0% found this document useful (0 votes)
93 views60 pages

Digital Integrated Circuits: A Design Perspective

ISU EE 465 Chapter 7 Slides

Uploaded by

steves0118
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
93 views60 pages

Digital Integrated Circuits: A Design Perspective

ISU EE 465 Chapter 7 Slides

Uploaded by

steves0118
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 60

Digital Integrated

Circuits
A Design Perspective

Designing Sequential
Logic Circuits

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Sequential Logic
Inputs Outputs
COMBINATIONAL
LOGIC

Current State
Next state
Registers
Q D

CLK

2 storage mechanisms
• positive feedback
• charge-based

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


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

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Latch versus Register
 Latch  Register
stores data when stores data when
clock is low clock rises

D Q D Q

Clk Clk

Clk Clk

D D

Q Q

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Latches

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Latch-Based Design
• N latch is transparent • P latch is transparent
when f = 0 when f = 1
f

N P
Logic
Latch Latch

Logic

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Timing Definitions

CLK
t Register
tsu thold D Q

D DATA CLK
STABLE t
tc - q

Q DATA
STABLE t

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Characterizing Timing

tD - Q

D Q D Q

Clk Clk

tC - Q tC - Q

Register Latch

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Maximum Clock Frequency
f

FF’s

LOGIC Also:
tcdreg + tcdlogic > thold
tp,comb
tcd: contamination delay =
minimum delay
tclk-Q + tp,comb + tsetup = T

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Positive Feedback: Bi-Stability

V o1 Vi2
1
o 1
o
V V
52
Vi

V i1 V o2

A
V i 2 = V o1
1
Vo
52 C
Vi
B
V i 1 = V o2

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Meta-Stability

Gain should be larger than 1 in the transition region

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Writing into a Static Latch
Use the clock as a decoupling signal,
that distinguishes between the transparent and opaque states
CLK
CLK

Q D D
CLK
CLK
D

CLK
Forcing the state
Converting into a MUX (can implement as NMOS-only)

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Mux-Based Latches
Negative latch Positive latch
(transparent when CLK= 0) (transparent when CLK= 1)

Q 0 Q
1

D 0 D 1

CLK CLK

Q  Clk  Q  Clk  In Q  Clk  Q  Clk  In

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Mux-Based Latch

CLK

CLK

CLK

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Mux-Based Latch

CLK
QM
CLK

QM

CLK

CLK

NMOS only Non-overlapping clocks

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Master-Slave (Edge-Triggered)
Register

Two opposite latches trigger on edge


Also called master-slave latch pair

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Master-Slave Register

Multiplexer-based latch pair

I2 T2 I3 I5 T4 I6 Q

QM
D I1 T1 I4 T3

CLK

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Clk-Q Delay

2.5
CLK

1.5
D
tc - q(lh) tc - q(hl)
Volts Q
0.5

2 0.5
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5
time, nsec

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup Time

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Reduced Clock Load
Master-Slave Register

CLK CLK

D T1 I1 T2 I3 Q

I2 I4
CLK CLK

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Avoiding Clock Overlap
CLK X CLK
Q
A
D
B

CLK CLK
(a) Schematic diagram

CLK

CLK
(b) Overlapping clock pairs

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Overpowering the Feedback Loop ─
Cross-Coupled Pairs
NOR-based set-reset

S R Q Q
S
Q
S Q 0 0 Q Q
1 0 1 0
R Q
0 1 0 1
Q
R 1 1 0 0

Forbidden State

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Cross-Coupled NAND
Added clock
Cross-coupled NANDs VDD

S M2 M4
Q
Q
Q

Q CLK M6 M8 CLK
R M1 M3

S M5 M7 R

This is not used in datapaths any more,


but is a basic building memory cell

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Sizing Issues
2.0 3
Q S

1.5
2 W = 0.5 m m
Q (Volts)

W = 0.6 m m

Volts
1.0
W = 0.7 m m
1
0.5 W = 0.8 m m
W = 0.9 m m
W = 1m m
0.0 0
2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2
W/L 5 and 6 time (ns)
(a) (b)

Output voltage dependence Transient response


on transistor width

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Storage Mechanisms

Static Dynamic (charge-based)

CLK
CLK

D Q
Q

CLK
CLK
D

CLK

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Making a Dynamic Latch Pseudo-Static

CLK

D D

CLK

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
More Precise Setup Time

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Circuit before clock arrival (Setup-1 case)
CN

TG1
Inv2 Clk-Q Delay
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

CP
TClk-Q

TSetup-1 Time

Data Clock
TSetup-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Circuit before clock arrival (Setup-1 case)
CN

TG1
Inv2 Clk-Q Delay
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

CP
TClk-Q

TSetup-1 Time

Data Clock
TSetup-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Circuit before clock arrival (Setup-1 case)
CN

TG1
Inv2 Clk-Q Delay
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

CP
TClk-Q

TSetup-1 Time

Data Clock
TSetup-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Circuit before clock arrival (Setup-1 case)
CN

TG1
Inv2 Clk-Q Delay
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1
TClk-Q

CP

TSetup-1 Time

Data Clock
TSetup-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Circuit before clock arrival (Setup-1 case)
CN

TG1
Inv2 Clk-Q Delay
D1 SM QM TClk-Q
D

Inv1

CP

TSetup-1 Time

Data Clock
TSetup-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Hold-1 case
CN

