Unit-2 Logic Gates Functions
Unit-2 Logic Gates Functions
Unit 2
Overview
• Introduction to Digital Logic Gates
• Truth table
• Symbol
• Universal Gates (NAND/NOR)
• XOR and XNOR Gates
• Logic Chips
• Logic Functions
• Logical Equivalence
• Standard Forms (SOP/POS)
Chapter-2
M. Morris Mano, Charles R. Kime and Tom Martin, Logic and Computer Design
Fundamentals, Global (5th) Edition, Pearson Education Limited, 2016. ISBN:
9781292096124
Introduction to Digital Logic Basics
Hardware consists of a few simple building blocks
These are called logic gates
AND, OR, NOT, …
NAND, NOR, XOR, …
Logic gates are built using transistors
NOT gate can be implemented by a single transistor
AND gate requires 3 transistors
Transistors are the fundamental devices
Pentium consists of 3 million transistors
Compaq Alpha consists of 9 million transistors
Now we can build chips with more than 100 million transistors
Basic Concepts
Simple gates
AND
OR
NOT
Functionality can be
expressed by a truth table
A truth table lists output for
each possible input
combination
Precedence
NOT > AND > OR
F=AB+AB
= (A (B)) + ((A) B)
Basic Concepts (cont.)
Additional useful gates
NAND
NOR
XOR
NAND = AND + NOT
NOR = OR + NOT
XOR implements exclusive-
OR function
NAND and NOR gates
require only 2 transistors
AND and OR need 3
transistors!
Basic Concepts (cont.)
Proving NAND gate is universal
Basic Concepts (cont.)
Proving NOR gate is universal
XOR and XNOR Gates
A X A X
The XOR Gate B B
=1
Floyd, Digital Fundamentals, 10th ed © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved
A X A X
The XOR Gate B B
=1
Example waveforms:
A
B
X
Notice that the XOR gate will produce a HIGH only when exactly one
input is HIGH.
Floyd, Digital Fundamentals, 10th ed © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved
A X A X
The XNOR Gate B B =1
Floyd, Digital Fundamentals, 10th ed © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved
A X A X
The XNOR Gate B B =1
Example waveforms:
A
B
X
Notice that the XNOR gate will produce a HIGH when both inputs are
the same. This makes it useful for comparison functions.
Floyd, Digital Fundamentals, 10th ed © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved
Logic Chips
Logic Chips (cont.)
Integration levels
SSI (small scale integration)
Introduced in late 1960s
1-10 gates (previous examples)
MSI (medium scale integration)
Introduced in late 1960s
10-100 gates
LSI (large scale integration)
Introduced in early 1970s
100-10,000 gates
VLSI (very large scale integration)
Introduced in late 1970s
More than 10,000 gates
Logic Functions
Number of functions
With N logical variables, we can define
N
2 combination of inputs
A function relates outputs to inputs
Some of them are useful
AND, NAND, NOR, XOR, …
Some are not useful:
Output is always 1
Output is always 0
Logic Functions
Logical functions can be expressed in several ways:
Truth table
Logical expressions
Graphical form
Example:
Majority function
Output is one whenever majority of inputs is 1
We use 3-input majority function
Logic Functions (cont.)
3-input majority function Logical expression form
A B C F F=AB+BC+AC
0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 1 0 0
0 1 1 1
1 0 0 0
1 0 1 1
1 1 0 1
1 1 1 1
Logical Equivalence
All three circuits implement F = A B function
Logical Equivalence
Derivation of logical expression from a circuit
Trace from the input to output
Write down intermediate logical expressions along the path
Logical Equivalence (cont.)
Proving logical equivalence: Truth table method
A B F1 = A B F3 = (A + B) (A + B) (A + B)
0 0 0 0
0 1 0 0
1 0 0 0
1 1 1 1
Standard Forms for
Boolean Expressions
Sum-of-Products (SOP)
Derived from the Truth table for a function by considering
those rows for which F = 1.
The logical sum (OR) of product (AND) terms.
Realized using an AND-OR circuit.
Product-of-Sums (POS)
Derived from the Truth table for a function by considering
those rows for which F = 0.
The logical product (AND) of sum (OR) terms.
Realized using an OR-AND circuit.
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21
22
Minterms
Sum-of-Products
Any function F can be represented by a sum of minterms,
where each minterm is ANDed with the corresponding
value of the output for F.
F = (mi . fi)
where mi is a minterm
Denotes the logical
sum operation and fi is the corresponding functional output
Only the minterms for which fi = 1 appear in the
shorthand notation
expression for function F.
F = (mi) = m(i)
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Sum-of-Products
Sum of minterms are a.k.a. Canonical Sum-of-Products
Synthesis process
Determine the Canonical Sum-of-Products
Use Boolean Algebra (and K-maps) to find an optimal,
functionally equivalent, expression.
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2
28
Maxterms
Product-of-Sums
Any function F can be represented by a product of
Maxterms, where each Maxterm is ANDed with the
complement of the corresponding value of the output for F.
F = (Mi . f 'i)
where Mi is a Maxterm