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DSD LogicFamilies

TTL (Transistor-Transistor Logic) is a logic family of integrated circuits that uses transistors to perform logic functions. There are several TTL subfamilies with different characteristics. Standard TTL gates were constructed with varying resistor values to achieve lower power dissipation or higher speeds. Later subfamilies like Schottky TTL and low-power Schottky TTL further optimized these tradeoffs between power and speed. TTL gates can have different output configurations like totem-pole, open-collector, or three-state outputs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views

DSD LogicFamilies

TTL (Transistor-Transistor Logic) is a logic family of integrated circuits that uses transistors to perform logic functions. There are several TTL subfamilies with different characteristics. Standard TTL gates were constructed with varying resistor values to achieve lower power dissipation or higher speeds. Later subfamilies like Schottky TTL and low-power Schottky TTL further optimized these tradeoffs between power and speed. TTL gates can have different output configurations like totem-pole, open-collector, or three-state outputs.

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ibiiuouj
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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TTL Logic Family

Introduction — Logic IC
 Logic Family : A collection of different IC’s that have similar
circuit characteristics
 A circuit configuration or approach used to produce a type of
digital integrated circuit.
 Consequence: different logic functions, when fabricated in the
form of an IC with the same approach, or in other words
belonging to the same logic family, will have identical electrical
characteristics.
 the set of digital ICs belonging to the same logic family are
electrically compatible with each other
Common Characteristics of the Same
Logic Family

 Supply voltage range, speed of response, power dissipation,


input and output logic levels, current sourcing and sinking
capability, fan-out, noise margin, etc.
 Consequence: choosing digital ICs from the same logic
family guarantees that these ICs are compatible with
respect to each other and that the system as a whole
performs the intended logic function.

3
Integration Levels

• Gate/transistor ratio is roughly 1/10


– SSI < 12 gates/chip
– MSI < 100 gates/chip
– LSI …1K gates/chip
– VLSI …10K gates/chip
– ULSI …100K gates/chip
– GSI …1Meg gates/chip

4
Moore’s Law

 In 1965, Gordon Moore predicted that the number of


transistors that can be integrated on a die would double
every 18 to 14 months
 i.e., grow exponentially with time
 Considered a visionary – million transistor/chip barrier
was crossed in the 1980’s
 2300 transistors, 1 MHz clock (Intel 4004/4040) - 1971
 42 Million transistors, 2 GHz clock (Intel P4) - 2001
 140 Million transistors, (HP PA-8500)
IC digital logic families
 RTL (Resistor-transistor logic)
 DTL (Diode-transistor logic)
 TTL (Transistor -transistor logic)
 ECL (Emitter-coupled logic)
 MOS (Metal-oxide semiconductor)
 CMOS (Complementary Metal-oxide semiconductor)
Fan-In
 Number of input signals to a gate
 Not an electrical property
 Function of the manufacturing process

NAND gate with a


Fan-in of 8
Fan-Out
 A measure of the ability of the output of one gate to drive the
input(s) of subsequent gates
 Usually specified as standard loads within a single family
 e.g., an input to an inverter in the same family
 The maximum number of logic inputs (of the same logic
family) that an output can drive reliably is called the fan-
out.
Logic Level and Voltage Range
 Typical acceptable voltage ranges for positive logic 1 and logic 0 are
shown below
 A logic gate with an input at a voltage level within the
‘indeterminate’ range will produce an unpredictable output level.

5.0V
Logic 1

2.5V
Indeterminate
0.8V
Logic 0
0V
TTL
Noise Margin
Noise margin:The unwanted signals are referred to as noise
 It is the limit of a noise voltage which may be present without impairing the
proper operation of the circuit.
 Manufacturers specify voltage limits to represent the logical 0 or 1.
 These limits are not the same at the input and output sides.
 For example, a particular Gate A may output a voltage of 4.8V when it is
supposed to output a HIGH but, at its input side, it can take a voltage of 3V
as HIGH.
 In this way, if any noise should corrupt the signal, there is some margin for
error.
 Noise margin is the maximum noise added to an input signal of a digital circuit
that does not cause an undesirable change in the circuit output
Speed: Rise & Fall Times
 Rise Time
 Time from 10% to 90% of signal, Low to High
 Fall Time
 Time from 90% to 10% of signal, High to Low

