Cmos Analog Ic Design: Spring 2013
Cmos Analog Ic Design: Spring 2013
Cmos Analog Ic Design: Spring 2013
Spring 2013
Department of Telecommunications Faculty of Electrical and Electronics Engineering Ho Chi Minh city University of Technology
Dr. Cuong HuynhTelecommunications DepartmentHCMUT 1
Objectives:
Understand CMOS technology from a design perspective Discuss basic transistor models and layout techniques for design and characterization of analog integrated circuits. Study the most important building blocks in CMOS technologies and understand their advantages and limitations. Learn analog CMOS design approaches: Specification Circuit Topology Circuit Simulation Layout Fabrication Design basic analog IC circuits considering practical parameters. Use the IC design tools, especially Cadence, Spectre, Spice, 3 and Matlab. Dr. Cuong HuynhTelecommunications DepartmentHCMUT
Lecture 1: Introduction
Naturally occurring signals are analog Analog circuits are required to amplify and condition the signal for further processing Performance of analog circuits often determine whether the chip works or not Examples Sensors and actuators (imagers, MEMS) Optical receiver, RF transceivers Microprocessor circuits (PLL, high-speed I/O, thermal sensor)
Dr. Cuong HuynhTelecommunications DepartmentHCMUT 7
Why Integrated?
What is Integrated Circuits ? Why Integrated ? Smaller size, reduced cost, increased performance. Motivate creativity and new applications: RFID, sensor . . . Idea of integration was in the late 1950s. Prediction of Gordon Moore (one of Intel founder).
Why Integrated?
Why CMOS?
The metaloxidesemiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) was first patented by Julius Edgar Lilienfeld in 1925, well before the invention of BJT. Due to the fabrication limitation, MOSFET has not been used until the early years of 1960s. CMOS (Complementary MOS p- and n-type device) was patented by Frank Wanlass in 1967, initiating a revolution in the semiconductor industry. CMOS initially dominates in the digital circuit/systems while others for analog. Why CMOS now ? Low cost, high integration and solution for SOC.
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Analog IC Applications
Digital-analog and analog-digital conversion Disk drive controllers Modems - filters Bandgap reference Analog phase lock loops DC-DC conversion Buffers Codecs Wireless tranceivers Etc.
Next Time
Chapter 2: MOS Transistor Characteristics and Modeling MOS Transistor Modeling Threshold Voltage, VT DC I-V Equations Body Effect Subthreshold Region Reading: Chapter 2 and Appendix A in Razavis Book [1]
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