Part
Number Logic Family
TTL 74LS00 Low-power Schottky TTL
74ALS00 Advanced low-power Schottky TTL
74F00 Fast TTL
CMOS 74HC00 High-speed CMOS
74HCT00 High-speed CMOS (TTL-compatible inputs)
74LVX00 Low-voltage CMOS
H
H
VIH
L
_
VOL
_
L
L
VIL
H
_
_
VOH
_
_
_
_
FIGURE 11.1
Input/Output Voltage Parameters
H
H
IIH
L
IOL
L
L
IIL
H
IOH
FIGURE 11.2
Input/Output Current Parameters
The voltages and currents are designated with two subscripts, one that designates an
input or output and another that indicates the logic level. For example, VOL is the voltage at
the gate output when the output is in the logic LOW state. IIL is the input current when the
input is in the LOW state.
These voltages and currents are specified in manufacturers’ published data sheets,
which are usually available in print form in a data book or in an electronic format, such as
Portable Document Format (pdf) on a CD or internet site.
Figure 11.3 shows a data sheet for a 74LS00 NAND gate, which also shows parameter
values for a 54LS00 device. A 54-series device is manufactured to military specifications,
which require a high range of environmental operating conditions.A74-series device is suitable
for general or commercial use.We will limit ourselves to the 74-series devices.
The voltage and current parameters indicated in Figures 11.1 and 11.2 are all shown in
the 74LS00 data sheet. Some parameters are shown as typical values, as well as maximum or
minimum. Typical values should be considered “information only” as device manufacturers
500 C H A P T E R 1 1 • Logic Gate Circuitry
FIGURE 11.3
74LS00 Data (1 of 2) Reprinted with permission of Motorola.
QUAD 2-INPUT NAND GATE
GUARANTEED OPERATING RANGES
Symbol Parameter Min Typ Max Unit
VCC Supply Voltage 54
74
4.5
4.75
5.0
5.0
5.5
5.25
V
TA Operating Ambient Temperature Range 54
74
–55
0
25
25
125
70
C
IOH Output Current — High 54, 74 –0.4 mA
IOL Output Current — Low 54
74
4.0
8.0
mA
SN54/74LS00
QUAD 2-INPUT NAND GATE
LOW POWER SCHOTTKY
J SUFFIX
CERAMIC
CASE 632-08
N SUFFIX
PLASTIC
CASE 646-06
14
1
14
1
ORDERING INFORMATION
SN54LSXXJ Ceramic
SN74LSXXN Plastic
SN74LSXXD SOIC
14
1
D SUFFIX
SOIC
CASE 751A-02
14 13
1 2 3 4 5 6
12 11 10 9
VCC
8
7
GND
• ESD > 3500 Volts
11.1 • Electrical Characteristics of Logic Gates 501
do not guarantee these values. An exception to this would be the supply voltage, VCC, whose
typical value is simply indicated as the average of maximum and minimum values.
Note that IIH and IIL are shown in Figure 11.2 as flowing in opposite directions, as are
IOH and IOL. On a data sheet, a current entering a gate is indicated as positive and a current
leaving the gate is shown as having a negative value. The reason for these current directions
will become apparent when we examine the internal circuits of the gates later in the chapter.
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.1 What is the maximum value of VOL for a 74LS00 NAND gate when the output current is at
its maximum value?
Solution When the output is in the LOW state, the output current is given by IOL,
which has a maximum value of 8 mA. The output voltage, VOL, is specified for a value of
4 mA and for 8 mA. Since the output condition is specified for maximum IOL (8 mA),
then VOL _ 0.5 V.
❘❙❚
FIGURE 11.3
74LS00 Data (2 of 2) Reprinted with permission of Motorola.
