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Application-specific integrated circuit
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== Structured design == {{Main|Structured ASIC platform|Platform-based design}} ''Structured ASIC design'' (also referred to as "''platform ASIC design''") is a relatively new trend in the semiconductor industry, resulting in some variation in its definition. However, the basic premise of a structured ASIC is that both manufacturing cycle time and design cycle time are reduced compared to cell-based ASIC, by virtue of there being pre-defined metal layers (thus reducing manufacturing time) and pre-characterization of what is on the silicon (thus reducing design cycle time). Definition from Foundations of Embedded Systems states that:<ref>{{Cite book|title=Foundations of Embedded Systems|last1=Barkalov|first1=Alexander|last2=Titarenko|first2=Larysa|last3=Mazurkiewicz|first3=Małgorzata|date=2019|publisher=Springer International Publishing|isbn=9783030119607|series=Studies in Systems, Decision and Control|volume=195|location=Cham|language=en|doi=10.1007/978-3-030-11961-4|s2cid=86596100}}</ref> {{quote|In a "structured ASIC" design, the logic mask-layers of a device are predefined by the ASIC vendor (or in some cases by a third party). Design differentiation and customization is achieved by creating custom metal layers that create custom connections between predefined lower-layer logic elements. "Structured ASIC" technology is seen as bridging the gap between field-programmable gate arrays and "standard-cell" ASIC designs. Because only a small number of chip layers must be custom-produced, "structured ASIC" designs have much smaller non-recurring expenditures (NRE) than "standard-cell" or "full-custom" chips, which require that a full mask set be produced for every design.|sign=|source=Foundations of Embedded Systems}} This is effectively the same definition as a gate array. What distinguishes a structured ASIC from a gate array is that in a gate array, the predefined metal layers serve to make manufacturing turnaround faster. In a structured ASIC, the use of predefined metallization is primarily to reduce cost of the mask sets as well as making the design cycle time significantly shorter. For example, in a cell-based or gate-array design the user must often design power, clock, and test structures themselves. By contrast, these are predefined in most structured ASICs and therefore can save time and expense for the designer compared to gate-array based designs. Likewise, the design tools used for structured ASIC can be substantially lower cost and easier (faster) to use than cell-based tools, because they do not have to perform all the functions that cell-based tools do. In some cases, the structured ASIC vendor requires customized tools for their device (e.g., custom physical synthesis) be used, also allowing for the design to be brought into manufacturing more quickly.
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