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Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits PDF

1009 Pages·2006·8.1 MB·English
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In Praise of Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits ‘‘Thisbook,craftedandtestedwithMITsophomoresinelectricalengineeringandcomputer scienceoveraperiodofmorethansixyears,providesacomprehensivetreatmentofboth circuit analysis and basic electronic circuits. Examples such as digital and analog circuit applications, field-effect transistors, and operational amplifiers provide the platform for modelingofactivedevices,includinglarge-signal,small-signal(incremental),nonlinearand piecewise-linearmodels.Thetreatmentofcircuitswithenergy-storageelementsintransient andsinusoidal-steady-statecircumstancesisthoroughandaccessible.Havingtaughtfrom draftsofthisbookfivetimes,Ibelievethatitisanimprovementoverthetraditionalapproach tocircuitsandelectronics,inwhichthefocusisonanalogcircuitsalone.’’ -PAUL E. GRAY, MassachusettsInstituteofTechnology ‘‘Myoverallreactiontothisbookisoverwhelminglyfavorable.Well-writtenandpedagog- icallysound,thebookprovidesagoodbalancebetweentheoryandpracticalapplication.I thinkthatcombiningcircuitsandelectronicsisaverygoodidea.Mostintroductorycircuit theorytextsfocusprimarilyontheanalysisoflumpedelementnetworkswithoutputting thesenetworksintoapracticalelectronicscontext.However,itisbecomingmorecriticalfor ourelectricalandcomputerengineeringstudentstounderstandandappreciatethecommon groundfromwhichbothfieldsoriginate.’’ -GARY MAY, GeorgiaInstituteofTechnology ‘‘Withoutadoubt,studentsinengineeringtodaywanttoquicklyrelatewhattheylearnfrom coursestowhattheyexperienceintheelectronics-filledworldtheylivein.Understanding today’sdigitalworldrequiresastrongbackgroundinanalogcircuitprinciplesaswellas akeenintuitionabouttheirimpactonelectronics. InFoundations...AgarwalandLang presentauniqueandpowerfulapproachforanexcitingfirstcourseintroducingengineers totheworldofanaloganddigitalsystems.’’ -RAVI SUBRAMANIAN, BerkeleyDesignAutomation ‘‘Finally,anintroductorycircuitanalysisbookhasbeenwrittenthattrulyunifiesthetreat- mentoftraditionalcircuitanalysisandelectronics. AgarwalandLangskillfullycombine thefundamentalsofcircuitanalysiswiththefundamentalsofmodernanaloganddigital integratedcircuits.Iapplaudtheirdecisiontoeliminatefromtheirbooktheusualmanda- torychapteronLaplacetransforms,atoolnolongerinusebymoderncircuitdesigners.I expectthisbooktoestablishanewtrendinthewayintroductorycircuitanalysisistaught toelectricalandcomputerengineers.’’ -TIM TRICK, UniversityofIllinoisatUrbana-Champaign Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits about the authors AnantAgarwalisProfessorofElectricalEngineeringandComputerScienceattheMassachusetts InstituteofTechnology.Hejoinedthefacultyin1988,teachingcoursesincircuitsandelectronics, VLSI,digitallogicandcomputerarchitecture.Between1999and2003,heservedasanassociate director of the Laboratory for Computer Science. He holds a Ph.D. and an M.S. in Electrical EngineeringfromStanfordUniversity,andabachelor’sdegreeinElectricalEngineeringfromIIT Madras.AgarwalledagroupthatdevelopedSparcle(1992),amultithreadedmicroprocessor,and theMITAlewife(1994),ascalableshared-memorymultiprocessor.HealsoledtheVirtualWires projectatMITandwasafounderofVirtualMachineWorks,Inc.,whichtooktheVirtualWires logicemulationtechnologytomarketin1993.CurrentlyAgarwalleadstheRawprojectatMIT, whichdevelopedanewkindofreconfigurablecomputingchip. Heandhisteamwereawarded aGuinnessworldrecordin2004forLOUD,thelargestmicrophonearrayintheworld, which canpinpoint, trackandamplifyindividualvoicesinacrowd. Co-founderofEngim, Inc., which developsmulti-channelwirelessmixed-signalchipsets,AgarwalalsowontheMauriceWilkesprize forcomputerarchitecturein2001,andthePresidentialYoungInvestigatorawardin1991. JeffreyH.LangisProfessorofElectricalEngineeringandComputerScienceattheMassachusetts InstituteofTechnology. Hejoinedthefacultyin1980afterreceivinghisSB(1975), SM(1977) andPh.D.(1980)degreesfromtheDepartmentofElectricalEngineeringandComputerScience. HeservedastheAssociateDirectoroftheMITLaboratoryforElectromagneticandElectronic Systemsbetween1991and2003,andasanAssociateEditorof‘‘SensorsandActuators’’between 1991and1994.ProfessorLang’sresearchandteachinginterestsfocusontheanalysis,designand controlofelectromechanicalsystemswithanemphasisonrotatingmachinery,micro-scalesensors andactuators,andflexiblestructures.HehasalsotaughtcoursesincircuitsandelectronicsatMIT. He has written over 170 papers and holds 10 patents in the areas of electromechanics, power electronicsandappliedcontrol,andhasbeenawardedfourbest-paperprizesfromIEEEsocieties. ProfessorLangisaFellowoftheIEEE,andaformerHertzFoundationFellow. AgarwalandLanghavebeenworkingtogetherforthepasteightyearsonafreshapproachto teachingcircuits.Forseveraldecades,MIThadofferedatraditionalcourseincircuitsdesignedas thefirstcoreundergraduatecourseinEE.Butbythemid-‘90s, vastadvancesinsemiconductor technology,coupledwithdramaticchangesinstudents’backgroundsevolvingfromahamradioto computerculture,hadrenderedthistraditionalcoursepoorlymotivated,andmanypartsofitwere virtuallyobsolete.AgarwalandLangdecidedtorevampandbroadenthisfirstcourseforEE,ECEor EECSbyestablishingastrongconnectionbetweenthecontemporaryworldsofdigitalandanalog systems,andbyunifyingthetreatmentofcircuitsandbasicMOSelectronics.Astheydeveloped thecourse,theysolicitedcommentsandreceivedguidancefromalargenumberofcolleaguesfrom MITandotheruniversities,students,andalumni,aswellasindustryleaders. Unabletofindasuitabletextfortheirnewintroductorycourse,AgarwalandLangwrotethis booktofollowthelecturescheduleusedintheircourse.