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

Vlsi Design Notes

This document summarizes the key topics covered in Lecture 7 of the EE466 VLSI design course, including CMOS gate design, pass transistors, latches and flip-flops, standard cell layouts, and stick diagrams. Specifically, it discusses how to design 4-input CMOS NAND and NOR gates, the use of complementary CMOS logic, series and parallel transistor behavior, compound gates, pass transistors and transmission gates, signal strength considerations, and tristate buffers.

Uploaded by

books babu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
223 views

Vlsi Design Notes

This document summarizes the key topics covered in Lecture 7 of the EE466 VLSI design course, including CMOS gate design, pass transistors, latches and flip-flops, standard cell layouts, and stick diagrams. Specifically, it discusses how to design 4-input CMOS NAND and NOR gates, the use of complementary CMOS logic, series and parallel transistor behavior, compound gates, pass transistors and transmission gates, signal strength considerations, and tristate buffers.

Uploaded by

books babu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 47

EE466: VLSI

Design

Lecture 7:
Circuits & Layout
Outline
 CMOS Gate Design
 Pass Transistors
 CMOS Latches & Flip-Flops
 Standard Cell Layouts
 Stick Diagrams

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 2


CMOS Gate Design
 Activity:
– Sketch a 4-input CMOS NAND gate

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 3


CMOS Gate Design
 Activity:
– Sketch a 4-input CMOS NOR gate

A
B
C
D
Y

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 4


Complementary CMOS
 Complementary CMOS logic gates
– nMOS pull-down network pMOS

– pMOS pull-up network pull-up


network
inputs
– a.k.a. static CMOS output

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

Pull-down ON 0 X (crowbar)

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 5


Series and Parallel

a a a a
nMOS: 1 = ON g1
a
0 0 1 1


g2
pMOS: 0 = ON b
0
b
1
b
0
b
1
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
0

1
1

0
1

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 6


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 7


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 8


Example: O3AI
 Y  A B C D

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 9


Example: O3AI
 Y  A B C D

A
B
C D
Y
D
A B C

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 10


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 11


Pass Transistors
 Transistors can be used as switches

s d

s d

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 12


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 13


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 14


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 15


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 16


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 17


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 18
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 19


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 20


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 21


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 22


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 23


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 24


Transmission Gate Mux
 Nonrestoring mux uses two transmission gates

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 25


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

D0
S Y
D1

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 26


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 27


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 28


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 29


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 30


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 31


D Latch Operation
Q Q
D Q D Q

CLK = 1 CLK = 0

CLK

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 32


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 33


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 34


D Flip-flop Operation
QM Q
D

CLK = 0

QM
D Q

CLK = 1

CLK

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 35


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
Flop

Flop

Q1 Q2
D
Q2

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 36


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 37


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 38


Example: Inverter

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 39


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 40


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 41


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 42


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 43


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 44


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 45


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 46


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

1: Circuits & Layout CMOS VLSI Design Slide 47

You might also like