• Title/Summary/Keyword: Flip-flop

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Design of a CMOS Dual-Modulus Prescaler Using New High-Speed Low-Power TSPC D-Flip Flops (새로운 고속 저전력 TSPC D-플립플롭을 사용한 CMOS Dual-Modulus 프리스케일러 설계)

  • Oh, Kun-Chang;Lee, Jae-Kyong;Kang, Ki-Sub;Park, Jong-Tae;Yu, Chong-Gun
    • Journal of IKEEE
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    • v.9 no.2 s.17
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    • pp.152-160
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    • 2005
  • A prescaler is an essential building block for PLL-based frequency synthesizers and must satisfy high-speed and low-power characteristics. The design of D-flip flips used in the prescaler implementation is thus critical. Conventional TSPC D-flip flops suffer from glitches, unbalanced propagation delay, and unnecessary charge/discharge at internal nodes in precharge phase, which results in increased power consumption. In this paper a new dynamic D-flip flop is proposed to overcome these problems. Glitches are minimized using discharge suppression scheme, speed is improved by making balanced propagation delay, and low power consumption is achieved by removing unnecessary discharge. The proposed D-flip flop is employed in designing a 128/129 dual-modulus prescaler using $0.18{\mu}m$ CMOS process parameters. The designed prescaler operates up to 5GHz while conventional one can operate up to 4.5GHz under same conditions. It consumes 0.394mW at 4GHz that is a 34% improved result compared with conventional one.

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A Time-to-Digital Converter Using Dual Edge Flip Flops for Improving Resolution (분해능 향상을 위해 듀얼 에지 플립플롭을 사용하는 시간-디지털 변환기)

  • Choi, Jin-Ho
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information and Communication Engineering
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    • v.23 no.7
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    • pp.816-821
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    • 2019
  • A counter-type time-to-digital converter was designed using a dual edge T flip-flop. The time-to-digital converter was designed with a $0.18{\mu}m$ CMOS process at a supply voltage of 1.5 volts. In a typical time-to-digital converter, when the period of the clock is T, a conversion error corresponding to the period of the clock occurs due to the asynchronism between the input signal and the clock. However, the clock of the time-to-digital converter proposed in this paper is generated in synchronization with the start signal which is the input signal. As a result, conversion errors that may occur due to asynchronization of the start signal and the clock do not occur. The flip-flops constituting the counters are composed of dual-edge flip-flops operating at the positive and negative edges of the clock to improve the resolution.

A High-Speed Dual-Modulus Prescaler Using Selective Latch Technique (Selective Latch Technique을 이용한 고속의 Dual-Modulus Prescaler)

  • 김세엽;이순섭김수원
    • Proceedings of the IEEK Conference
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    • 1998.10a
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    • pp.779-782
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    • 1998
  • This paper describes a high-speed Dual-modulus Prescaler (DMP) for RF mobile communication systems with pulse remover using selective latch technique. This circuit achieves high speed and low power consumption by reducing full speed flip-flops and using a selective latch. The proposed DMP consists of only one full speed flip-flop, a selective latch, conventional flip-flops, and a control gate. In order to ensure the timing of control signal, duty cycle problem and propagation delay must be considered. The failling edgetriggered flip-flops alleviate the duty cycle problem andthis paper shows that the propagation delay of control signal doesn't matter. The maximum operating frequency of the proposed DMP with 0.6um CMOS technology is up to 2.2㎓ at 3.3V power supply and the circuit consumes 5.24mA.

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A 23.52µW / 0.7V Multi-stage Flip-flop Architecture Steered by a LECTOR-based Gated Clock

  • Bhattacharjee, Pritam;Majumder, Alak;Nath, Bipasha
    • IEIE Transactions on Smart Processing and Computing
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.220-227
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    • 2017
  • Technology development is leading to the invention of more sophisticated electronics appliances that require long battery life. Therefore, saving power is a major concern in current-day scenarios. A notable source of power dissipation in sequential structures of integrated circuits is due to the continuous switching of high-frequency clock signals, which do not carry any information, and hence, their switching is eliminated by a method called clock gating. In this paper, we have incorporated a recent clock-gating style named Leakage Control Transistor (LECTOR)-based clock gating to drive a multi-stage sequential architectures, and we focus on its performance under three different process corners (fast-fast, slow-slow, typical-typical) through Monte Carlo simulation at 18 GHz clock with 90 nm technology. This gating is found to be one of the best gated approaches for multi-stage architectures in terms of total power consumption.

High-speed CMOS Frequency Divider with Inductive Peaking Technique

  • Park, Jung-Woong;Ahn, Se-Hyuk;Jeong, Hye-Im;Kim, Nam-Soo
    • Transactions on Electrical and Electronic Materials
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    • v.15 no.6
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    • pp.309-314
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    • 2014
  • This work proposes an integrated high frequency divider with an inductive peaking technique implemented in a current mode logic (CML) frequency divider. The proposed divider is composed with a master-slave flip-flop, and the master-slave flip-flop acts as a latch and read circuits which have the differential pair and cross-coupled n-MOSFETs. The cascode bias is applied in an inductive peaking circuit as a current source and the cascode bias is used for its high current driving capability and stable frequency response. The proposed divider is designed with $0.18-{\mu}m$ CMOS process, and the simulation used to evaluate the divider is performed with phase-locked loop (PLL) circuit as a feedback circuit. A divide-by-two operation is properly performed at a high frequency of 20 GHz. In the output frequency spectrum of the PLL, a peak frequency of 2 GHz is obtained witha divide-by-eight circuit at an input frequency of 250 MHz. The reference spur is obtained at -64 dBc and the power consumption is 13 mW.