‘‘CircuitsandElectronics’’istaughtinboth thespringandfallsemestersatMIT,andservesasaprerequisiteforcoursesinsignalsandsystems, digital/computerdesign,andadvancedelectronics.Thecoursematerialisavailableworldwideon MIT’sOpenCourseWarewebsite,http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/index.htm. Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits anant agarwal DepartmentofElectricalEngineeringandComputerScience, MassachusettsInstituteofTechnology jeffrey h. lang DepartmentofElectricalEngineeringandComputerScience, MassachusettsInstituteofTechnology AMSTERDAM•BOSTON•HEIDELBERG•LONDON NEWYORK•OXFORD•PARIS•SANDIEGO SANFRANCISCO•SINGAPORE•SYDNEY•TOKYO MORGANKAUFMANNPUBLISHERSISANIMPRINTOFELSEVIER Publisher:DeniseE.M.Penrose PublishingServicesManager:SimonCrump EditorialAssistant:ValerieWitte CoverDesign:FrancesBaca Composition:CephaImagingPvt.Ltd.,India TechnicalIllustration:DartmouthPublishing,Inc. Copyeditor:EileenKramer Proofreader:KatherineHasal Indexer:KevinBroccoli Interiorprinter:ChinaTranslationandPrintingServicesLtd. Coverprinter:ChinaTranslationandPrintingServicesLtd. MorganKaufmannPublishersisanimprintofElsevier. 500SansomeStreet,Suite400,SanFrancisco,CA94111 Thisbookisprintedonacid-freepaper. ©2005byElsevierInc.Allrightsreserved. Designationsusedbycompaniestodistinguishtheirproductsareoftenclaimedastrademarksorregistered trademarks.InallinstancesinwhichMorganKaufmannPublishersisawareofaclaim,theproductnamesappearin initialcapitalorallcapitalletters.Readers,however,shouldcontacttheappropriatecompaniesformorecomplete informationregardingtrademarksandregistration. Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmittedinanyformorbyany means electronic,mechanical,photocopying,scanning,orotherwise withoutpriorwrittenpermissionofthe publisher. PermissionsmaybesoughtdirectlyfromElsevier’sScience&TechnologyRightsDepartmentinOxford,UK: phone:(+44)1865843830,fax:(+44)1865853333,e-mail:[email protected] yourrequeston-lineviatheElsevierhomepage(http://elsevier.com)byselecting‘‘CustomerSupport’’andthen ‘‘ObtainingPermissions.’’ LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData ISBN:1-55860-735-8 ForinformationonallMorganKaufmannpublications, visitourWebsiteatwww.mkp.comorwww.books.elsevier.com PrintedinChina 5 6 7 8 9 5 4 3 2 1 ToAnu,Akash,andAnisha AnantAgarwal ToMarija,Chris,John,Matt JeffreyLang contents Materialmarkedwith WWW appearsontheInternet(pleaseseePrefacefordetails). Preface ......................................................................................... xvii Approach ............................................................................ xvii Overview ............................................................................ xix CourseOrganization ............................................................. xx Acknowledgments ................................................................ xxi chapter 1 TheCircuitAbstraction ......................................... 3 1.1 ThePowerofAbstraction ...................................................... 3 1.2 TheLumpedCircuitAbstraction ............................................. 5 1.3 TheLumpedMatterDiscipline ............................................... 9 1.4 LimitationsoftheLumpedCircuitAbstraction .......................... 13 1.5 PracticalTwo-TerminalElements ............................................ 15 1.5.1 Batteries ................................................................ 16 1.5.2 LinearResistors ...................................................... 18 1.5.3 AssociatedVariablesConvention ............................... 25 1.6 IdealTwo-TerminalElements ................................................ 29 1.6.1 IdealVoltageSources,Wires,andResistors .................. 30 1.6.2 ElementLaws ........................................................ 32 1.6.3 TheCurrentSource AnotherIdealTwo-Terminal Element ................................................................ 33 1.7 ModelingPhysicalElements ................................................... 36 1.8 SignalRepresentation ............................................................ 40 1.8.1 AnalogSignals ....................................................... 41 1.8.2 DigitalSignals ValueDiscretization ........................ 43 1.9 SummaryandExercises ......................................................... 46 chapter 2 ResistiveNetworks ............................................... 53 2.1 Terminology ........................................................................ 54 2.2 Kirchhoff’sLaws ................................................................... 55 2.2.1 KCL ................................................................... 56 2.2.2 KVL ..................................................................... 60 2.3 CircuitAnalysis:BasicMethod ............................................... 66 2.3.1 Single-ResistorCircuits ............................................ 67 2.3.2 QuickIntuitiveAnalysisofSingle-ResistorCircuits ........ 70 2.3.3 EnergyConservation ............................................... 71 ix

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applications, field-effect transistors, and operational amplifiers provide the platform to circuits and electronics, in which the focus is on analog circuits alone. the fundamentals of circuit analysis with the fundamentals of modern electromagnetic waves by adding the third constraint, namely,
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