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Silicon Integration: Panacea or Problem?

In a paper written for Convergence, Eugene R. McFarland, vice president worldwide automotive segment for TI's Semiconductor Group, and James D. Richardson of Delco Electronics, explore the potential advantages and potential problems of creating single-chip silicon solutions for automotive applications.
Intuitively, a single-chip silicon solution integrating digital, linear, memory and power functions appeals to the system design engineer because of potential size reduction, fewer connections for increased reliability, simplicity and cost reduction. Previously, device prices, availability, time-to-market, software, risk and other considerations favored the more traditional multi-IC approach to system design.

PRISM, an integrated circuit design methodology and products, was created by Texas Instruments and Delco to quickly and cost-effectively integrate the necessary technology to produce a very competitive single-chip silicon solution for many current automotive applications.

Development time -- one of the major constraints to a single-chip dedicated solution -- has been reduced to several months rather than years using a reusable design methodology.

Two applications -- a GM body computer and a PC board in a GM cluster -- compare the results using single-chip systems ICs and more traditional multi-chip implementation.


The authors, Eugene R. McFarland, vice president worldwide automotive segment for TI's Semiconductor Group, and James D. Richardson of Delco Electronics, will serve on the Convergence Enablers and Inhibitors panel at 10 a.m. Oct. 22 at Convergence.

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