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Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly - you will find some...

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Introducti on to Digital Design
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Page 1: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Introduction to

Digital Design

Page 2: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Text Book• Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly

• www.ddpp.com - you will find some solutions at this site.

• www.xilinx.com - Xlinix Web site

Page 3: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Digital Design• Digital Design is also know as “Logical Design”.

• The purpose is to build Digital Systems.

Page 4: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Analog versus Digital

• Analog systems process time-varying signals that can take on any value across a continuous range of voltages (in electrical/electronics systems).

• Digital systems process time-varying signals that can take on only one of two discrete values of voltages (in electrical/electronics systems).– Discrete values are called 1 and 0 (ON and OFF,

HIGH and LOW, TRUE and FALSE, etc.)

Page 5: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Digital Revolution

• Digital systems started back in 1940s.

• Digital systems cover all areas of life:– still pictures– digital video– digital audio– telephone– traffic lights– Animation

Page 6: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Benefits of Digital over Analog

• Reproducibility

• Not effected by noise means quality

• Ease of design

• Data protection

• Programmable

• Speed

• Economy

Page 7: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Digital Devices

• Gates

• Flip-Flops

• PLDs

• FPGAs

Page 8: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Gates

• The most basic digital devices are called gates.

• Gates got their name from their function of allowing or blocking (gating) the flow of digital information.

• A gate has one or more inputs and produces an output depending on the input(s).

• A gate is called a combinational circuit.

• Three most important gates are: AND, OR, NOT

Page 9: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Digital Logic• Binary system -- 0 & 1, LOW & HIGH,

negated and asserted.

• Basic building blocks -- AND, OR, NOT

Page 10: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

AND, OR, NOT Gates

Page 11: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .
Page 12: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Electronic Aspects of Digital Design

• How we represent digital information in electronic devices?

• By discrete voltages.

Page 13: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

What is the Basic Digital Element

in Electronics?

a Switch

Page 14: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Using Switch to represent digital information

Page 15: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Digital Abstraction

• It is difficult to make ideal switches means a switch is completely ON or completely OFF.

• So, we impose some rules that allow analog behavior to be ignored in most cases, so circuits can be modeled as if they really did process 0s and 1s, known as digital abstraction.

• Digital abstraction allows us to associate a noise margin with each logic values (0 and 1).

Page 16: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Real Switches to represent digital information

5v 5v

1k

10k

5v 4.5v

Output Output

Page 17: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Logic levels• Undefined region

is inherent– digital, not analog– amplification,

weak => strong• Switching threshold varies with voltage, temp, process,

phase of the moon– need “noise margin”

• The more you push the technology, the more “analog” it becomes.

• Logic voltage levels decreasing with new processors.– 5 -> 3.3 -> 2.5 -> 1.8 V

Page 18: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

MOS Transistors

NMOS

PMOS

Voltage-controlled resistance

Page 19: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

CMOS Inverter

Page 20: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Switch model

Page 21: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Alternate transistor symbols

Page 22: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

CMOS Gate Characteristics • No DC current flow into MOS gate terminal

– However gate has capacitance ==> current required for switching (CV2f power)• No current in output structure,

except during switching– Both transistors partially on– Power consumption related

to frequency– Slow input-signal rise times

==> more power• Symmetric output structure

==> equally strong drive in LOW and HIGH states

Page 23: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Flip-flops

• A device that stores either a 0 or 1.

• Stored value can be changed only at certain times determined by a clock input.

• New value depend on the current state and it’s control inputs

• A digital circuit that contains filp-flops is called a sequential circuit

Page 24: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Flip-flops

S-R latch symbols D flip-flop

J-K flip-flops

Page 25: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Integrated Circuits

• A collection of one or more gates fabricated on a single silicon chip is called an integrated circuit (IC).

• ICs were classified by size:– SSI - small scale integration - 1~20 gates– MSI - medium scale integration - 20~200 gates– LSI - large scale integration - 200~200,000 gates– VLSI - very large scale integration - over 1M

transistors

• Pentium-III - 40 million transistors

Page 26: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

DIP Packages

Page 27: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Gates in ICs

Page 28: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Programmable Logic Devices

• PLDs allow the function to be programmed into them after they are manufactured.

• Complex PLDs (CPLD) are a collection of PLDs on the same chip.

• Another programmable logic chip is FPGA - field-programmable gate arrays.

Page 29: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

CPLDs and FPGAs

FPGACPLD

Page 30: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Application Specific Ics (ASICs)

• Chips designed for a particular application are called semicustom ICs or application-specific ICs (ASICs).

• ASICs generally reduce the total component and manufacturing cost of a product by reducing chip count, physical size, and power consumption, and they often provide higher performance.

• But costly if not produced in bulk.

Page 31: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Printed-Circuit Boards

• An IC is normally mounted on a printed-circuit board (PCB) that connects it to other ICs in a system.

• Individual wire connection or traces can be as narrow as 4 mils with 4 mils spacing (one-thousandth of an inch)

• Now a days, most of the components use surface mount technology.

• They are normally layered.

Page 32: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Software Aspects of Digital Design• Today software tools are an essential part of digital

design.• Software tools improve productivity, correctness and

quality of designs• Software tools are:

– Schematic entry– HDL (Hardware Description Language) Editors – Simulators - to verify the behaviour of the design– Synthesis tools - circuit design– Timing analyzers and verifiers

Page 33: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Digital Design Levels

• the lowest level of design is device physics and IC manufacturing processes.

• design at the transistor level

• level of functional building blocks

• level of logic design using HDLs

• computer design and overall system design.

Page 34: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Different Design Levels

Consider a simple design example:

Build a multiplexer with two data inputs A and B, a control input S, and an output Z.

Switch model for the example multiplexer

Page 35: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Designing at the transistor level

• Transistor-levelcircuit diagrams

• Gate symbols (for simple elements)

Page 36: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

• Logic designusing Truth tables

Page 37: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

• Logic designusing boolean algebra

Equations: Z = S A+ S B

• Logic diagrams

Page 38: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

• Prepackaged building blocks, e.g. multiplexer

Page 39: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

• Various hardware description languages– ABEL

– VHDL

• We’ll start with gates and work our way up

Page 40: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

• Name of the program module

• the type of PLD

• pin numbers

• ABEL statement to achieve the multiplexer

• Standard library

• and a set of definitions

• Inputs and outputs

• functions behaviour

Page 41: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Structural VHDL program for the multiplexer

Page 42: Introduction to Digital Design. Text Book Digital Design by - John F. Wakerly  - you will find some solutions at this site. .

Summery

• Design to minimize cost.

• Rule of thumb is to minimize the number of ICs.

• Though PLDs costs more but uses less PCB area.

• Unless mass production avoid ASIC design.

• Design to solve real life problems.


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