When simulating off-state current of any circuit, always run a transient simulation. Use the following transient sequence to enable/disable your circuit: {enable, disable, enable}. This will help determine if there are any floating, high-impedance nodes that can cause the off-state current to decay slowly.
The IEEE Wireless and Microwave Technology Conference (WAMICON) is an IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques Society (MTT-S) sponsored conference. The conference will address up-to-date multidisciplinar...
The Design Automation Conference (DAC) is the premier event for the design of electronic circuits and systems, and for EDA and silicon solutions. DAC features a wide array of technical presentations p...
http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/rndcalc
The IEEE Spectrum R&D 100 Graph-o-Matic gives you access to seven years’ worth of R&D spending data as provided to us by Standard & Poors. Use this tool to compare R&D expenditures, sales, and number of employees among companies, industries, and countries where these companies are based.
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Analog design does not scale the way digital design does. Namely, as process shrinks, one does not immediately benefit by having reduced power consumption for the same performanc
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Let’s say that you’ve designed the circuit with a supply voltage (VDD) of 2.4 V. It’s performing very well. You meet exactly the specified linearity and noise requirements, and are within the desired current limits. The power d
From HotChips.org
Funny, short presentation from Professor Mark Horowitz of Stanford.
http://www.hotchips.org/archives/hc19/2_Mon/HC19.Panel/HC19.panel.03.pdf