Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Semiconductor Modeling
Operation and Modeling of the MOS Transistor by Yannis Tsividis, 2003. MOSFET Models for SPICE Simulation, Including BSIM3v3 and BSIM4 by William Liu, 2001. Modeling the Bipolar Transistor by Ian Getreu, 1979.
VLSI Design
CMOS VLSI Design: A Circuits and Systems Perspective by Neil Weste and David Harris, 2004. Digital Integrated Circuits by Jan M. Rabaey, Anantha Chandrakasan and Borivoje Nikolic, 2002.
Digital Integrated Circuits by Jan M. Rabaey, Anantha Chandrakasan and Borivoje Nikolic, 2002. Digital Systems Engineering, William J. Dally, John W. Poulton, 1998.
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Board-Level Design
The Circuit Designer's Companion by Tim Williams, 2004.
Presents a detailed, comparative treatment of analog integrated circuit analysis and design, combining bipolar, CMOS, and BiCMOS analog integrated-circuit design. This edition expands its coverage of a few important technologies and techniques, including increased emphasis on CMOS circuits; a new chapter on fully differential amplifiers and common-mode feedback; new material on feedback circuit analysis using return
differential amplifiers and common-mode feedback; new material on feedback circuit analysis using return ratio in addition to the two-port feedback analysis; and new coverage of two-stage MOS op-amp compensation, single-stage op amps, and nested Miller compensation. Includes a number of open-ended design problems, many of which make extensive use of SPICE. Of likely utility as a text for students and as a reference for practicing engineers.
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community I would have to rate this book a 5 out of 5. Im currently using it for an advanced course in analog design, switching from Razavis book. It is intuitive and clear. Except for the some of the typos in the device physics section, this book is excellent. Emad You can find a good deal of information about designing delta-sigma ADCs (including bandpass delta-sigma ADCs) along with switched-capacitor circuits in this book. -VivekRC A good book. -Jason_Class Supporting Material Solution guide (32 MB) (removed)
This text is for a senior or graduate level course called Analog Integrated Circuits or Design of Analog Integrated Circuits. This book combines the consideration of CMOS and bipolar circuits into a unified treatment. Also included are CMOS-bipolar circuits made possible by BiCMOS technology. The text progresses smoothly from MOS and bipolar device modeling to simple one and two transistor building block circuits. The final two chapters present a unified coverage of sample-data and continuous-time signal processing systems.
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community This book has good explanations of amplifier design and gain-bandwidth trade-offs. -Paul I would like to recommend this book, which I think is of immense use for analog designers. -Ashish
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community An excellent book on switched capacitor design. Contains a nice introduction to sampled-data systems and amplifiers, but especially the three chapters on switched-cap circuit design make this book an excellent reference in the domain. -Paul
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community The second edition of Alan Hastings book is out and it is improved over the first edition. I really liked the first version, it was an excellent book. However, I did not feel disappointed plunking down the money for the second edition. Only other thing that would have been nice is a little more treatment of how to layout to minimize DSM effects: RET/OPC, STI/LOD, and N-Well proximity. -Sheldon
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community This book is a comprehensive presentation on how CMOS device performance depends on length and inversion coefficient. There has been a lot of back door interest in gm/Id design approaches, but this book is the first comprehensive text on the subject. -RFICDUDE
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community As an introduction into RF design, I can recommend the book by Thomas Lee. -Frank Wiedmann I'd recommend Thomas Lee's book "The Design of CMOS Radio-Frequency Integrated Circuits". -Rangel
RF Microelectronics
Behzad Razavi, 1997 Purchase (Amazon)
This book is designed to give electrical engineers the RF microelectronics background they need to design state-of-the-art consumer electronics and communications devices.RF Microelectronics begins with a thorough introduction to the fundamental concepts of RF design, including nonlinearity, interference and noise. It reviews modulation and detection theory; multiple access techniques, and current wireless standards -- including CDMA, TDMA, AMPS and GSM. It presents case studies of transceiver architectures designed by several leading manufacturers. Finally, it offers detailed explanations of low-noise amplifiers, mixers and oscillators; frequency synthesizers and power amplifiers.For electrical engineers working in the communications fields, especially those involved with wireless technology. Also for graduate students.
Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community I have pretty much all the popular analog IC design books and this one is the most useful! It covers a wide variety of topics and circuits (models, digital, analog, physical design, mixed-signal), and explains many practical issues that are useful to someone getting starting in actually making circuits that work; it is very systematic. Plus there are tons of examples and problems (with solutions) to make everything stick, even SPICE files of everything on the web! The book uses WinSPICE and LASI (for layout) to allow you to try out everything in the book. The only thing this book doesn't have (which it would be impossible to fit plus is covered ad nauseum in the others) is in-depth theory; get this after you've looked at Razavi or Gray & Meyer. In conclusion, this book is excellent and you will kick yourself if you miss it. -Marc Murphy
Analog to digital and digital to analog converters are essential interfaces between computers and the outside world. They interface most signal processing devices and are embedded in an ever larger number of integrated circuits used for example in the telecommunications industry, remote control devices, and medical electronic instruments. This book surveys recent progress and gives an account of the working principles of integrated converters. It describes the architectures and discusses accuracy and speed in depth. The supporting web site provides MATLAB programs (in UNIX, PC, and Mac versions) which allow the reader to experiment with some of the concepts explained in the book. The appendix describes how to use the programs in order to simulate converters at the system level; thirteen examples are given to show what is feasible and how to run programs. Comments by Members of the Designer's Guide Community This book gives an excellent overview of most data converter topologies with Matlab codes for performance estimation,
This book gives an excellent overview of most data converter topologies with Matlab codes for performance estimation, including analysis of non-idealities. It does not spend too many pages on data converter basics, but offers in-depth discussion of the important design issues. Grade 4.5/5. -Paul
Razavi (electrical engineering, UCLA) describes the components and technologies used in the design of optical communication circuits and systems. Written for graduate students and practicing engineers, the textbook explains the design of transimpedance amplifiers, focusing on low noise broadband topologies and their trade-offs, then extends the concepts to limiting amplifiers and output buffers. Later chapters address the design of voltage-controlled oscillators, phase-locked loops, clock and data recovery (CDR) circuits, multiplexers, and laser drivers.
organization and pedagogy. The text has also been enhanced by changing notation to standard units of measurement, introducing an "Overview of the MOS Transistor" in the first chapter, and increasing the number of examples. The author has also added a new chapter (10) on CAD models to take advantage of the widespread use of simulation software.
can result in different, albeit similar, implementations. However, moving higher in abstraction can eliminate the differences among designs, so that the higher level of abstraction can be shared and only a minimal amount of work needs to be carried out to achieve final implementation. The ultimate goal is to create a library of functions and of hardware and software implementations that can be used for all new designs. It is important to have a multilevel library, since it is often the case that the lower levels that are closer to the physical implementation change because of the advances in technology, while the higher levels tend to be stable across product versions. It is most likely that the preferred approaches to the implementation of complex embedded systems will include the following aspects: + Design costs and time are likely to dominate the decision-making process for systems designers. Therefore, design reuse in all its shapes and forms will be of paramount importance. + Designs have to be captured at the highest level of abstraction to be able to exploit all the degrees of freedom that are available. + Next-generation systems will use a few highly complex (Moore's Law Limited) part-types, but many more energy-power-costefficient, medium-complexity (10M-100M) gates in 50nm technology chips, working concurrently to implement solutions to complex sensing, computing, and signaling/actuating problems. + Such chips will most likely be developed as an instance of a particular platform. That is, rather than being assembled from a collection of independently developed blocks of silicon functionality, they will be derived from a specific `family' of rnicroarchitectures, possibly oriented toward a particular class of problems, that can be modified (extended or reduced) by the system developer. + These platforms will be highly programmable. + Both system and software reuse impose a design methodology that has to leverage existing implementations available at all levels of abstraction. This book deals with the basic principles of a design methodology that addresses the concerns expressed above. The platform concept is carried throughout the book as a unifying theme to reuse. This is the first book that deals with the platform-based approach to the design of embedded systems and is a stepping stone for anyone who is interested in the real issues facing the design of complex systems-on-chip.
The extensively revised 3rd edition of CMOS VLSI Design details modern techniques for the design of complex and high performance CMOS Systems-on-Chip. The authors draw upon extensive industry and classroom experience to explain modern practices of chip design. The introductory chapter covers transistor operation, CMOS gate design, fabrication, and layout at a level accessible to anyone with an elementary knowledge of digital electornics. Later chapters beuild up an in-depth discussion of the design of complex, high performance, low power CMOS Systems-on-Chip.
the deep-submicron space causes devices to behave differently and brings to the forefront a number of new issues that impact the reliability, cost, performance, power dissipation, and reliability of the digital IC. This updated text reflects the ongoing (r)evolution in the world of digital integrated circuit design, caused by this move into the deep-submicron realm. This means increased importance of deep-submicron transistor effects, interconnect, signal integrity, high-performance and low-power design, timing, and clock distribution. In contrast to the first edition, the present text focuses entirely on CMOS ICs. Even more than for the first edition, this book uses its companion website to evolve and grow over time. It contains complete Microsoft PowerPoint presentations covering all the material, updates. corrections, design projects, and extensive instructor material. Most importantly, all problem sets are now available on the website (and have been removed from the text).
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