Inverse Design in Distributed Circuits Using Single-Step Reinforcement Learning
Li, Jiayu, Mortazavi, Masood, Yan, Ning, Ma, Yihong, Zafarani, Reza
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
The goal of inverse design in distributed circuits is to generate near-optimal designs that meet a desirable transfer function specification. Existing design exploration methods use some combination of strategies involving artificial grids, differentiable evaluation procedures, and specific template topologies. However, real-world design practices often require non-differentiable evaluation procedures, varying topologies, and near-continuous placement spaces. In this paper, we propose DCIDA, a design exploration framework that learns a near-optimal design sampling policy for a target transfer function. DCIDA decides all design factors in a compound single-step action by sampling from a set of jointly-trained conditional distributions generated by the policy. Utilizing an injective interdependent ``map", DCIDA transforms raw sampled design ``actions" into uniquely equivalent physical representations, enabling the framework to learn the conditional dependencies among joint ``raw'' design decisions. Our experiments demonstrate DCIDA's Transformer-based policy network achieves significant reductions in design error compared to state-of-the-art approaches, with significantly better fit in cases involving more complex transfer functions.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Jun-11-2025
- Country:
- Asia (0.04)
- Europe (0.04)
- North America > United States
- California
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.14)
- Santa Clara County > San Jose (0.04)
- Indiana > St. Joseph County
- Notre Dame (0.04)
- Massachusetts > Middlesex County
- Cambridge (0.04)
- California
- Genre:
- Research Report > Promising Solution (0.34)
- Technology: