CSE245: Computer-Aided Circuit Simulation and Verification - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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CSE245: Computer-Aided Circuit Simulation and Verification

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Sparse Table Analysis (STA) Nodal Analysis (NA) Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA) ... Example shows how NA may be derived from STA ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CSE245: Computer-Aided Circuit Simulation and Verification


1
CSE245 Computer-Aided Circuit Simulation and
Verification
  • Lecture 1 Introduction and Formulation
  • Spring 2008
  • Chung-Kuan Cheng

2
Administration
  • CK Cheng, CSE 2130, tel. 534-6184,
    ckcheng_at_ucsd.edu
  • Lectures 1230 150pm TTH WLH2205
  • Textbooks
  • Electronic Circuit and System Simulation Methods
  • T.L. Pillage, R.A. Rohrer, C. Visweswariah,
    McGraw-Hill
  • Interconnect Analysis and Synthesis
  • CK Cheng, J. Lillis, S. Lin, N. Chang, John
    Wiley Sons
  • Grading
  • Homework and Projects 60
  • Project Presentation 20
  • Final Report 20

3
CSE245 Course Outline
  • Formulation (2-3 lectures)
  • RLC Linear, Nonlinear Components,Transistors,
    Diodes
  • Incident Matrix
  • Nodal Analysis, Modified Nodal Analysis
  • K Matrix
  • Linear System (3-4 lectures)
  • S domain analysis, Impulse Response
  • Taylors expansion
  • Moments, Passivity, Stability, Realizability
  • Symbolic analysis, Y-Delta, BDD analysis
  • Matrix Solver (3-4 lectures)
  • LU, KLU, reordering
  • Mutigrid, PCG, GMRES

4
CSE245 Course Outline (Cont)
  • Integration (3-4 lectures)
  • Forward Euler, Backward Euler, Trapezoidal Rule
  • Explicit and Implicit Method, Prediction and
    Correction
  • Equivalent Circuit
  • Errors Local error, Local Truncation Error,
    Global Error
  • A-Stable
  • Alternating Direction Implicit Method
  • Nonlinear System (2-3 lectures)
  • Newton Raphson, Line Search
  • Transmission Line, S-Parameter (2-3 lectures)
  • FDTD equivalent circuit, convolution
  • Frequency dependent components
  • Sensitivity
  • Mechanical, Thermal, Bio Analysis

5
Motivation
  • Why
  • Whole Circuit Analysis, Interconnect Dominance
  • What
  • Power, Clock, Interconnect Coupling
  • Where
  • Matrix Solvers, Integration Methods
  • RLC Reduction, Transmission Lines, S Parameters
  • Parallel Processing
  • Thermal, Mechanical, Biological Analysis

6
Circuit Simulation
  • Types of analysis
  • DC Analysis
  • DC Transfer curves
  • Transient Analysis
  • AC Analysis, Noise, Distortions, Sensitivity

7
Program Structure (a closer look)
Input and setup
Models
  • Numerical Techniques
  • Formulation of circuit equations
  • Solution of ordinary differential equations
  • Solution of nonlinear equations
  • Solution of linear equations

Output
8
Lecture 1 Formulation
  • Derive from KCL/KVL
  • Sparse Tableau Analysis (IBM)
  • Nodal Analysis, Modified Nodal Analysis (SPICE)

some slides borrowed from Berkeley EE219 Course
9
Conservation Laws
  • Determined by the topology of the circuit
  • Kirchhoffs Current Law (KCL) The algebraic sum
    of all the currents flowing out of (or into) any
    circuit node is zero.
  • No Current Source Cut
  • Kirchhoffs Voltage Law (KVL) Every circuit node
    has a unique voltage with respect to the
    reference node. The voltage across a branch vb is
    equal to the difference between the positive and
    negative referenced voltages of the nodes on
    which it is incident
  • No voltage source loop

10
Branch Constitutive Equations (BCE)
  • Ideal elements

Element Branch Eqn Variable parameter
Resistor v Ri -
Capacitor i Cdv/dt -
Inductor v Ldi/dt -
Voltage Source v vs i ?
Current Source i is v ?
VCVS vs AV vc i ?
VCCS is GT vc v ?
CCVS vs RT ic i ?
CCCS is AI ic v ?
11
Formulation of Circuit Equations
  • Unknowns
  • B branch currents (i)
  • N node voltages (e)
  • B branch voltages (v)
  • Equations
  • NB Conservation Laws
  • B Constitutive Equations
  • 2BN equations, 2BN unknowns gt unique solution

