, and their relevance to the propagation of high-speed pulses in digital circuit applications is explained. Guidelines are given for different interconnection technologies to indicate where the onset of severe dispersion takes place. Experimental structures have been built and tested, and this paper reports on their electrical performance and demonstrates the agreement between measured data and waveforms derived from analysis. The paper addresses the problems found on lossy lines, such as reflections, rise-time slowdown, increased delay, attenuation, and crosstalk, and suggests methods for controlling these effects in order to maintain distortion-free propagation of high-speed signals.


Proceedings of the IEEE | 1998

Electrical characteristics of interconnections for high-performance systems

Alina Deutsch

A review is presented of the electrical characteristics of high-density, high-performance interconnections used in digital and communication applications. These interconnections behave as lossy transmission lines for the frequency range of interest. A brief theoretical explanation of the key properties of lossy, coupled transmission lines is given. A new short-pulse propagation technique used for characterizing a large category of wiring is described. A detailed description is made of each of the major interconnect types encountered namely, shielded cables, printed circuit boards, ceramic carriers, thin-film wiring, and on-chip wiring. Representative examples are given in each case to highlight the key performance-limiting parameters. The modeling and measurement techniques used are explained and examples are given. Future technological directions and their effect on performance are discussed.


electronic components and technology conference | 1997

When are transmission-line effects important for on-chip interconnections

Alina Deutsch; Gerard V. Kopcsay; P. Restle; George A. Katopis; Wiren D. Becker; Howard H. Smith; P.W. Coteus; Barry J. Rubin; R.P. Dunne; T. Gallo; Keith A. Jenkins; L.M. Terman; Robert H. Dennard; G.A. Sai-Halasz; D.R. Knebel

Short, medium and long on-chip interconnections having line widths of 0.45-52 /spl mu/m are analyzed in a five-metal-layer structure. We study capacitive coupling for short lines, inductive coupling for medium-length lines, inductance and resistance of the current return path in the power buses and line resistive losses for the global wiring. Design guidelines and technology changes are proposed to achieve minimum delay and contain crosstalk for local and global wiring. Conditional expressions are given to determine when transmission-line effects are important for accurate delay and crosstalk prediction.


IEEE Microwave and Guided Wave Letters | 1992

Characterization of resistive transmission lines by short-pulse propagation

Alina Deutsch; G. Arjavalingam; Gerard V. Kopcsay

A method for completely characterizing resistive transmission lines by short-pulse propagation is described. Using the loss and dispersion of pulses propagated on two different lengths of line, together with the measured low-frequency capacitance, the frequency-dependent propagation constant, attenuation, and the complex impedance are determined. The basic method is demonstrated with results from low-loss cables and a well-controlled coplanar waveguide sample.<<ETX>>


electrical performance of electronic packaging | 2005

Extraction of /spl epsiv//sub r/(f) and tan/spl delta/(f) for printed circuit board insulators up to 30 GHz using the short-pulse propagation technique

Alina Deutsch; Thomas-Michael Winkel; Gerard V. Kopcsay; Barry J. Rubin; George A. Katopis; Bruce J. Chamberlin; Roger S. Krabbenhoft

In this paper, the self-consistent, frequency-dependent dielectric constant epsivr(f) and dielectric loss tandelta(f) of several materials are determined over the range 2 to 30 GHz using a short-pulse propagation technique and an iterative extraction based on a rational function expansion. The simple measurement technique is performed in the time domain on representative printed circuit board wiring. Broadband, fully causal transmission-line models based on these results are generated up to 50 GHz for card wiring using low loss materials including BT, Nelco N4000-13, and Nelco N4000-13SI. Simulation and modeling results highlight the need for the accurate frequency-dependent dielectric loss extraction. Signal propagation based on these results shows very good agreement with measured step and pulse time-domain excitations and provides validation of the measurement and model generation technique


IEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility | 2001

Frequency-dependent losses on high-performance interconnections

Alina Deutsch; Gerard V. Kopcsay; Paul W. Coteus; Paul Eric Dahlen; David L. Heckmann; Dah-Weih Duan

This paper compares the major classes of chip-to-chip and on-chips interconnections used in high-performance computers and communication systems and reviews their electrical characteristics. Measurement results of dielectric loss are shown and the attenuation is compared for printed-circuit-board, glass-ceramic, thin-film, and on-chip wiring. Simulation results are shown with representative driver and receiver circuits, guidelines are given for when losses are significant, and predictions are made for the sustainable bandwidths on useful wiring lengths.


electrical performance of electronic packaging | 1997

The importance of inductance and inductive coupling for on-chip wiring

Alina Deutsch; Howard H. Smith; George A. Katopis; Wiren D. Becker; Paul W. Coteus; Gerard V. Kopcsay; Barry J. Rubin; R.P. Dunne; T. Gallo; Daniel R. Knebel; B.L. Krauter; L.M. Terman; G.A. Sai-Halasz; P.J. Reslte

The importance of inductance and inductive coupling for accurate delay and crosstalk prediction in on-chip interconnections is investigated experimentally for the top three layers in a five-layer wiring structure and guidelines are formulated. In-plane and between-plane crosstalk and delay dependence on driver and receiver circuit device sizes and line lengths and width are analyzed with representative CMOS circuits. Simplified constant-parameter, distributed coupled-line RLC-circuit representation that approximates the waveforms predicted with frequency-dependent line parameters is shown to be feasible.


IEEE Transactions on Advanced Packaging | 2007

Prediction of Losses Caused by Roughness of Metallization in Printed-Circuit Boards

Alina Deutsch; Roger S. Krabbenhoft; Gerard V. Kopcsay; Bruce J. Chamberlin

In this paper, the effect of metal roughness on the total loss, the extracted tandelta, and signal integrity of typical interconnections found in printed-circuit boards is extracted from measurements on three different materials. The differing characteristics of the roughened metal cross sections are highlighted, and a simplified, practical, 2-D, causal, broadband modeling methodology is shown

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