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Overview

Overview. Last lecture R-S latches Today Cascading latches Flip-Flops. R. R. Q'. R. Q'. S. S. Q. S. Q. clock. Cascading latches. Connect output of one latch to input of another How to stop changes from racing through chain?

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Overview

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  1. Overview • Last lecture • R-S latches • Today • Cascading latches • Flip-Flops CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 1

  2. R R Q' R Q' S S Q S Q clock Cascading latches • Connect output of one latch to input of another • How to stop changes from racing through chain? • need to be able to control flow of data from one latch to the next • move one latch per clock period • have to worry about logic between latches (arrows) that is too fast CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 2

  3. slave stage master stage R Q' R Q' P' R S Q S Q S P CLK Master-slave structure • Break flow by alternating clocks (like an air-lock) • use positive clock to latch inputs into one R-S latch • use negative clock to change outputs with another R-S latch • View pair as one basic unit • master-slave flip-flop • twice as much logic • output changes a few gate delays after the falling edge of clock but does not affect any cascaded flip-flops CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 3

  4. 1s catch Set Reset slave stage master stage R Q' R Q' S R CLK P P' Q Q' P' R S Q S Q MasterOutputs S P SlaveOutputs CLK The 1s catching problem • In first R-S stage of master-slave FF • 0-1-0 glitch on R or S while clock is high is "caught" by master stage • leads to constraints on logic to be hazard-free CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 4

  5. slave stage master stage R Q' R Q' P' K S Q S Q J P CLK J-K flip flop • Allows input pair (1,1) but 1’s catching is still there When (J,K) = (1,1) Go from state (Q,Q’) to (Q’,Q) Q (t+1) = JQ’(t) + K’Q(t) CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 5

  6. slave stage master stage P' Q' R Q' R Q' Q D S Q S Q P CLK D flip-flop • Make S and R complements of each other • eliminates 1s catching problem • can't just hold previous value (must have new value ready every clock period) • value of D just before clock goes low is what is stored in flip-flop • can make R-S flip-flop by adding logic to make D = S + R' Q 10 gates CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 6

  7. D’ D 0 R Q Clk=1 Q’ S 0 D’ D Edge-triggered flip-flops • More efficient solution: only 6 gates • sensitive to inputs only near edge of clock signal (not while high) holds D' when clock goes low negative edge-triggered D flip-flop (D-FF) 4-5 gate delays must respect setup and hold time constraints to successfullycapture input holds D whenclock goes low characteristic equationQ(t+1) = D CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 7

  8. D’ D’ D D D’ D’ R R Q Q Clk=0 Clk=0 S S D D D’ D’ D new D Edge-triggered flip-flops (cont’d) • Step-by-step analysis new D  old D when clock is low data is held when clock goes high-to-low data is latched CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 8

  9. Edge-triggered flip-flops (cont’d) • Positive edge-triggered • inputs sampled on rising edge; outputs change after rising edge • Negative edge-triggered flip-flops • inputs sampled on falling edge; outputs change after falling edge 100 D CLK Qpos Qpos' Qneg Qneg' positive edge-triggered FF negative edge-triggered FF CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 9

  10. Q T Q T(t) Q(t) Q(t + t) > 0 0 0 0 1 1 CLK 1 0 1 1 1 0 T flip-flop • Full name: Toggle flip-flop • Output toggles state when input is asserted • Q(t + t)=Q(t)‘ T + Q(t) T’ • If T=1, then Q  Q' when CLK • If T=0, then Q  Q when CLK CSE 370 – Winter 2002 - Sequential Logic-2 - 10

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