From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "logic family"
m |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | A logic family may refer to two tightly related concepts. A '''logic family''' is a collection of devices that share the same core technology used to implement [[integrated circuit]]s logic (e.g. [[CMOS]] vs [[Bipolar]]). A '''logic family''' is also used to refer to the various '''logic sub-families''' where particular technique used to implement logic gates (e.g. [[Dynamic CMOS]] vs [[Static CMOS]]. | + | A logic family may refer to two tightly related concepts. A '''logic family''' is a collection of devices that share the same core technology used to implement [[integrated circuit]]s logic (e.g. [[CMOS]] vs [[Bipolar]]). A '''logic family''' is also used to refer to the various '''logic sub-families''' where particular technique used to implement [[logic gates]] (e.g. [[Dynamic CMOS]] vs [[Static CMOS]]. |
== Types == | == Types == |
Revision as of 11:17, 24 November 2015
A logic family may refer to two tightly related concepts. A logic family is a collection of devices that share the same core technology used to implement integrated circuits logic (e.g. CMOS vs Bipolar). A logic family is also used to refer to the various logic sub-families where particular technique used to implement logic gates (e.g. Dynamic CMOS vs Static CMOS.
Types
- field-effect transistor (FET)
- bipolar junction transistor (BJT)
- transistor-transistor logic (TTL)
- mmitter-coupled logic (ECL)
- diode-transistor logic (DTL)
- complemented transistor diode logic (CTDL)
- high-threshold logic (HTL)
- resistor-transistor logic (RTL)
- integrated injection logic (IIL)
- bipolar complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor logic (BiCMOS)