The document discusses different logic families used in digital circuits. It describes the main characteristics of logic families including speed, fan-in, fan-out, noise immunity, and power dissipation. The key logic families covered are TTL, CMOS, ECL, and their characteristics such as speed, power consumption, and noise immunity. CMOS is highlighted as the most widely used family due to its high speed and low power consumption.
The document discusses different logic families used in digital circuits. It describes the main characteristics of logic families including speed, fan-in, fan-out, noise immunity, and power dissipation. The key logic families covered are TTL, CMOS, ECL, and their characteristics such as speed, power consumption, and noise immunity. CMOS is highlighted as the most widely used family due to its high speed and low power consumption.
The document discusses different logic families used in digital circuits. It describes the main characteristics of logic families including speed, fan-in, fan-out, noise immunity, and power dissipation. The key logic families covered are TTL, CMOS, ECL, and their characteristics such as speed, power consumption, and noise immunity. CMOS is highlighted as the most widely used family due to its high speed and low power consumption.
The document discusses different logic families used in digital circuits. It describes the main characteristics of logic families including speed, fan-in, fan-out, noise immunity, and power dissipation. The key logic families covered are TTL, CMOS, ECL, and their characteristics such as speed, power consumption, and noise immunity. CMOS is highlighted as the most widely used family due to its high speed and low power consumption.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 18
Logic Families
Basic Characteristics of Logic Families
• The main characteristics of Logic families
include: – Speed – Fan-in – Fan-out – Noise Immunity – Power Dissipation Contt.. • Speed: Speed of a logic circuit is determined by the time between the application of input and change in the output of the circuit. • Fan-in: It determines the number of inputs the logic gate can handle. • Fan-out: Determines the number of circuits that a gate can drive. • Noise Immunity: Maximum noise that a circuit can withstand without affecting the output. • Power: When a circuit switches from one state to the other, power dissipates. Types • TTL – transistor-transistor logic based on bipolar transistors. • CMOS – complementary metal-oxide semiconductor logic based on metal-oxide- semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs). • ECL – emitter coupled logic based on bipolar transistors. General Characteristics of Basic Logic Families • CMOS consumes very little power, has excellent noise immunity, and is used with a wide range of voltages. • TTL can drive more current and uses more power than CMOS. • ECL is fast, with poor noise immunity and high power consumption. Complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) – most widely used family for large-scale devices – combines high speed with low power consumption – usually operates from a single supply of 5 – 15 V – excellent noise immunity of about 30% of supply voltage – can be connected to a large number of gates (about 50) – many forms – some with tPD down to 1 ns – power consumption depends on speed (perhaps 1 mW Transistor-transistor logic (TTL)
– based on bipolar transistors
– one of the most widely used families for small- and medium-scale devices – rarely used for VLSI – typically operated from 5V supply – typical noise immunity about 1 – 1.6 V – many forms, some optimised for speed, power, etc. – high speed versions comparable to CMOS (~ 1.5 ns) – low-power versions down to about 1 mW/gate Emitter-coupled logic (ECL) – based on bipolar transistors, but removes problems of storage time by preventing the transistors from saturating – very fast operation - propagation delays of 1ns or less – high power consumption, perhaps 60 mW/gate – low noise immunity of about 0.2-0.25 V – used in some high speed specialist applications, but now largely replaced by high speed CMOS A Comparison of Logic Families A CMOS inverter CMOS gates Noise immunity – noise is present in all real systems – this adds random fluctuations to voltages representing logic levels – to cope with noise, the voltage ranges defining the logic levels are more tightly constrained at the output of a gate than at the input – thus small amounts of noise will not affect the circuit – the maximum noise voltage that can be tolerated by a circuit is termed its noise immunity, VNI Key Points • Physical gates are not ideal components • Logic gates are manufactured in a range of logic families • The ability of a gate to ignore noise is its ‘noise immunity’ • Both MOSFETs and bipolar transistors are used in gates • All logic gates exhibit a propagation delay when responding to changes in their inputs • The most widely used logic families are CMOS and TTL • CMOS is available in a range of forms offering high speed or very low power consumption • TTL logic is also produced in many versions, each optimised for a particular characteristic Key points about TTL The most popular and most widely used IC family is TTL. A TTL circuit acts as a current sink in the low state. A TTL circuit acts as a current source in the high state The TTL series most suitable at high frequencies is FTTL. The fastest saturated logic family is TTL The logic family most suitable for SSI and MSI is TTL Key points about ECL • The fastest logic family is ECL • The logic family which gives complementary outputs is ECL • The logic family preferred in superfast computers is ECL • The logic family with both logic levels negative is ECL • The logic family which consumes maximum power is ECL Key points about MOS • The logic family which is simplest to fabricate is MOS • The logic family ideally suited for LSI/VLSI/ULSI applications is MOS • The slowest logic family is MOS Key points about CMOS • The ICs used in watches and calculators are of CMOS • The logic family which has the highest fan-out is CMOS. • The logic family which has highest noise margin is CMOS. • The logic family which consumes least power is CMOS. Key points about IIL • The newest of the logic families is the IIL • The logic family with highest packing density is