Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byShonda Spencer Modified over 9 years ago
1
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Digital Integrated Circuits A Design Perspective Designing Sequential Logic Circuits Jan M. Rabaey Anantha Chandrakasan Borivoje Nikolic November 2002
2
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Sequential Logic 2 storage mechanisms positive feedback charge-based
3
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Naming Conventions In our text: a latch is level sensitive a register is edge-triggered There are many different naming conventions For instance, many books call edge- triggered elements flip-flops This leads to confusion however
4
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Latch versus Register Latch stores data when clock is low D Clk Q D Q Register stores data when clock rises Clk D D QQ
5
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Latches
6
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Latch-Based Design N latch is transparent when = 1 P latch is transparent when = 0 N Latch Logic P Latch
7
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Timing Definitions t CLK t D t c 2 q t hold t su t Q DATA STABLE DATA STABLE Register CLK DQ
8
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Characterizing Timing Register Latch
9
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Maximum Clock Frequency Also: t cdreg + t cdlogic > t hold t cd : contamination delay = minimum delay t clk-Q + t p,comb + t setup = T
10
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Positive Feedback: Bi-Stability V o 1 V i 2 5 V o 1 V i 2 5 V o 1 V i1 A C B V o2 V i1 =V o2 V o1 V i2 V i2 =V o1
11
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Meta-Stability Gain should be larger than 1 in the transition region
12
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Writing into a Static Latch D CLK D Converting into a MUX Forcing the state (can implement as NMOS-only) Use the clock as a decoupling signal, that distinguishes between the transparent and opaque states
13
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Mux-Based Latches Negative latch (transparent when CLK= 0) Positive latch (transparent when CLK= 1) CLK 1 0D Q 0 1D Q
14
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Mux-Based Latch
15
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Mux-Based Latch NMOS onlyNon-overlapping clocks
16
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Master-Slave (Edge-Triggered) Register Two opposite latches trigger on edge Also called master-slave latch pair
17
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Master-Slave Register Multiplexer-based latch pair
18
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Reduced Clock Load Master-Slave Register
19
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Avoiding Clock Overlap CLK A B (a) Schematic diagram (b) Overlapping clock pairs X D Q CLK
20
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Overpowering the Feedback Loop ─ Cross-Coupled Pairs NOR-based set-reset
21
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Storage Mechanisms D CLK Q Dynamic (charge-based) Static
22
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Other Latches/Registers: C 2 MOS “Keepers” can be added to make circuit pseudo-static
23
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Insensitive to Clock-Overlap M 1 DQ M 4 M 2 00 V DD X M 5 M 8 M 6 V (a) (0-0) overlap M 3 M 1 DQ M 2 1 V DD X M 7 1 M 5 M 6 V (b) (1-1) overlap
24
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Pipelining Reference Pipelined
25
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Other Latches/Registers: TSPC Negative latch (transparent when CLK= 0) Positive latch (transparent when CLK= 1)
26
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits TSPC Register
27
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Including Logic in TSPC AND latch Example: logic inside the latch
28
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Pulse-Triggered Latches An Alternative Approach Master-Slave Latches D Clk QD Q Data D Clk Q Data Pulse-Triggered Latch L1L2L Ways to design an edge-triggered sequential cell:
29
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Pulsed Latches
30
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Latch-Based Pipeline
31
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Non-Bistable Sequential Circuits─ Schmitt Trigger VTC with hysteresis Restores signal slopes
32
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Noise Suppression using Schmitt Trigger
33
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Schmitt Trigger Simulated VTC 2.5 V X (V) V M2 V M1 V in (V) Voltage-transfer characteristics with hysteresis.The effect of varying the ratio of the PMOS deviceM 4. The width isk* 0.5 m. m 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.51.01.52.02.5 V x (V) k = 2 k = 3 k = 4 k = 1 V in (V) 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.51.01.52.02.5
34
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits CMOS Schmitt Trigger (2)
35
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Monostable
36
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Astable Multivibrators (Oscillators) 012N-1 Ring Oscillator simulated response of 5-stage oscillator
37
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Relaxation Oscillator
38
© Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Sequential Circuits Voltage Controller Oscillator (VCO)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.