Abstract
A new optimization design of an active guard ring has been proposed to improve latch-up immunity of CMOS integrated circuits and been successfully verified in a 0.18- $\mu \text{m}$ 1.8-/3.3-V CMOS technology. Codesigned with the on-chip electrostatic discharge (ESD) protection devices (gate-ground nMOS and gate-VDD pMOS) equipped at the input–output (I/O) pad, the overshooting/undershooting trigger current during latch-up test can be conducted away through the turned-on channels of the ESD protection MOSFET’s to the power rails ( ${V}_{\textsf {DD}}$ or ${V}_{\textsf {SS}}$ ). Therefore, the trigger current injecting from the I/O devices (that directly connected to the I/O pad) through the substrate to initiate the latch-up occurrence at the internal circuit blocks can be significantly reduced. Thus, the latch-up immunity of the whole chip can be effectively improved under the same placement distance between the I/O cells and the internal circuit blocks. The new proposed design is a cost-efficient solution to improve latch-up immunity and also to mention good ESD robustness of the I/O cells.
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