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Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Digital Timing Macromodeling for VLSI Design Verification first of
all provides an extensive history of the development of simulation
techniques. It presents detailed discussion of the various
techniques implemented in circuit, timing, fast-timing,
switch-level timing, switch-level, and gate-level simulation. It
also discusses mixed-mode simulation and interconnection analysis
methods. The review in Chapter 2 gives an understanding of the
advantages and disadvantages of the many techniques applied in
modern digital macromodels. The book also presents a wide variety
of techniques for performing nonlinear macromodeling of digital MOS
subcircuits which address a large number of shortcomings in
existing digital MOS macromodels. Specifically, the techniques
address the device model detail, transistor coupling capacitance,
effective channel length modulation, series transistor reduction,
effective transconductance, input terminal dependence, gate
parasitic capacitance, the body effect, the impact of parasitic
RC-interconnects, and the effect of transmission gates. The
techniques address major sources of errors in existing
macromodeling techniques, which must be addressed if macromodeling
is to be accepted in commercial CAD tools by chip designers. The
techniques presented in Chapters 4-6 can be implemented in other
macromodels, and are demonstrated using the macromodel presented in
Chapter 3. The new techniques are validated over an extremely wide
range of operating conditions: much wider than has been presented
for previous macromodels, thus demonstrating the wide range of
applicability of these techniques.
Only two decades ago most electronic circuits were designed with a
slide-rule, and the designs were verified using breadboard
techniques. Simulation tools were a research curiosity and in
general were mistrusted by most designers and test engineers. In
those days the programs were not user friendly, models were
inadequate, and the algorithms were not very robust. The demand for
simulation tools has been driven by the increasing complexity of
integrated circuits and systems, and it has been aided by the rapid
decrease in the cost of com puting that has occurred over the past
several decades. Today a wide range of tools exist for analYSiS,
deSign, and verification, and expert systems and synthesis tools
are rapidly emerging. In this book only one aspect of the analysis
and design process is examined. but it is a very important aspect
that has received much attention over the years. It is the problem
of accurate circuit and timing simulation."
Digital Timing Macromodeling for VLSI Design Verification first of
all provides an extensive history of the development of simulation
techniques. It presents detailed discussion of the various
techniques implemented in circuit, timing, fast-timing,
switch-level timing, switch-level, and gate-level simulation. It
also discusses mixed-mode simulation and interconnection analysis
methods. The review in Chapter 2 gives an understanding of the
advantages and disadvantages of the many techniques applied in
modern digital macromodels. The book also presents a wide variety
of techniques for performing nonlinear macromodeling of digital MOS
subcircuits which address a large number of shortcomings in
existing digital MOS macromodels. Specifically, the techniques
address the device model detail, transistor coupling capacitance,
effective channel length modulation, series transistor reduction,
effective transconductance, input terminal dependence, gate
parasitic capacitance, the body effect, the impact of parasitic
RC-interconnects, and the effect of transmission gates. The
techniques address major sources of errors in existing
macromodeling techniques, which must be addressed if macromodeling
is to be accepted in commercial CAD tools by chip designers. The
techniques presented in Chapters 4-6 can be implemented in other
macromodels, and are demonstrated using the macromodel presented in
Chapter 3. The new techniques are validated over an extremely wide
range of operating conditions: much wider than has been presented
for previous macromodels, thus demonstrating the wide range of
applicability of these techniques.
Only two decades ago most electronic circuits were designed with a
slide-rule, and the designs were verified using breadboard
techniques. Simulation tools were a research curiosity and in
general were mistrusted by most designers and test engineers. In
those days the programs were not user friendly, models were
inadequate, and the algorithms were not very robust. The demand for
simulation tools has been driven by the increasing complexity of
integrated circuits and systems, and it has been aided by the rapid
decrease in the cost of com puting that has occurred over the past
several decades. Today a wide range of tools exist for analYSiS,
deSign, and verification, and expert systems and synthesis tools
are rapidly emerging. In this book only one aspect of the analysis
and design process is examined. but it is a very important aspect
that has received much attention over the years. It is the problem
of accurate circuit and timing simulation."
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