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An Analysis of MOS Current Mode Logic for
Low Power and High Performance Digital Logic
Jason Michael Musicer, M.S. 2000 (advisor:
Jan Rabaey)..
The recent development of VLSI technology has allowed rapid
growth in the area of portable electronic devices.
Laptop computers, cellular phones, and PDA's have all become commonplace
items in people's lives.
One of the primary consumer complaints of these devices is the short
battery life and/or the extra weight of the batteries due to the high power
consumption of the circuitry.
As CMOS process technology scales and demand for more processing power
increases, it can be shown that the power consumption of future IC's will
increase over time if significant architectural changes are not made [1].
It is therefore critical in future circuits that power be minimized
beyond the traditional constraints of packaging cost and heat dissipation. As
device density increases, it is also extremely desirable to integrate analog and
digital circuitry onto the same die for many DSP and communications systems.
High levels of integration will be required in order to drive down
production costs and reduce total system area.
This integration has been delayed due primarily to the difficulty in
designed high precision analog circuitry in the presence of extremely hostile
digital switching noise.
These difficulties will also increase as process technology scales due to
fundamental challenges in high precision analog design at low supply voltages in
digital CMOS technology.
Either significant advances in analog design techniques will be required
or digital designers will be forced to adapt their design techniques or process
technology.A digital circuit style that seems to be promising in both reducing
power consumption and providing an analog friendly environment is MOS Current
Mode Logic (MCML).
While bipolar CML, a derivative of emitter coupled logic (ECL) logic, has
been used for years in high performance applications, it has become less
desirable due to its high static power consumption and reliance on bipolar
processing.
In [2], MCML was analyzed and a 64-bit adaptively pipelined adder was
developed and simulated.
It was demonstrated in that paper that MCML could dissipate less power
than equivalent CMOS circuitry as well as adjust for clock skew and
environmental or process variations.In
this project, a much broader analysis of MCML is presented with some theoretical
development and application to other circuit blocks.
Near-minimum sized transistors are used in this project instead of the
significantly larger designs in [2] and power consumption is measured for a wide
variety of circuit blocks, performance levels, and design techniques. It will be
shown that area efficient MCML can actually consume significantly less power
than equivalent CMOS circuitry while maintaining many of the other benefits of
traditional CML such as reduction in dI/dt effects, common mode noise immunity,
and process and voltage variation immunity.
The most important goal of this project is to evaluate the appropriate
domains of performance and power requirements in which MCML presents benefits
over current logic styles.

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