Thank you friends for your answer
you have cleared this issue with me, specially the last answer from timof
hence, i will connect the gates of the transistors in the amplifier stage with much contacts as possible and switch it to metal one when possible.
for the current mirror of the biasing circuit i will use the poly since I dont care for the response or the switching performance
I would like to also to share with you guys this new and nice book about the layout design,
Fundamentals of Layout Design for Electronic Circuits
This book provides the fundamental knowledge from technological constraints to reliability requirements necessary for a sound grounding from which to make practical use of the complete and indispensable application-oriented information regarding the physical design of electronic circuits.link.springer.com
Thank you once again
Best Regards
Thank you Tim for your nice explanation,Well, for regular poly, you can put maximum one contact at each side, i.e. one or two contacts per one transistor instance.
The effective gate resistance (of one instance) for one-sided connected poly is 1/3*(W/L)*rsh, while for two-sided connected poly it's 1/12*(W/L)*rsh.
Here W is gate width (poly line length), L is gate length (poly line width), and rsh is poly sheet resistivity.
The factors 1/3 and 1/12 come from the distributed properties of the RC ladder of the gate network (and from a mathematically rigorous solution yielding hyperbolic functions).
If you want to reduce gate resistance, you do not put more contacts - instead, you split one finger into many, to get narrower gate width, connect all polys to M1 and up, and use metals to distribute the gate signal towards the poly contacts - to get low resistance, uniform delay distribution (over device area), etc.
thank you freebird for your reply,Max distance to tap will be the final limiter for large devices.
Thank you freebird for your answer, however my question was opposite to your answer, I am inquiring about the rule for maximum number if fingers I can go, what is the criteria where I should say it is enough to have 4 fingers as an example or having more,You often see a max-active-to-tap rule of 20u or some such.
That means the center of the centermost finger can't be more
than 20um from the inner edge of active*pplus (Nch) or
active*nplus (PMOS) tap / guardring. Given that there will
be some standoff of GR to S/D regions in the W-direction,
this means >= (40u-2*{tap-active} is the maximum DRC
driven width of a finger. Of course this specific rule will vary
w/ process (epi vs bulk vs SOI wafers, doping, how aggressive
the Ldrawn and LDDs / halo vs HCE...). Might be 5, might be
20u, I've even seen SOI with no body ties -allowed- (dumb
asses).
Thank you freebird,I can't recall ever running into a max finger count limit that
was groundrule-driven.There may be other "soft limits" like
ugly aspect ratios (like, do you want 100 min-W fingers?)
at the high end, and the low "nf=" end is probably driven by
circuit performance or reliability concerns (current density,
source debiasing, gate resistance).
If you let the W go large then nf= will push on your tap-distance
and once nf*{S/D fingerL + gateL gets up around 20u you're back
to that.
"however, if routing a biasing voltage like the connection between the MOS gates, here there is ideally no current"
It's wrong to think that there is no current in the gate network.
There is no DC current, but there is transient and AC current.
If you have too large gate resistance, it can bring in a lot of problems - slow response, slow switching, dynamic gate opening due to drain dV/dt effect (leading to shoot through current), etc.
Gate currents can be huge, several amps, in large and fast power FETs.
Construction of gate network, gate resistance, current flow uniformity, gate switching uniformity, etc. are very important effects, that should not be ignored.
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