SN54/74LS00
DC CHARACTERISTICS OVER OPERATING TEMPERATURE RANGE (unless otherwise specified)
Limits
Symbol Parameter Min Typ Max Unit Test Conditions
VIH Input HIGH Voltage 2.0 V
Guaranteed Input HIGH Voltage for
All Inputs
VIL Input LOW Voltage
54 0.7
V
Guaranteed Input LOW Voltage for
74 0.8
g
All Inputs
VIK Input Clamp Diode Voltage –0.65 –1.5 V VCC = MIN, IIN = – 18 mA
VOH Output HIGH Voltage
54 2.5 3.5 V VCC = MIN, IOH = MAX, VIN = VIH
74 2.7 3.5 V
CC OH IN IH
or VIL per Truth Table
VOL Output LOW Voltage
54, 74 0.25 0.4 V IOL = 4.0 mA VCC = VCC MIN,
VIN = VIL or VIH
74 0.35 0.5 V IOL = 8.0 mA
per Truth Table
IIH Input HIGH Current
20 A VCC = MAX, VIN = 2.7 V
0.1 mA VCC = MAX, VIN = 7.0 V
IIL Input LOW Current –0.4 mA VCC = MAX, VIN = 0.4 V
IOS Short Circuit Current (Note 1) –20 –100 mA VCC = MAX
ICC
Power Supply Current
CC Total, Output HIGH 1.6 mA VCC = MAX
Total, Output LOW 4.4
CC
Note 1: Not more than one output should be shorted at a time, nor for more than 1 second.
AC CHARACTERISTICS (TA = 25C)
Limits
Symbol Parameter Min Typ Max Unit Test Conditions
tPLH Turn-Off Delay, Input to Output 9.0 15 ns VCC = 5.0 V
tPHL Turn-On Delay, Input to Output 10 15 ns
CC
CL = 15 pF
502 C H A P T E R 1 1 • Logic Gate Circuitry
The 74XX00 NAND gate data is sufficient to represent any logic functions having
“normal” output current within its particular logic family. This data can be used for most
gate or flip-flop circuits within the family. Some specialized devices with higher-current
outputs (e.g., 74XX244 octal tristate buffers) have a different set of electrical characteristics
within their family.
In the following sections of the chapter, we will use a NAND gate from each of
three device families (74LS00, 74HC00A, and 74HCT00A) for illustrating the general
principles of the various electrical characteristics. Devices from other families will also
be used in examples and problems. Data sheets for the various devices are included in
Appendix C.
❘❙❚ SECTION 11.1 REVIEW PROBLEM
11.1 What are the maximum values of voltage and current we can expect at the output of
a 74LS00 NAND gate when both inputs are LOW?
11.2 Propagation Delay
tpHL Propagation delay when the device output is changing from HIGH to LOW.
tpLH Propagation delay when the device output is changing from LOW to HIGH.
Propagation delay occurs because the output of a logic gate or flip-flop cannot respond
instantaneously to changes at its input. There is a short delay, on the order of several
nanoseconds, between input change and output response. This is largely due to the charging
and discharging of capacitances inherent in the switching transistors of the gate or flipflop.
Figure 11.4 shows propagation delay in two gates: a 74XX00 NAND gate and a
74XX08 AND gate. Each gate has an identical input waveform, a LOW-HIGH-LOW
pulse. After each input transition, the output changes after a short delay, tp.
K E Y T E R M S
FIGURE 11.4
Propagation Delay in NAND and AND Gates
Two delays are shown for each gate: tpLH and tpHL. The LH and HL subscripts show
the direction of change at the gate output; LH indicates that the output goes from LOW to
HIGH, and HL shows the output changing from HIGH to LOW.
Propagation delay is the time between input and output voltages passing through a
standard reference value. The reference voltage for standard TTL is 1.5 V. LSTTL and
CMOS have different reference voltages, as follows.
11.2 • Propagation Delay 503
Propagation Delay for Various Logic Families:
LSTTL: Time from 1.3 V at input to 1.3 V at output.
Other TTL: Time from 1.5 V at input to 1.5 V at output.
CMOS: Time from 50% of maximum input to 50% of maximum output.
