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Lect1 Ccts and Layout

- Complementary CMOS logic gates use both nMOS and pMOS transistors, with the nMOS transistors forming a pull-down network and the pMOS transistors forming a pull-up network. - Static CMOS gates output either a 0 or 1 and consume no static power. - Compound gates can implement any boolean function using both AND and OR gates within the pull-down network. - Transmission gates pass both 0s and 1s strongly by using an nMOS and pMOS transistor in parallel.

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Jonitha Kruthika
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
55 views

Lect1 Ccts and Layout

- Complementary CMOS logic gates use both nMOS and pMOS transistors, with the nMOS transistors forming a pull-down network and the pMOS transistors forming a pull-up network. - Static CMOS gates output either a 0 or 1 and consume no static power. - Compound gates can implement any boolean function using both AND and OR gates within the pull-down network. - Transmission gates pass both 0s and 1s strongly by using an nMOS and pMOS transistor in parallel.

Uploaded by

Jonitha Kruthika
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Complementary CMOS

 Complementary CMOS logic gates


– nMOS pull-down network
pMOS
– pMOS pull-up network pull-up
network

– a.k.a. static CMOS inputs


output

nMOS
pull-down
network
Pull-up OFF Pull-up ON
Pull-down Z (float) 1
OFF
Pull-down ON 0 X (crowbar)

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 1


Series and Parallel
 nMOS: 1 = ON a a a a a
0 0 1 1
g1

 pMOS: 0 = ON
g2
0 1 0 1
b b b b b
(a) OFF OFF OFF ON
 Series: both must be ON a a a a
a

 Parallel: either can be ON g1


g2
0 0 1 1

0 1 0 1
b b b b b
(b) ON OFF OFF OFF

a a a a a

g1 g2 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1
b b b b b

(c) OFF ON ON ON

a a a a a

g1 g2 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1
b b b b b

(d) ON ON ON OFF

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 2


Conduction Complement
 Complementary CMOS gates always produce 0 or 1
 Ex: NAND gate
– Series nMOS: Y=0 when both inputs are 1
– Thus Y=1 when either input is 0
– Requires parallel pMOS Y
A
B
 Rule of Conduction Complements
– Pull-up network is complement of pull-down
– Parallel -> series, series -> parallel

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 3


Compound Gates
 Compound gates can do any inverting function
 Ex: Y  AB  C D (AND-AND-OR-INVERT, AOI22)
A C A C
B D B D
(a) (b)

C D
A B C D
A B
(c)
(d)

C D
A
A B
B
Y Y
C
A C
D
B D
(f)

(e)

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 4


Example: O3AI
 Y   A  B  C  D

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 5


Example: O3AI
 Y   A  B  C  D

A
B
C D
Y
D
A B C

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 6


Signal Strength
 Strength of signal
– How close it approximates ideal voltage source
 VDD and GND rails are strongest 1 and 0
 nMOS pass strong 0
– But degraded or weak 1
 pMOS pass strong 1
– But degraded or weak 0
 Thus nMOS are best for pull-down network

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 7


Pass Transistors
 Transistors can be used as switches

s d

s d

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 8


Pass Transistors
 Transistors can be used as switches

g g=0 Input g = 1 Output


s d 0 strong 0
s d
g=1 g=1
s d 1 degraded 1

g g=0 Input Output


g=0
s d 0 degraded 0
s d
g=1
g=0
s d strong 1

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 9


Transmission Gates
 Pass transistors produce degraded outputs
 Transmission gates pass both 0 and 1 well

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 10


Transmission Gates
 Pass transistors produce degraded outputs
 Transmission gates pass both 0 and 1 well
Input Output
g = 0, gb = 1 g = 1, gb = 0
g
a b 0 strong 0
a b g = 1, gb = 0 g = 1, gb = 0
a b 1 strong 1
gb

g g g
a b a b a b
gb gb gb

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 11


Tristates
 Tristate buffer produces Z when not enabled

EN
EN A Y
0 0 A Y
0 1
1 0
EN
1 1
A Y

EN

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 12


Tristates
 Tristate buffer produces Z when not enabled

EN
EN A Y
0 0 Z A Y
0 1 Z
1 0 0
EN
1 1 1
A Y

EN

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 13


Nonrestoring Tristate
 Transmission gate acts as tristate buffer
– Only two transistors
– But nonrestoring
• Noise on A is passed on to Y

EN

A Y

EN
1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 14
Tristate Inverter
 Tristate inverter produces restored output
– Violates conduction complement rule
– Because we want a Z output

A
EN
Y
EN

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 15


Tristate Inverter
 Tristate inverter produces restored output
– Violates conduction complement rule
– Because we want a Z output

A A
A
EN
Y Y Y
EN

EN = 0 EN = 1
Y = 'Z' Y=A

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 16


Multiplexers
 2:1 multiplexer chooses between two inputs

S
S D1 D0 Y
0 X 0 D0 0
0 X 1 Y
D1 1
1 0 X
1 1 X

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 17


Multiplexers
 2:1 multiplexer chooses between two inputs

S
S D1 D0 Y
0 X 0 0 D0 0
0 X 1 1 Y
D1 1
1 0 X 0
1 1 X 1

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 18


Gate-Level Mux Design
 Y  SD1  SD0 (too many transistors)
 How many transistors are needed?

