Zelek S. Herman, Robert F. Kirchner, et al.
Inorganic Chemistry
In this paper, a skin-effect modeling approach is presented that is suitable for all frequency regimes of interest and therefore is most appropriate for transient interconnect analysis. Yet, the new formulation lends itself to a model that can be abstracted for use in conjunction with surface integral and finite difference-based electromagnetic tools for interconnect modeling. While a volume filament technique is not computationally feasible at high frequencies, where a fine discretization is necessary, the formulation that is presented avoids this difficulty by carefully casting the behavior of a conductor into the form of a global surface impedance, thus requiring fewer unknowns. Several examples illustrating the ability of the proposed model to accurately capture proximity and skin-effect behaviors will be shown. Interconnect resistance and inductance per-unit-length results are given and compared with those obtained using different models.
Zelek S. Herman, Robert F. Kirchner, et al.
Inorganic Chemistry
Xikun Hu, Wenlin Liu, et al.
IEEE J-STARS
Frank Stem
C R C Critical Reviews in Solid State Sciences
S. Cohen, J.C. Liu, et al.
MRS Spring Meeting 1999