Date post: | 26-Jun-2015 |
Category: |
Technology |
Upload: | dharmesh-goyal |
View: | 378 times |
Download: | 0 times |
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Design and Implementation of VLSI Systems(EN1600)
Lecture 20: Combinational Circuit Design (2/3)
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Let’s get rid of pMOS
Reduced the capacitance and improved the delay Increased static power consumption
[see subsection 2.5.4]
Implementing a large resistive load in CMOS is not readily available
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
2. Pseudo-nMOS circuits
• Use a pull-up transistor that is always ON• Issues:
– Ratio or relative strength– Make pMOS about ¼ effective strength of pulldown network
[see subsection 2.5.4]
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Logical effort of pseudo-nMOS gates
• Design for unit current on output to compare with unit inverter.• pMOS fights nMOS• psuedo-nMOS is slower on the average than CMOS but it works
well for wide NOR gates
logical effort independent of number of inputs!
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Pseudo-nMOS power
• Pseudo-nMOS draws power whenever Y = 0– Called static power P = I•VDD
– A few mA / gate * 1M gates would be a problem– This is why nMOS went extinct!
• Use pseudo-nMOS sparingly for wide NORs• Turn off pMOS when not in use
A BY
C
en
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Ganged CMOS
• When A=B=0:• both pMOS turn on in parallel pulling the output high fast
• When both inputs are ‘1’:• both pMOS transistors turn off saving power over psuedo-nMOS
• When one is ‘1’ or one is ‘0’ then it is just like the pseudo-nMOS case
Traditional pseudo-nMOS
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
3. Cascode Voltage Switch Logic (CVSL)
• Seeks the performance of pseudo-nMOS without the static power consumption
• CVSL disadvantages:– Require input complement
– NAND gate structures can be tall and slow
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
4. Pass Transistor Logic
B
B
A
F = AB
0
Problem:
• ‘1’ is not passed perfectly
• cannot the output to the input of another gate
Advantage: • just uses two transistors
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Complementary Pass Transistor Logic (CPTL)
• Complementary data inputs and outputs are available• Very suitable for XOR realization (compare to traditional CMOS)• Interconnect overhead to route the signal and its complement
A
B
A
B
B B B B
A
B
A
B
F=AB
F=AB
F=A+B
F=A+B
B B
A
A
A
A
F=A
F=A
OR/NOR EXOR/NEXORAND/NAND
F
F
Pass-Transistor
Network
Pass-TransistorNetwork
AABB
AABB
Inverse
(a)
(b)
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Possible solution: interface to a CMOS inverter
VDD
In
Outx
0.5m/0.25m0.5m/0.25m
1.5m/0.25m
0 0.5 1 1.5 20.0
1.0
2.0
3.0
Time [ns]
Volta
ge [V
]
xOut
In
Threshold voltage loss causes static power consumption
M 2
M 1
M n
M r
OutA
B
VDD
VDDLevel Restorer
X
A better design: full swing; reduces static power
(AKA Lean Integration with Pass Transistors - LEAP)
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Pass Transistor Logic with transmission gates
• In pass-transistor circuits, inputs are also applied to the source/drain terminals.
• Circuits are built using transmission gates.
Problem: • Non-restoring logic. • Traditional CMOS “rejuvenates” signals
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Restoring Pass Transistor Logic
AM2
M1
B
S
S
S F
VDD
S. Reda EN160 SP’08
Circuit Families
Static CMOSRatioed CircuitsCascode Voltage Switch LogicPass-transistor Circuits Dynamic Circuits