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 19


Gate-Level Mux Design
 Y  SD1  SD0 (too many transistors)
 How many transistors are needed? 20

D1
S Y
D0

D1 4 2
S 4 2 Y
D0 4 2
2

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 20


Transmission Gate Mux
 Nonrestoring mux uses two transmission gates

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 21


Transmission Gate Mux
 Nonrestoring mux uses two transmission gates
– Only 4 transistors
S

D0
S Y
D1

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 22


Inverting Mux
 Inverting multiplexer
– Use compound AOI22
– Or pair of tristate inverters
– Essentially the same thing
 Noninverting multiplexer adds an inverter

D0 S D0 D1 S
S D1 S S
Y Y D0 0
S S S S Y
D1 1

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 23


4:1 Multiplexer
 4:1 mux chooses one of 4 inputs using two selects

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 24


4:1 Multiplexer
 4:1 mux chooses one of 4 inputs using two selects
– Two levels of 2:1 muxes
– Or four tristates S1S0 S1S0 S1S0 S1S0

D0
S0 S1

D0 0
D1
D1 1
0
Y Y
1
D2 0 D2
D3 1

D3

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 25


D Latch
 When CLK = 1, latch is transparent
– D flows through to Q like a buffer
 When CLK = 0, the latch is opaque
– Q holds its old value independent of D
 a.k.a. transparent latch or level-sensitive latch

CLK CLK

D
Latch

D Q
Q

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 26


D Latch Design
 Multiplexer chooses D or old Q

CLK
CLK
D Q Q
1
Q D Q
0
CLK CLK

CLK

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 27


D Latch Operation
Q Q
D Q D Q

CLK = 1 CLK = 0

CLK

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 28


D Flip-flop
 When CLK rises, D is copied to Q
 At all other times, Q holds its value
 a.k.a. positive edge-triggered flip-flop, master-slave
flip-flop

CLK
CLK
D
Flop

D Q
Q

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 29


D Flip-flop Design
 Built from master and slave D latches

CLK CLK
CLK QM
D Q
CLK CLK CLK CLK
CLK
Latch

Latch

QM
D Q
CLK CLK

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 30


D Flip-flop Operation
QM Q
D

CLK = 0

QM
D Q

CLK = 1

CLK

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 31


Race Condition
 Back-to-back flops can malfunction from clock skew
– Second flip-flop fires late
– Sees first flip-flop change and captures its result
– Called hold-time failure or race condition

CLK1
CLK1 CLK2 CLK2

Q1 Q1
Flop

Flop

D Q2
Q2

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 32


Nonoverlapping Clocks
 Nonoverlapping clocks can prevent races
– As long as nonoverlap exceeds clock skew
 We will use them in this class for safe design
– Industry manages skew more carefully instead
2 1
QM
D Q

2 2 1 1

2 1

1

2

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 33


Gate Layout
 Layout can be very time consuming
– Design gates to fit together nicely
– Build a library of standard cells
 Standard cell design methodology
– VDD and GND should abut (standard height)
– Adjacent gates should satisfy design rules
– nMOS at bottom and pMOS at top
– All gates include well and substrate contacts

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 34


Example: Inverter

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 35


Example: NAND3
 Horizontal N-diffusion and p-diffusion strips
 Vertical polysilicon gates
 Metal1 VDD rail at top
 Metal1 GND rail at bottom
 32 l by 40 l

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 36


Stick Diagrams
 Stick diagrams help plan layout quickly
– Need not be to scale
– Draw with color pencils or dry-erase markers

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 37


Wiring Tracks
 A wiring track is the space required for a wire
– 4 l width, 4 l spacing from neighbor = 8 l pitch
 Transistors also consume one wiring track

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 38


Well spacing
 Wells must surround transistors by 6 l
– Implies 12 l between opposite transistor flavors
– Leaves room for one wire track

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 39


Area Estimation
 Estimate area by counting wiring tracks
– Multiply by 8 to express in l

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 40


Example: O3AI
 Sketch a stick diagram for O3AI and estimate area
– Y   A  B  C  D

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 41


Example: O3AI
 Sketch a stick diagram for O3AI and estimate area
– Y   A  B  C  D

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 42


Example: O3AI
 Sketch a stick diagram for O3AI and estimate area
– Y   A  B  C  D

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 43

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