rise time fall time

10% 90% 90% 10%


 The average transition-delay time for the signal to propagate from
input to output when the binary signal changes in value
 It is the time delay between the specified voltage points
on the input and output waveforms.
 Propagation delays are separately defined for LOW-to-
HIGH and HIGH-to-LOW transitions at the output. In
addition, we also define enable and disable time delays
that occur during transition between the high-impedance
state and defined logic LOW or HIGH states.

12
TPD,HL TPD,LH

TPD,HL – input-to-output propagation delay from HI to LO output


TPD,LH – input-to-output propagation delay from LO to HI output

13
 The power dissipation parameter for a logic family is
specified in terms of power consumption per gate and is
the product of supply voltage VCC and supply current
ICC
 The power needed by the gate, Expressed in mW
Power Dissipation
 Static
 I2R losses due to passive components, no input signal
 Dynamic
 I2R losses due to charging and discharging capacitances through
resistances, due to input signal
Power dissipation
I CCH + I CCL
I CC (avg ) =
2
PD (avg ) = I CC (avg ) × VCC
Feature of BJT
 BJT
 npn or pnp
 Si or Ge
 Si is used mainly
 npn is most popular
Typical npn Transistor Parameters

Region VBE (V) VCE (V) Current


Relation
Cutoff < 0.6 Open IB=IC=0
circuit
Active 0.6-0.7 > 0.8 IC =hFEIB

Saturation 0.7-0.8 0.2 IB ≥IC/hFE


Transistor-Transistor Logic (TTL)
 The original basic TTL gate was a slight improvement over the
DTL gate.
 There are several TTL subfamilies or series of the TTL technology.
 Has a number start with 74 and follows with a suffix that
identifies the series type, e.g 7404, 74S86, 74ALS161.
 There are many versions or families of TTL

 Standard TTL.

 High Speed TTL

 Low Power TTL.

 Schhottky TTL.
 As such all the families of TTL have three configuration for outputs.

 Totem - Pole output.

 Open Collector Output.

 Tristate Output.
 TTL is slight improvement over the DTL.
 The standard TTL gate was constructed with different resistor
values to produce gates with lower dissipation or higher speed.
 The propagation delay of a saturated logic family depends on
largely two factors: Storage Time and RC time constants.
 Reducing the ST decreases the PD.
 Reducing resistor values in the circuit reduces the RC time
constants and decreases PD.
 The trade off is a higher power dissipation because lower
resistances draw more current from the power supply.
 Speed of gate is inversely proportional to PD.
 In the low power TTL gate the resistor values are higher than in
the standard gate to reduce the Power dissipation, but PD is
increased.
 In the high-speed TTL gate, resistor values are lowered to reduce
the PD, but the power dissipation is increased.
 The Schottky TTL removes the storage time of transistor by
preventing them from going into saturation, which increases the
speed without increasing the power dissipation .
 The low-power Schottky TTL scarifies some speed for reduced
power dissipation.
 It is about equal to standard TTL in PD but has only one-fifth
the power dissipation.
 It has the best speed-power product.
Open-collector TTL Gate
 Modified circuit of DTL gate.
 Multiple emitters in transistor Q1 are connected to the
inputs.
 The voltage levels for the circuit are 0.2 V for the low
level and from 2.4 to 5 V for the high level.
 The basic circuit is a NAND gate.
Wired-AND of Two Open-Collector
TTL Gate with Totem-Pole Output
Schottky TTL Gate
Three-state TTL Gate
Transistor-Transistor Logic Families
 Transistor-Transistor Logic Families:
 74L Low power
 74H High speed
 74S Schottky
 74LS Low power Schottky
 74AS Advanced Schottky
 74ALS Advance Low power Schottky
TTL Subfamilies

31
Comparison of Logic Families

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