As suggested below, Electric has support for FastHenry. That could be handy. 
Expect the usual hassles getting and compiling it for Linux. My experience is 
that it pretty much works out of the box if you are familiar with doing such 
things. You can also find windows binaries through google. 

Tom Riley 
Kaben Wireless Silicon 
----- Original Message -----

From: "emmet fealy" <[email protected]> 
To: "Ole Myren Rohne" <[email protected]> 
Cc: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, 27 November, 2012 9:59:58 AM 
Subject: Re: Integrated on-chip Transformer 

Since it going to be difficult to model the transformer in electric do you know 
of any other open source program I could use to model to the transformer in and 
then import the model into electric? 


On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 8:42 AM, Ole Myren Rohne < [email protected] > wrote: 


This must be possible to do in Electric but certainly nothing as streamlined as 
in Cadence. Search up this list for "Asitic tool" and "pure layer", extract 
actual inductance/coupling with FastHenry, then iterate on the geometry. 

Good luck, 
Ole 


On 2012-11-20, at 17:54 , emmet fealy < [email protected] > wrote: 

> Could you help me with a college project I'm working on involving the design 
> of an on-chip transformer. I have found nothing online on how to do this in 
> electric or is it similar as doing it in cadence as I have found an 
> application note on that. 
> 
> Thank You, 
> Emmet 


> _______________________________________________ 
> Discuss-gnu-electric mailing list 
> [email protected] 
> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnu-electric 





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