A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit

There is no doubt that static complementary CMOS logic is one of the most dominant logic-circuit families available. However, CMOS circuits with wide fan-in suffer from a relatively poor performance that is apparent in increased area, large time delay, and large power consumption. This is typically...

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Main Author: Sherif M. Sharroush
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-09-01
Series:Alexandria Engineering Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111001681630151X
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spelling doaj-976e2664e7a840e4b4de4764fe1ab4f42021-06-02T07:27:15ZengElsevierAlexandria Engineering Journal1110-01682016-09-015532565258210.1016/j.aej.2016.06.013A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuitSherif M. SharroushThere is no doubt that static complementary CMOS logic is one of the most dominant logic-circuit families available. However, CMOS circuits with wide fan-in suffer from a relatively poor performance that is apparent in increased area, large time delay, and large power consumption. This is typically the case with CMOS circuits containing NMOS or PMOS stacks (i.e. branches containing a relatively large number of serially connected transistors). In this paper, a novel circuit that depends on applying the input signals in the form of pulses with a certain width will be presented as an alternative to stack circuits. The proposed scheme will be investigated quantitatively with the effect of the pulse width on the performance of the proposed scheme taken into account. The proposed scheme will be compared with the conventional CMOS logic from the points of view of area, high-to-low propagation delay, and average power consumption. The parameter variations and second-order effects will also be taken into account. Simulation results verify the correct operation of the proposed scheme and that the percentage reduction in the average propagation delay is 15.8% and 61.25% in cases of four and eight inputs, respectively, adopting the 45 nm CMOS technology with VDD = 1 V.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111001681630151XAreaCMOS technologyPower consumptionProcess variationsTime delay
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sherif M. Sharroush
spellingShingle Sherif M. Sharroush
A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit
Alexandria Engineering Journal
Area
CMOS technology
Power consumption
Process variations
Time delay
author_facet Sherif M. Sharroush
author_sort Sherif M. Sharroush
title A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit
title_short A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit
title_full A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit
title_fullStr A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit
title_full_unstemmed A novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in CMOS circuit
title_sort novel high-performance time-balanced wide fan-in cmos circuit
publisher Elsevier
series Alexandria Engineering Journal
issn 1110-0168
publishDate 2016-09-01
description There is no doubt that static complementary CMOS logic is one of the most dominant logic-circuit families available. However, CMOS circuits with wide fan-in suffer from a relatively poor performance that is apparent in increased area, large time delay, and large power consumption. This is typically the case with CMOS circuits containing NMOS or PMOS stacks (i.e. branches containing a relatively large number of serially connected transistors). In this paper, a novel circuit that depends on applying the input signals in the form of pulses with a certain width will be presented as an alternative to stack circuits. The proposed scheme will be investigated quantitatively with the effect of the pulse width on the performance of the proposed scheme taken into account. The proposed scheme will be compared with the conventional CMOS logic from the points of view of area, high-to-low propagation delay, and average power consumption. The parameter variations and second-order effects will also be taken into account. Simulation results verify the correct operation of the proposed scheme and that the percentage reduction in the average propagation delay is 15.8% and 61.25% in cases of four and eight inputs, respectively, adopting the 45 nm CMOS technology with VDD = 1 V.
topic Area
CMOS technology
Power consumption
Process variations
Time delay
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S111001681630151X
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