Rechnergestützter Entwurf hochintegrierter MOS-Schaltungen


Book Description

Dieses Buch enthält die notwendigen Grundlagen für das Verständnis und den Entwurf hochintegrierter MOS-Schaltungen. Obwohl der rechnerunterstützte Entwurf dabei im Vordergrund steht, werden die notwendigen physikalischen und elektrotechnischen Grundbegriffe nicht vernachlässigt. Auch wird die Herstellung integrierter Schaltungen kurz angesprochen, da ein gewisses produktionstechnisches Verständnis für den Entwurf notwendig ist. Damit ist dieses Buch weniger zur Erweiterung und Vertiefung der zu den angsprochenen Themen reichlich vorhandenen Spezialliteratur gedacht. Vielmehr sollen die notwendigen Grundlagen sowohl des Schaltungsentwurfs als auch der Entwurfsautomatisierung verständlich zusammengestellt werden, um den Leser in die Lage zu versetzen, auf dem Gebiet des Entwurfs hochintegrierter Schaltungen tätig zu werden und die Spezialliteratur zu verstehen. Der Leser lernt digitale MOS-Schaltungen in verschiedenen Schaltungstechniken auf der Schaltkreisebene verstehen und zu entwerfen. Es werden verschiedene Entwurfsstile vorgestellt und die geläufigen Methoden und Algorithmen für Layout-Erstellung detailliert beschrieben.













German books in print


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Modelling and Simulation 1992


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Theory Of Superconductivity


Book Description

Theory of Superconductivity is primarily intended to serve as a background for reading the literature in which detailed applications of the microscopic theory of superconductivity are made to specific problems.




Understanding Complexity


Book Description

Peter A. Coming Palo Alto, CA November, 2000 This volwne represents a distillation of the plenary sessions at a unique millenniwn year event -a World Congress of the Systems Sciences in conjunction with the 44th annual meeting of the International Society for the Systems Sciences (ISSS). The overall theme of the conference was "Understanding Complexity in the New Millenniwn. " Held at Ryerson Polytechnic University in Toronto, Canada, from July 16-22,2000, the conference included some 350 participants from over 30 countries, many of whom were representatives of the 21 organizations and groups that co-hosted this landmark event. Each of these co-host organizations/groups also presented a segment of the program, including a plenary speech. In addition, the conference featured a nwnber of distinguished "keynote" speeches related to the three daily World Congress themes: (1) The Evolution of Complex Systems, (2) The Dynamics of Complex Systems, and (3) Human Systems in the 21st Century. There were also seven special plenary-level symposia on a range of timely topics, including: "The Art and Science of Forecasting in the Age of Global Wanning"; "Capitalism in the New Millenniwn: The Challenge of Sustainability"; "The Future of the Systems Sciences"; "Global Issues in the New Millenniwn"; "Resources and the Environment in the New Millenniwn"; "The Lessons of Y2K"; and "Can There be a Reconciliation Between Science and Religion?" Included in this special commemorative volume is a cross-section of these presentations.




Discrete Tomography


Book Description

Goals of the Book Overthelast thirty yearsthere has been arevolutionindiagnostic radiology as a result oftheemergenceofcomputerized tomography (CT), which is the process of obtaining the density distribution within the human body from multiple x-ray projections. Since an enormous variety of possible density values may occur in the body, a large number of projections are necessary to ensure the accurate reconstruction oftheir distribution. There are other situations in which we desire to reconstruct an object from its projections, but in which we know that the object to be recon structed has only a small number of possible values. For example, a large fraction of objects scanned in industrial CT (for the purpose of nonde structive testing or reverse engineering) are made of a single material and so the ideal reconstruction should contain only two values: zero for air and the value associated with the material composing the object. Similar as sumptions may even be made for some specific medical applications; for example, in angiography ofthe heart chambers the value is either zero (in dicating the absence of dye) or the value associated with the dye in the chamber. Another example arises in the electron microscopy of biological macromolecules, where we may assume that the object to be reconstructed is composed of ice, protein, and RNA. One can also apply electron mi croscopy to determine the presenceor absence ofatoms in crystallinestruc tures, which is again a two-valued situation.