EECE574
Notices
- Welcome to all students who register this course.
Course Description
This course will provide an overview of the MOS transistor, circuit characterization and performance estimation. CMOS logic and structured design: electrical design of logic circuits, clocking strategies and design rules. CMOS systems and RISC architectures.
- Objectives:
- Ability to understand the functions and the properties of CMOS devices, combinational gates, and sequential circuits
- Ability to analyze the performance and power consumption of a digital VLSI circuit using proper device and interconnect models
- Ability to design functional units such as adders and multipliers using CMOS devices
- Ability to optimize a digital circuit with respect to different quality metrics such as cost, speed, power dissipation, and reliability
- Ability to use Cadence layout design tool and HSPICE for VLSI circuit design and analysis
All course announcements, lecture slides, assignments, and projects will be made available on Blackboard, please frequently check the site and contact the instructor if there is any question.
Prerequisites: EECE 351 or equivalent.
Instructor
Prof. Zhanpeng Jin
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Email: zjin at binghamton dot edu (preferred)
Phone: 607-777-3363
Hours
- Lecture: Tuesday/Thursday 10:05am ― 11:30am @ SSW-204
- Office Hours: Tuesday 1:00pm ― 3:00pm @ ES-2306
Textbooks
- (Required) J. M. Rabaey, A. Chandrakasan, and B. Nikolic, “Digital Integrated Circuits: a Design Perspective”, 2nd edition, Prentice Hall 2003
- (Optional) N. H. E. Weste and K. Eshraghian, “Principles of CMOS VLSI Design: A Systems Perspective”, 4th edition, Addison-Wesley, 2010
Quick Links
- Blackboard @ Binghamton.
- International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS).
- WWW Computer Architecture Page.
- Top 500 Supercomputer Sites.
- Timeline of Computing History.
- The Turing Archive for the History of Computing.
- The Modern History of Computing, by Copeland, B. Jack from Stanford.
- The History of Computing, by J. A. N. Lee from Virginia Tech.
- History of Computing, by Virginia Montecino from George Mason.