VLSI Design Project 2023/2024 - Documentation
User's Guide & Techninal Note
Overview
As documentation for your sports altimeter chip, you will need to produce
two documents intended for different audiences. Sports enthusiasts will need a
User's Guide document to help them understand the operation of your
sports altimeter while engineers will need a
Techninal Note document to help them to build
the sports altimeter based on your sports altimeter chip.
The User's Guide & Techninal Note (supported by the demonstration)
account for 5% of the marks for ELEC6231.
The deadline for the submission of the User's Guide & Techninal Note is 4.15 p.m. on Tuesday 7th May 2024.
User's Guide
The content and format of the user's guide will largely be
determined by individual teams based on their research but there are
a few key points below that you should take into account:
Techninal Note
- You should aim this document at the engineers (possibly including
future project students) who will take your chip design and build it into
a complete sports altimeter. Unlike the sports enthusiasts, the engineers will
have an interest in the internal operation of the device but they
will not be interested in the tools and processes that you used to
create your design.
- While the sports enthusiasts will not read the technical note, the engineers
will be able to read the user's guide. For this reason you should avoid
too much duplication between the documents. It is a good idea to refer
readers of the technical note to the other document where you feel they
would benefit from further detail on a particular topic.
- The technical note should include an architecture diagram for
your design along with a description of its principal components.
- The technical note must include details of any third-party
intellectual property included in the design (hardware and software)
with appropriate references to source material. If no third party
intellectual property has been included in the design, the technical
note should explicitly state this.
- Where design for test (DFT) is included in your design, the
technical note should provide information about this. If no DFT
has been included in the design, the technical
note should explicitly state this.
- The technical note should include information relating to the
pinout of the chip including a bonding diagram. The bonding diagram
should be at a large enough scale to permit it to be used by the engineer
who undertakes the bonding of your chip (more than one diagram may be
needed to support this).
- The technical note should include information relating to
the ciruit that will be needed to support your chip.
- The Technical Note document should not exeed 4 sides of A4.