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.2 Use the data sheet in Figure 11.3, as well as those in Appendix C, to find the maximum
propagation delays for each of the following gates: 74LS00 (quadruple 2-input NAND),
74LS02 (quadruple 2-input NOR), 74LS08 (quadruple 2-input AND), and 74LS32
(quadruple 2-input OR).
Solution
N O T E
Table 11.2 Propagation Delays of 74LS Gates
74LS00 74LS02 74LS08 74LS32
tpLH 15 ns 15 ns 15 ns 22 ns
tpHL 15 ns 15 ns 20 ns 22 ns
Table 11.2 shows the variation of propagation delay among logic gates of the same
family (74LS TTL). Since each logic function has a different circuit, its propagation delay
will differ from those of gates with different functions.
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.3 Use data sheets to find the maximum propagation delays for each of the following logic
gates: 74F00, 74AS00, 74ALS00, 74HC00, and 74HCT00.
Solution
Table 11.3 Propagation Delays of 74LS Gates
74F00* 74AS00 74ALS00 74HC00** 74HCT00***
tpLH 6 ns 4.5 ns 11 ns 15 ns 19 ns
tpHL 5.3 ns 4 ns 8 ns 15 ns 19 ns
*Temperature range (74F00): 0°C to 70°C.
**VCC _ 4.5 V, temperature range (74HC00): _55°C to 25°C.
***VCC _ 5 V, temperature range (74HCT00): _55°C to 25°C.
As indicated by the notes for Table 11.3, propagation delay (and other parameters)
vary with certain operating conditions, such as ambient temperature and power supply
voltage. Always make sure that the operating conditions are correctly specified when looking
up a data sheet parameter.
❘❙❚
All gates in Example 11.3 have the same logic function (2-input NAND), but different
propagation delay times. We might ask, “Why not always use the advanced Schottky
TTL gate (74AS00), since it is the fastest?” The main reason is that it has the highest
power dissipation of the gates shown. We wouldn’t know this without looking
up other specs on the data sheet. (We will learn how to do this later in the chapter.) Thus,
it is important to make design decisions based on complete information, not just one
parameter.
504 C H A P T E R 1 1 • Logic Gate Circuitry
Propagation Delay in Logic Circuits
A circuit consisting of two or more gates or flip-flops has a propagation delay that is the
sum of delays in the input-to-output path. Delays in gates that do not affect the circuit
output are disregarded. Figure 11.5 shows how propagation delay works in a simple logic
circuit consisting of a 74HC08 AND gate and a 74HC32 OR gate. Changes at inputs A and
B must propagate through both gates to affect the output. The total delay in such a case is
the sum of tp1 and tp2. A change at input C must pass only through gate 2. The circuit delay
resulting from this change is only tp2.
FIGURE 11.5
Propagation Delays in a Logic Gate Circuit
The timing diagram in Figure 11.5 shows the changes at inputs A, B, and C and the resulting
transitions at all gate outputs.
Assume VCC _ 4.5 V and temperature range is _55°C to 25°C.
1. When A goes LOW, AB, the output of gate 1, also goes LOW after a maximum delay of
tpHL _ 15 ns. This makes Y go LOW after a further delay of up to tpHL _ 15 ns. Total
delay: tp _ tpHL1 _ tpHL2 _ 15 ns _ 15 ns _ 30 ns, max.
2. The HIGH-to-LOW transition at input B has no effect, since there is no difference between
0 _ 1 and 0 _ 0. AB is already LOW.
3. The LOW-to-HIGH transition at input C makes Y go HIGH after a maximum delay of
tpLH2 _ 15 ns.
❘❙❚ SECTION 11.2 REVIEW PROBLEM
11.2 Assume the gates in Figure 11.5 are replaced by a 74LS08 AND gate and a 74LS32
OR gate. Repeat the calculations of for the propagation delays if the waveforms of
Figure 11.5 are applied to the circuit. The data sheets for the 74LS08 and 74LS32 are
found in Appendix C.
