scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "David A. Hodges published in 1983"


Book
01 Jan 1983
TL;DR: The third edition of the Hodges and Jackson's Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits has been thoroughly revised and updated by a new co-author, Resve Saleh of the University of British Columbia as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The third edition of Hodges and Jackson's Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits has been thoroughly revised and updated by a new co-author, Resve Saleh of the University of British Columbia The new edition combines the approachability and concise nature of the Hodges and Jackson classic with a complete overhaul to bring the book into the 21st century The new edition has replaced the emphasis on Bipolar with an emphasis on CMOS The book focuses on the latest CMOS technologies and uses standard deep submicron models throughout the book The material on memory has been expanded and updated As well the book now includes more on SPICE simulation and new problems that reflect recent technologies The emphasis of the book is on design, but it does not neglect analysis and has as a goal to provide enough information so that a student can carry out analysis as well as be able to design a circuit This book provides an excellent and balanced introduction to digital circuit design for both students and professionals Table of contents 1 Deep Submicron Digital IC Design 2 MOS Transistors 3 Fabrication, Layout and Simulation 4 MOS Inverter Circuits 5 Static MOS Gate Circuits 6 High-Speed CMOS Logic Design 7 Transfer Gate and Dynamic Logic Design 8 Semiconductor Memory Design 9 Additional Topics in Memory Design 10 Interconnect Design 11 Power Grid and Clock Design Appendix A A Brief Introduction to Spice Appendix B Bipolar Transistors and Circuits

400 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Linearity errors of weighted capacitor digital-to-analog converters (DAC's) can be corrected using a simple digital algorithm.
Abstract: Linearity errors of weighted capacitor digital-to-analog converters (DAC's) can be corrected using a simple digital algorithm. The additional circuitry required is approximately 350 digital gates plus 10 bytes of memory space.

77 citations