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COMP541 Transistors and all that… a brief overview
Montek Singh Sep 14, 2016
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Transistors as switches
At an abstract level, transistors are merely switches 3-ported voltage-controlled switch n-type: conduct when control input is 1 p-type: conduct when control input is 0
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Silicon as a semiconductor
Transistors are built from silicon Pure Si itself does not conduct well Impurities are added to make it conducting As provides free electrons n-type B provides free “holes” p-type Figure 1.26 Silicon lattice and dopant atoms
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MOS Transistors MOS = Metal-oxide semiconductor 3 terminals
gate: the voltage here controls whether current flows source and drain: are what the current flows between structurally, source and drain are the same Figure 1.29 nMOS and pMOS transistors
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nMOS Transistors Gate = 0 Gate = 1 OFF = disconnect ON= connect
no current flows between source & drain Gate = 1 ON= connect current can flow between source & drain positive gate voltage draws in electrons to form a channel Figure 1.30 nMOS transistor operation
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pMOS Transistors Just the opposite Summary: Gate = 1 disconnect
Gate = 0 connect Summary:
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CMOS Topologies There is actually more to it than connect/disconnect
nMOS: pass good 0’s, but bad 1’s so connect source to GND pMOS: pass good 1’s, but bad 0’s so connect source to VDD Typically use them in complementary fashion: nMOS network at bottom pulls output value down to 0 pMOS network at top pulls output value up to 1 only one of the two networks must conduct at a time! or smoke may be produced if neither network conducts output will be floating
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Inverter A P1 N1 Y ON OFF 1
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NAND A B P1 P2 N1 N2 Y ON OFF 1
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3-input NOR Gate?
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2-input AND Gate?
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Transmission Gates Transmission gate is a switch:
nMOS pass 1’s poorly pMOS pass 0’s poorly Transmission gate is a better switch passes both 0 and 1 well When EN = 1, the switch is ON: A is connected to B When EN = 0, the switch is OFF: A is not connected to B IMPORTANT: Transmission gates are not drivers will NOT remove input noise to produce clean(er) output simply connect A and B together (current could even flow backward!) use very carefully!
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Logic using Transmission Gates
Typically combine two (or more) transmission gates Together form an actual logic gate whose output is always driven 0 or 1 Exactly one transmission gate drives the output; all remaining transmission gates float their outputs Example: XOR when C = 0, TG0 conducts F = A when C = 1, TG1 conducts F = A’ therefore: F = A xor C TG0 TG1
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Tristate buffer and tristate inverter
When enabled: sends input to output When disabled: output is floating (‘Z’) Implementation: Tristate buffer using only a pass gate If on: output input If off: output is floating Tristate inverter Top half and bottom half are not fully complementary Either both conduct: output NOT(input) will act as a driver! Or both off: output is floating
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Power and Energy Consumption
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Power Consumption Power = Energy consumed per unit time
Dynamic power consumption Static power consumption
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Dynamic Power Consumption
Energy consumed due to switching activity: All wires and transistor gates have capacitance Energy required to charge a capacitance, C, to VDD is CVDD2 Circuit running at frequency f: transistors switch (from 1 to 0 or vice versa) at that frequency Capacitor is charged f/2 times per second (discharging from 1 to 0 is free) Pdynamic = ½CVDD2f
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Static Power Consumption
Power consumed when no gates are switching Caused by the quiescent supply current, IDD (also called the leakage current) Pstatic = IDDVDD
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Power Consumption Example
Estimate the power consumption of a wireless handheld computer VDD = 1.2 V C = 20 nF f = 1 GHz IDD = 20 mA P = ½CVDD2f + IDDVDD = ½(20 nF)(1.2 V)2(1 GHz) + (20 mA)(1.2 V) = 14.4 W mW = W
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