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As AI workloads push the limits of compute scale, power efficiency, and bandwidth density, traditional die-to-die interconnect approaches—such as SerDes‑based links and wide-parallel IO— are becoming bottlenecks because they cannot deliver the required bandwidth density or energy efficiency. To address these challenges, Synopsys introduced the 3DIO solution IP: a protocol free, digitally friendly die-to-die IO architecture, purpose-built for low-power and low-latency heterogeneous 3D integration.
The emergence of hybrid bonding further clarified this architectural direction. By enabling ultra-short vertical connections and by allowing ultra-fine interconnect pitches, hybrid bonding makes it possible to achieve significantly higher bandwidth density and lower power, while avoiding the complexity inherent in long reach analog signaling and clock recovery.
As these benefits became evident, the industry rapidly aligned with a similar model. UCIe 2.0 introduced a new system level manageability architecture, followed by UCIe 3D, which is explicitly optimized for fine pitch hybrid bonding across a broad bump pitch range. Its emphasis on vertical connectivity and digitally managed die-to-die links closely mirrors the architectural path already established by the Synopsys 3DIO IP.
Figure 1: Evolution of IO connectivity
Breaking the Bottleneck: 3DIO Redefines Die-to-Die Connectivity
Building on this architectural foundation, Synopsys 3DIO translates these principles into a practical, manufacturable die-to-die solution. From its inception, 3DIO was designed as a fully digital IO architecture, enabling seamless integration across stacked dies without the overhead of protocol layers, long reach analog signaling, or clock recovery circuitry.
As hybrid bonding moved to the forefront (Figure 1), 3DIO directly leveraged its strengths: ultra-tight vertical connections, exceptional bandwidth density, and substantial power savings to deliver simpler integration, improved reliability, and superior area efficiency compared to legacy serial IO approaches.
Critically, the original 3DIO PHY was built to support this model, streamlining timing closure and physical implementation across stacked dies, and establishing a scalable foundation for reliable 3D system design.
Industry Momentum: Synopsys 3DIO Sets the Pace
As the benefits of vertically optimized die-to-die connectivity became clear, the industry converged in a similar architectural direction. The industry’s shift toward UCIe 2.0 and UCIe 3D—both optimized for fine‑pitch hybrid bonding and digitally managed vertical links—reinforces the architectural direction pioneered by Synopsys 3DIO.
Building on this industry momentum, we expanded the 3DIO portfolio to meet the latest performance, flexibility, and integration challenges across AI, HPC, networking, and edge workloads.
Rapid innovation in AI, HPC, networking, and edge computing has pushed multi‑die connectivity requirements further than ever. In response, we significantly enhanced the 3DIO portfolio to meet modern performance, flexibility, and integration demands:
Our enhanced 3DIO PHY now supports up to ~4-6 Gb/s per link at < 0.05 pJ/bit, operating in SDR or DDR modes. Optimized for hybrid bonding and aligned with UCIe‑3D guidance, it provides exceptional vertical bandwidth density while maintaining very low energy.
To accommodate varied multi-die topologies, we introduced a cluster-based 3DIO PHY and a digital control layer that scales bandwidth and testability through composition and configuration:
- Scalable clusters: Modular architecture constructed from 16lane TX/RX clusters (with dedicated clocks) supporting configurations from a single cluster up to larger multi-cluster PHY instances.
- Configurable redundancy + repair: Embedded digital logic supports repair and configuration at the cluster level, enabling localized fault tolerance without redesign.
- Pre-/post-bond built-in self-test (BIST): Cluster level BIST capability supports manufacturing test coverage across bonding stages.
- System level scaling via digital controller/wrapper: A synthesizable integration layer exposes configuration and control through protocols such as the advanced peripheral bus (APB) and joint test action group (JTAG), enabling orchestration across multiple PHY instances and standard SoC integration.
Two Complementary Offerings: A Unified 3DIO Strategy
To support different integration philosophies and design requirements, the 3DIO portfolio includes two complementary options.
Figure 2: Synopsys 3DIO Platform
Bottom line: Whether you want ultimate flexibility (3DIO cell) or a fast path to closure at scale (3DIO PHY), both are architected for fine-pitch hybrid bonding and vertical bandwidth density.
As advanced packaging evolves toward hybrid bonded, fine pitch 3D architectures, design teams face increasing constraints in interconnect density, timing closure, and energy efficiency. Synopsys 3DIO provides an end-to-end, tool integrated flow for 3D systems, enabling efficient implementation, predictable timing closure, and flexible test and repair across the full multi-die lifecycle and is engineered specifically to address these challenges (Figure 3).
Figure 3: Accelerating Multi-Die Integration
Hybrid bonded systems require ultracompact IO structures that minimize routing congestion while enabling dense vertical connectivity. The 3DIO cell architecture is dimensioned for fine-pitch environments, supporting high bandwidth density without the overhead of long reach analog signaling.
Scalability is achieved through a cluster-based PHY architecture incorporating configurable redundancy, pre and post bond BIST, and repair mechanisms. This localized approach enables predictable yield scaling as inter-die link counts increase, making 3DIO well suited for large, densely interconnected 3D stacks.
The short vertical die-to-die channel eliminates the need for complex clock recovery circuits. With SDR/DDR source-synchronous lanes, FIFO elasticity, and clock delay monitoring, 3DIO maintains robust timing margins across process, voltage, and temperature variations.
As designs scale to thousands of vertical interconnects, maintaining signal integrity and timing margin becomes increasingly challenging. 3DIO’s source-synchronous operation, combined with built-in redundancy and BIST, directly mitigates these risks and improves bring up predictability in large-scale 3D systems.
Integrated CDM ESD, VDD/VSS bumps, and TSV‑aware bottom‑die constructs simplify power delivery and IR planning across stacked dies, while pre‑validated physical checks shorten die‑to‑package integration cycles.
As the 3D integration landscape evolves, system designers increasingly require more than isolated IP blocks or point tools. They need a cohesive, scalable ecosystem spanning architecture through signoff.
Synopsys addresses this need with 3DIO and 3DIO PHY IP, integrated with 3D extraction, analysis, and the Synopsys 3DIC Compiler, forming an end-to-end multi-die design solution.
In contrast to approaches that rely on standalone IP, disconnected tools, or service centric flows, Synopsys provides a configurable, production ready 3DIO portfolio coupled with a vendor supported design methodology that spans planning, implementation, verification, and signoff. This integrated approach enables predictable convergence for complex 3D systems.
Socionext’s recent 3DIC achievements provide strong validation of Synopsys 3DIO IP in production‑grade, heterogeneous multi‑die systems. In an accelerated program resulting in two successful 3DIC tape outs within seven months, Socionext used Synopsys 3DIO to:
Socionext’s experience highlights a broader trend: customers who adopt Synopsys 3DIO early in their partitioning and integration flow can reduce design iterations, improve predictability, and accelerate time‑to‑tapeout for advanced, AI-class multi‑die systems.
Building on these customer results, we continue to evolve 3DIO to support upcoming process nodes and packaging technologies.
As foundries transition from FinFET to Gate-All-Around (GAA) and explore complementary FET (CFET) era integration, we are ensuring that Synopsys 3DIO evolves alongside leading-edge nodes so you can migrate designs with minimal reengineering. Expect continued work in:
The enhanced Synopsys 3DIO IP is approaching general availability, with early customer engagements underway for programs targeting upcoming 2 nm‑era designs. Support continues for 5 nm and 3 nm, and features will be backported where they add value. If your project is approaching its next market window, this is a good time to begin planning discussions.
As multi‑die architectures move into mainstream production, die‑to‑die connectivity has become one of the most critical design decisions—and the enhanced Synopsys 3DIO IP is engineered to give teams a predictable, high‑performance foundation for their next 3D programs. If you are planning a 2 nm‑era design, exploring hybrid‑bonded stacking, or evaluating options for high‑bandwidth vertical links, now is the right time to engage with us to align lane counts, redundancy strategies, bump‑map configurations, and integration requirements.
Whether used as a standalone die‑to‑die IO solution or paired with the broader Synopsys multi‑die design ecosystem, Synopsys 3DIO delivers the robust connectivity backbone required for modern 3D systems.
Let’s begin the conversation—and build what’s next—with Synopsys 3DIO.
For more information visit: Synopsys 3DIO Solution IP
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