Key Takeaways
- SRAM occupies nearly 40% of chip area in mobile System-on-Chip development, influencing yield and performance.
- Traditional Monte Carlo simulations are computationally intensive and lead to iterative design cycles that delay production.
- Additive Learning technology, integrated into Siemens EDA's Solido tools, significantly reduces the number of simulations needed for verification while maintaining SPICE-level accuracy.
- MediaTek's implementation of Additive Learning achieved speedups of 20-67x in verification processes compared to traditional methods.
- The collaboration between Siemens EDA and MediaTek exemplifies the potential of AI in semiconductor workflows, promising greater efficiencies in future nodes.

In the competitive vertical of mobile System-on-Chip development, SRAM plays a pivotal role, occupying nearly 40% of chip area and directly impacting yield and performance. The presentation “Accelerating SRAM Design Cycles With Additive AI Technology,” co-delivered by Mohamed Atoua of Siemens EDA and Deepesh Gujjar of MediaTek at TSMC’s Open Innovation Platform, addresses the verification challenges in advanced nodes like TSMC’s N2P process. As mobile SoCs push for lower minimum operating voltages (Vmin) to enhance power efficiency, device variations intensify, necessitating rigorous statistical yield qualification: 6-sigma for bitcells and 4-4.5 sigma for periphery logic. Traditional brute-force Monte Carlo simulations, while accurate, are computationally intensive and time-consuming, often leading to iterative design cycles that delay production.
The core motivation stems from these iterative workflows. Failures in verification prompt design fixes, PDK revisions, simulator updates, or additional PVT corners, each requiring full re-runs. MediaTek, leveraging Siemens EDA’s Solido tools, sought a more efficient approach. Enter Additive Learning technology, an AI-driven methodology integrated into the Solido Design Environment. This innovation retains and reuses AI models and simulation data from prior jobs, drastically reducing simulations in subsequent iterations without compromising SPICE-level accuracy.
Solido’s suite includes the High-Sigma Verifier and PVTMC Verifier, both enhanced by Additive Learning. HSV enables verifiable high-sigma analysis, achieving 6-sigma yield verification in thousands of simulations—up to 1,000-1,000,000,000x faster than brute force. PVTMC provides full-coverage verification across PVT corners plus Monte Carlo, 2-10x faster than traditional methods, excels at outlier detection. In traditional flows, five iterations might consume 50 hours; with Solido’s iterative workflow, this drops to 5 hours, saving days or weeks in chip schedules.
The Additive Learning Engine automatically detects reuse opportunities, drawing from a lightweight, optimized Reusable AI Datastore. This datastore supports multi-user access, parallel read/write, and small disk footprints, allowing deletion of full DE results while preserving speedup potential. It stores AI models and past data for fast lookups, ensuring seamless integration into workflows like design sizing changes or PDK updates.
MediaTek’s results demonstrate tangible benefits. In Case 1, verifying 5-sigma bitcell write margin on N2P (clock-to-bitcell flip), the base run required 2,500 simulations, yielding a mean of 120.1 ps and 5-sigma of 131.2 ps. Post-design fix (Vt changes in write driver and column mux), Additive Learning completed verification in just 29 simulations, a 67x speedup, with mean 121.8 ps and 5-sigma 132.5 ps. Case 2 involved 4-sigma instance-level verification (clock-to-data out), where the original 300 simulations gave mean 167.4 ps and 4-sigma 173.1 ps. After Vt updates in control/IO blocks, Additive Learning used 15 simulations (20x faster) matching full re-run results (mean 198 ps, 4-sigma 204.6-204.8 ps).
This technology’s broader adoption underscores its production-grade maturity. NVIDIA, for instance, employs Additive Learning in AI-powered standard cell verification, achieving speedups on incremental runs amid rising design complexity beyond 5nm. Siemens EDA highlights up to 100x boosts to existing AI techniques for verification efficiency. As nodes shrink, such tools are essential for maintaining accuracy while compressing cycles, enabling faster time-to-market for high-yield SoCs.
Bottom line: Additive Learning transforms SRAM design from a bottleneck into an agile process: fast, accurate, and automatic. By reusing models across iterations PDK revisions, sizing tweaks, or tool updates, it exemplifies AI’s role in EDA, as evidenced by MediaTek’s 20-67x gains. This collaboration between Siemens EDA and MediaTek not only accelerates mobile innovation but sets a benchmark for AI integration in semiconductor workflows, promising even greater efficiencies in future nodes.
Also Read:
Transforming Functional Verification through Intelligence
Why chip design needs industrial-grade EDA AI
Hierarchically defining bump and pin regions overcomes 3D IC complexity
CDC Verification for Safety-Critical Designs – What You Need to Know
Share this post via:


Comments
There are no comments yet.
You must register or log in to view/post comments.