Abstract

This paper presents two improvements to, and a warning about a previously unrecognized issue with, statistical modeling, characterization, and simulation. We focus on mismatch, which is key for analog IC design, but the topics addressed are generic. For relative variation (i.e., % difference), we show that conventional measures have significant issues when the variation is large. We present two new measures of % difference between y2 and y1 and show that 100∙ln(y2/y1) is the only measure that is physically correct for mismatch. We review existing, but not widely known, robust alternatives to the textbook approach to estimate standard deviation, show the limitations of these, and propose a new method that is intermediate between, and overcomes limitations of, the textbook and robust approaches. We then show how the accuracy of mismatch simulation, critical for analog IC design, is affected by “spurious correlation” between statistical samples; we are not aware that the importance of this has been recognized previously.

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