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This book presents a detailed summary of research on automatic layout of device-level analog circuits that was undertaken in the late 1980s and early 1990s at Carnegie Mellon University.
Unfortunately, this resemblance is often of little help in actually writing the software for problem X' given the software for problem X. And of course, VLSI design software, and engineering design software in general, is often exquisitely sensitive to some aspects of the domain (technology) in which it operates.
Practical Synthesis of High-Performance Analog Circuits presents a technique for automating the design of analog circuits.
Power distribution --the design of the geometric topology for the network of wires that connect the various power supplies, the widths of the indi vidual segments for each of these wires, the number and location of the power I/O pins around the periphery of the chip --was simple because the chips were simpler.
This book presents novel solutions to problems of efficient statistical analysis of circuits in the nanometer regime. It draws on theories from a wide variety of scientific fields and applies them to parallel problems in numerous other fields.
The approach described in this book can pack devices much more densely than a typical cell-based layout. Direct Transistor-Level Layout For Digital Blocks is a comprehensive reference work on device-level layout optimization, which will be valuable to CAD tool and circuit designers.
Power distribution --the design of the geometric topology for the network of wires that connect the various power supplies, the widths of the indi vidual segments for each of these wires, the number and location of the power I/O pins around the periphery of the chip --was simple because the chips were simpler.
Practical Synthesis of High-Performance Analog Circuits presents a technique for automating the design of analog circuits.
This book presents a detailed summary of research on automatic layout of device-level analog circuits that was undertaken in the late 1980s and early 1990s at Carnegie Mellon University.
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