TG1 Clk-Q Delay


Inv2
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

0
CP
TClk-Q

THold-1
Time

Clock Data
THold-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Hold-1 case
CN

TG1 Clk-Q Delay


Inv2
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

0
CP
TClk-Q

THold-1
Time

Clock Data
THold-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Hold-1 case
CN

TG1 Clk-Q Delay


Inv2
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

0
CP TClk-Q

THold-1
Time

Clock Data
THold-1

Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Hold-1 case
CN

TG1 Clk-Q Delay


Inv2
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1 TClk-Q

0
CP

THold-1
Time

Clock Data
THold-1
Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Setup/Hold Time Illustrations
Hold-1 case
CN

TG1 Clk-Q Delay


Inv2 TClk-Q
D1 SM QM
D

Inv1

0
CP

THold-1
Time

Clock Data
THold-1 
Time
t=0

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Other Latches/Registers: C2MOS
VDD VDD

M2 M6

CLK M4 CLK M8
X
D Q
CL1 CL2
CLK M3 CLK M7

M1 M5

Master Stage Slave Stage

“Keepers” can be added to make circuit pseudo-static

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Insensitive to Clock-Overlap
VDD VDD VDD VDD

M2 M6 M2 M6

0 M4 0 M8
X X
D Q D Q
1 M3 1 M7

M1 M5 M1 M5

(a) (0-0) overlap (b) (1-1) overlap

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Pipelining
REG

REG
a a

REG

REG

REG
REG
log Out CLK log Out
CLK

REG
REG

b CLK b CLK CLK CLK

CLK CLK

Reference Pipelined

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Other Latches/Registers: TSPC
VDD VDD VDD VDD

Out

In CLK CLK In CLK CLK

Out

Positive latch Negative latch


(transparent when CLK= 1) (transparent when CLK= 0)

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Including Logic in TSPC
VDD VDD VDD VDD

In1 In2
PUN
Q Q

In CLK CLK CLK CLK

PDN In1

In2

Example: logic inside the latch


AND latch

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
TSPC Register

VDD VDD VDD

CLK Q
M3 M6 M9
Y
Q
D CLK X CLK
M2 M5 M8

CLK
M1 M4 M7

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Pulse-Triggered Latches
An Alternative Approach
Ways to design an edge-triggered sequential cell:

Master-Slave Pulse-Triggered
Latches Latch
L1 L2 L
Data Data
D Q D Q D Q

Clk Clk Clk Clk


Clk

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Pulsed Latches
VDD VDD

M3 M6 VDD
CLK
Q
D CLKG CLKG MP CLKG
M2 M5
X

MN
M1 M4

(a) register (b) glitch generation

CLK

CLKG

(c) glitch clock

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Pulsed Latches
Hybrid Latch – Flip-flop (HLFF), AMD K-6 and K-7 :

CLK P1 P3
x Q

M6
M3

D P2 M5
M2

M4
M1 CLKD

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Hybrid Latch-FF Timing

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Latch-Based Pipeline

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Non-Bistable Sequential Circuits─
Schmitt Trigger
Vou t V OH
In Out

•VTC with hysteresis V OL

•Restores signal slopes

VM– VM+ Vi n

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Noise Suppression using Schmitt
Trigger

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
CMOS Schmitt Trigger
VDD

M2 M4

Vin X Vout

M1 M3

Moves switching threshold


of the first inverter

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Schmitt Trigger Simulated VTC

2.5 2.5

2.0 2.0

1.5 VM1 1.5

(V)
X1.0 VM2 (V)
x1.0
k=1
V V k=3
k=2
0.5 0.5
k=4

0.0 0.0
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5
Vin (V) Vin (V)
Voltage-transfer characteristics with hysteresis. The effect of varying the ratio of the
PMOS device M4. The width is k* 0.5m m.

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
CMOS Schmitt Trigger (2)
VDD

M4

M6
M3

In Out

M2
X M5
VDD

M1

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Multivibrator Circuits
R

S
Bistable Multivibrator
flip-flop, Schmitt Trigger

T
Monostable Multivibrator
one-shot

Astable Multivibrator
oscillator

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Transition-Triggered Monostable

In
DELAY
Out
td td

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Monostable Trigger (RC-based)
VDD

In R
A B Out

(a) Trigger circuit.


C

In

B VM
(b) Waveforms.

Out
t
t1 t2

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Astable Multivibrators (Oscillators)
0 1 2 N-1

Ring Oscillator

simulated response of 5-stage oscillator

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Relaxation Oscillator

Out1
Out2
I1 I2

R C

Int

T = 2 (log3) RC

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Voltage Controller Oscillator (VCO)

Schmitt Trigger
VD D VDD
restores signal slopes
M6 M4

M2
In
M1
Iref Iref
Vcontr M3
M5 Current starved inverter

6
tpH L (nsec)

propagation delay as a function


0.0
0.5 1.5 2.5 of control voltage
V co ntr (V)

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits
Differential Delay Element and VCO

V o2 V o1 v3
v1
in 1 in 2
v2
v
4

V ctrl

delay cell two stage VCO


3.0
V1 V2 V3 V4
2.5

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5

0.0

2 0.5
0.5 1.5 2.5 3.5
time (ns)

simulated waveforms of 2-stage VCO

© Digital Integrated Circuits2nd


Sequential Circuits

You might also like