11.3 • Fanout 505
11.3 Fanout
Fanout The number of load gates that a logic gate output is capable of driving
without possible logic errors.
Driving gate A gate whose output supplies current to the inputs of other gates.
Load gate A gate whose input current is supplied by the output of another gate.
Sourcing A terminal on a gate or flip-flop is sourcing current when the current
flows out of the terminal.
Sinking A terminal on a gate or flip-flop is sinking current when the current flows
into the terminal.
IOL Current measured at a device output when the output is LOW.
IOH Current measured at a device output when the output is HIGH.
IIL Current measured at a device input when the input is LOW.
IIH Current measured at a device input when the input is HIGH.
We have assumed that logic gates are able to drive any number of other logic gates. Since
gates are electrical devices with finite current-driving capabilities, this is obviously not the
case. The number of gates (“loads”) a logic gate can drive is referred to as its fanout.
Fanout is simply an application of Kirchhoff’s current law: The algebraic sum of
currents at a node must be zero. Thus, the fanout of a logic gate is limited by:
a. The maximum current its output can supply safely in a given logic state (IOH or
IOL), and
b. The current requirements of the load to which it is connected (IIH or IIL).
Figure 11.6 shows the fanout of an AND gate when its output is in the HIGH and
LOW states. The AND gate, or driving gate, supplies current to the inputs of the other four
gates, which are called the load gates.
Each load gate requires a fixed amount of input current, depending on which state it is
in. The sum of these input currents equals the current supplied by the driving gate. The
N O T E
K E Y T E R M S
FIGURE 11.6
Driving Gates and Load Gates
506 C H A P T E R 1 1 • Logic Gate Circuitry
fanout is determined by the amount of current the driving gate can supply without damaging
its output circuit.
The input and output currents of a gate are established by its internal circuitry. These
values are usually the same for two gates in the same family, since the input and output circuitry
of a gate is common to all members of the family. Exceptions may occur when the
output of a particular gate, such as the 74XX244 octal three-state buffer, has additional output
buffering or an input of a gate such as a 74LS86 Exclusive OR is equivalent to more
than one input load.
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.4 The gates in Figure 11.7a and b are 74LS00 NAND gates. Determine the output current of
the driving gate in each figure.
H
H
IOL
L
IIL
L
L
IOH
H
IIH
a. Low output on driving gate
b. High output on driving gate
FIGURE 11.7
Example 11.4
Output Current due to One
Load Gate
Solution From the 74LS00 data sheet, IIL__0.4 mA and IIH _ 20 _A. (There are two
values of IIH given in the data sheet. Choose the one for the condition VIN _ 2.7 V, which
is the minimum output voltage of a driving gate in the HIGH state (VOH). The other value
is not appropriate since a gate will never have a 7 V output, as specified in the condition, if
its supply voltage is 5 V.)
Since the driving gate is driving one load, its output current is the same as the input
current of the load gate. Therefore, the driving gate output currents are given by IOL _ 0.4
mA (positive, since it is entering the driving gate output) and IOH _ _20 _A (negative,
since it is leaving the driving gate output).
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.5 Determine the output current of the driving gate in each of Figures 11.8a and b if the gates
are all 74LS00 NAND gates.
H
H
IOL
L
IIL
IIL
a. Low output on driving gate
L
L
IOH
H
IIH
IIH
b. High output on driving gate
FIGURE 11.8
Example 11.5
Output Current due to Two Load
Gates
11.3 • Fanout 507
Solution Since there are two identical load gates in the circuits of Figure 11.8, the driving
gate output current will be twice the load gate input current.
IOL _ 2 _ 0.4 mA _ 0.8 mA.
IOH _ 2 _ (_20 _A) __40 _A.
❘❙❚
Figure 11.9 shows the extension of the circuits in Figures 11.7 and 11.8, where the
number of load gates is the maximum that can be driven by the driving gate. This is the
condition used to calculate fanout.
