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Book ChapterDOI

An Efficient Algorithm for Reducing Wire Length in Three-Layer Channel Routing

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TLDR
An efficient polynomial time graph-based heuristic algorithm that minimizes the total wire length for most of the benchmark channel instances available in the reserved three-layer no-dogleg Manhattan channel routing model is developed.
Abstract
In VLSI physical design automation, channel routing problem (CRP) for minimizing total wire length to interconnect the nets of different circuit blocks is one of the most challenging requirements to enhance the performance of a chip to be designed. Interconnection with minimum wire length occupies minimum area and has minimum overall capacitance and resistance present in a circuit. Reducing the total wire length for interconnection minimizes the cost of physical wire segments required, signal propagation delays, electrical hazards, power consumption, the chip environment temperature, the heat of the neighboring interconnects or transistors, and the thermal conductivity of the surrounding materials. Thus, it meets the needs of green computing and has a direct impact on daily life and environment. Since the problem of computing minimum wire length routing solutions for three-layer no-dogleg general channel instance is NP-hard, it is interesting to develop heuristic algorithms that compute reduced total wire length routing solutions within practical time limit. In this paper, we have developed an efficient polynomial time graph-based heuristic algorithm that minimizes the total wire length for most of the benchmark channel instances available in the reserved three-layer no-dogleg Manhattan channel routing model. The results we compute are highly encouraging in terms of efficiency and performance of our algorithm in comparison to other existing algorithms for computing the same.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Difficult Channel Instance Generator for VLSI Physical Design Automation using Genetic Algorithm

TL;DR: The proposed method works efficiently for complex problems arise in VLSI physical design automation and it gives acceptable results in terms of different channel instances.
References
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Invited Talk: Introduction to Electromigration-Aware Physical Design

Jens Lienig
TL;DR: In this paper, an introduction to the electromigration problem and its relationship to current density is given, and various physical design constraints that affect electromigration are presented, together with components of an electromigration-aware physical design flow.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A graph based algorithm to minimize total wire length in VLSI channel routing

TL;DR: This paper develops an efficient heuristic algorithm for appreciably reducing the total wire length in the reserved two-layer no-dogleg Manhattan channel routing model and results obtained are greatly encouraging.

The Efficient Hybrid Approach to Channel Routing Problem

TL;DR: The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm maintains the convergence properties of sequential genetic algorithm while it achieves linear speedup as the nets of the channel routing and the number of computing processors increase.

On the Complexity of the Channel Routing Problem in the Dogleg-free Multilayer Manhattan Model

TL;DR: The second author has shown that in case lV=lH=k>1, it is NP-complete to decide whether a channel routing problem can be solved with width (d/k) in the dogleg-free 2k-layer Manhattan model and the remaining case is pointed out.
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