12
Equation Formulation - KCL
Law State Equation
A i 0
Node 1 Node 2
N equations
Branches
Kirchhoffs Current Law (KCL)
13
Equation Formulation - KVL
R3
1
2
Is5
R1
R4
G2v3
0
Law State Equation
v - AT e 0
vi voltage across branch i ei voltage at node
i
B equations
Kirchhoffs Voltage Law (KVL)
14
Equation Formulation - BCE
Law State Equation
Kvv Kii is
B equations
15
Equation FormulationNode-Branch Incidence Matrix
A
branches
n o d e s
(1, -1, 0)
16
Equation Assembly (Stamping Procedures)
  • Different ways of combining Conservation Laws and
    Branch Constitutive Equations
  • Sparse Table Analysis (STA)
  • Nodal Analysis (NA)
  • Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA)

17
Sparse Tableau Analysis (STA)
  1. Write KCL Ai0 (N eqns)
  2. Write KVL v - ATe0 (B eqns)
  3. Write BCE Kii KvvS (B eqns)

N2B eqns N2B unknowns
N nodes B branches
Sparse Tableau
18
Sparse Tableau Analysis (STA)
  • Advantages
  • It can be applied to any circuit
  • Eqns can be assembled directly from input data
  • Coefficient Matrix is very sparse
  • Disadvantages
  • Sophisticated programming techniques and data
  • structures are required for time and memory
  • efficiency

19
Nodal Analysis (NA)
  • 1. Write KCL
  • Ai0 (N equations, B unknowns)
  • 2. Use BCE to relate branch currents to branch
    voltages
  • if(v) (B equations ? B unknowns)
  • Use KVL to relate branch voltages to node
    voltages
  • vh(e) (B equations ? N unknowns)

N eqns N unknowns N nodes
Yneins
Nodal Matrix
20
Nodal Analysis - Example
R3
  1. KCL Ai0
  2. BCE Kvv i is ? i is - Kvv ? A Kvv A
    is
  3. KVL v ATe ? A KvATe A is

Yne ins
Yn AKvAT Ins Ais
21
Nodal Analysis
  • Example shows how NA may be derived from STA
  • Better Method Yn may be obtained by direct
    inspection (stamping procedure)
  • Each element has an associated stamp
  • Yn is the composition of all the elements stamps

22
Nodal Analysis Resistor Stamp
Spice input format Rk N N- Rkvalue
What if a resistor is connected to
ground? . Only contributes to the diagonal
KCL at node N KCL at node N-
23
Nodal Analysis VCCS Stamp
Spice input format Gk N N- NC NC-
Gkvalue
KCL at node N KCL at node N-
24
Nodal Analysis Current source Stamp
Spice input format Ik N N- Ikvalue
N N-
N N-
Ik
25
Nodal Analysis (NA)
  • Advantages
  • Yn is often diagonally dominant and symmetric
  • Eqns can be assembled directly from input data
  • Yn has non-zero diagonal entries
  • Yn is sparse (not as sparse as STA) and smaller
    than STA NxN compared to (N2B)x(N2B)
  • Limitations
  • Conserved quantity must be a function of node
    variable
  • Cannot handle floating voltage sources, VCVS,
    CCCS, CCVS

26
Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA)
How do we deal with independent voltage sources?
Ekl
k l

-
l
k
ikl
  • ikl cannot be explicitly expressed in terms of
    node voltages ? it has to be added as unknown
    (new column)
  • ek and el are not independent variables anymore ?
    a constraint has to be added (new row)

27
MNA Voltage Source Stamp
Spice input format Vk N N- Ekvalue
0 0 1
0 0 -1
1 -1 0
N
28
Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA)
  • How do we deal with independent voltage sources?
  • Augmented nodal matrix

In general
Some branch currents
29
MNA General rules
  • A branch current is always introduced as an
    additional variable for a voltage source or an
    inductor
  • For current sources, resistors, conductors and
    capacitors, the branch current is introduced only
    if
  • Any circuit element depends on that branch
    current
  • That branch current is requested as output

30
MNA CCCS and CCVS Stamp
31
MNA An example
Step 1 Write KCL
(1) (2) (3) (4)
32
MNA An example
Step 2 Use branch equations to eliminate as many
branch currents as possible
(1) (2) (3) (4)
Step 3 Write down unused branch equations
(b6) (b7)
33
MNA An example
Step 4 Use KVL to eliminate branch voltages from
previous equations
(1) (2) (3) (4) (b6) (b7)
34
MNA An example
35
Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA)
  • Advantages
  • MNA can be applied to any circuit
  • Eqns can be assembled directly from input data
  • MNA matrix is close to Yn
  • Limitations
  • Sometimes we have zeros on the main diagonal
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