H
H
IOL
L 1
2
nL
IIL
IIL
IIL
a. Low output on driving gate
b. High output on driving gate
L
L
IOH
H 1
2
nH
IIH
IIH
IIH
FIGURE 11.9
Output Current to Fanout Calculation
If the load gates each represent the same load, then by Kirchhoff’s current law (KCL):
IOL_ IIL1 _ IIL2 _ … IILnL _ nL IIL
and IOH _ IIH1 _ IIH2 _ … _ IIHnH _ nH IIH
The fanout of the driving gate in the LOW and HIGH states can be calculated as:
nL_
IOL
IIL
and nH_
IOH
IIH
By convention, current entering a gate (IIH, IOL) is denoted as positive, and current leaving
a gate (IIL, IOH) is denoted as negative. When current is leaving a gate, we say the gate is
sourcing current. When current is entering a gate, we say the gate is sinking current.
Note that the output of a gate does not always source current, nor does an input always
sink current. The current direction changes for the HIGH and LOW states at the same terminal.
The reason for this will become apparent when we study the circuitry of logic gate
inputs and outputs.
508 C H A P T E R 1 1 • Logic Gate Circuitry
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.6 How many 74LS00 inputs can a 74LS00 NAND gate drive? (that is, what is the fanout of
a 74LS00 NAND gate?)
Solution We must consider the following cases:
a. When the output of the driving gate is LOW
b. When the output of the driving gate is HIGH
Output LOW:
IOL _ 8 mA (sinking)
IIL _ _0.4 mA (sourcing)
nL _ 8 mA/0.4 mA _ 20
Output HIGH:
IOH _ _0.4 mA (sourcing)
IIH _ 20 _A (sinking)
nH _ 0.4 mA/20 _A _ 20
Since nL _ nH, fanout is 20.
We disregard the negative sign in our calculations, since the input current of the load
gate and output current of the driving gate are actually in the same direction. For example,
even though IOH is leaving the driving gate (negative), IIH is entering the load gates (positive).
These currents flow in the same direction. If we include the minus sign in our calculation,
we get a negative value of fanout, which is meaningless.
❘❙❚
The fanout in both HIGH and LOW states is the same in this case, but that is not always
so. If the values of HIGH- and LOW-state fanout are different, the smallest value
must be used. For example, if a gate can drive four loads in the HIGH state or eight in the
LOW state, the fanout of the driving gate is four loads. If we attempt to drive eight loads,
we can’t guarantee enough driving current to supply all loads in both states.
If a gate from one logic family is used to drive gates from another logic family, we
must use the output parameters (IOL, IOH) for the driving gate and the input parameters (IIL,
IIH) for the load gates.
❘❙❚ EXAMPLE 11.7 Calculate the maximum number of Schottky TTL loads (74SXX series) that a 74LS86
XOR gate can drive.
Solution
Driving gate: 74LS86 IOH__0.4 mA,
IOL _ 8 mA
Load gates: 74SXX IIH _ 50 _A,
IIL__2 mA
Output LOW:
IOL _ 8 mA (sinking)
IIL _ _2 mA (sourcing)
nL _ 8 mA/2 mA _ 4
Output HIGH:
IOH _ _0.4 mA (sourcing)
IIH _ 50 _A (sinking)
nH _ 0.4 mA/50 _A _ 8
Since nL _ nH, fanout _ nL _ 4.
❘❙❚
11.3 • Fanout 509
What happens if we load a gate output beyond its rated fanout? Adding more load
gates will do this by increasing the value of IOL beyond its maximum rating. If enough load
is added, the output of the driving gate might be destroyed by the heat generated by the excess
current. More likely, the performance of the driving gate will be degraded.
Figure 11.10 shows the relationship between output voltage and current for a 74LS00
and a 74F00 NAND gate. Figure 11.10a shows that the output voltage (LOW state) increases
with increasing sink current. Figure 11.10b indicates a decrease in HIGH state output
voltage with an increase of source current.
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