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Digital Electronics Electronics Technology

Digital Electronics Electronics Technology. RINKESH KURKURE In an as ROCK FRANCIS. Counters. Counter Competencies. 29. Given the schematic diagram of a counter circuit, the student will determine if this counter is synchronous or asynchronous.

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Digital Electronics Electronics Technology

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  1. Digital Electronics Electronics Technology RINKESH KURKURE In an as ROCK FRANCIS Counters

  2. Counter Competencies 29. Given the schematic diagram of a counter circuit, the student will determine if this counter is synchronous or asynchronous. 30. Given a schematic of an asynchronous counter, the student will identify the LSB flip-flop. 31. Given a schematic of a synchronous counter, the student will identify the LSB flip-flop. 32. Given the schematic of a counter and the value currently on the counter, the student will determine the new counter value if an instructor specified number of pulses are applied to the counter

  3. Counter Competencies 33. Given a modulus number from 16 to 32, the student will draw a schematic of flip-flops and NAND gates that will count this modulus starting with zero. 34. Given the schematic diagram of a synchronous counter circuit, the student will determine the modulus of the counter. 35. Given the schematic diagram of a synchronous counter circuit, the student will determine the counting sequence and list the sequence in decimal. 36. Given the schematic diagram of a counter and the clock input frequency, the student will determine the output frequency of the counter.

  4. Asynchronous up and down counters Asynchronous modulus counters Seven segment displays/ BCD coding Synchronous Counters Pre-settable Counters Ring Counters COUNTER UNIT

  5. COUNTERS CHARACTERISTICS 1. MODULUS- number of counts in one cycle 2. Up or down count 3. Asynchronous or synchronous operation 4. Free running or self stopping

  6. ASYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS • Only LSB flip-flop controlled by the clock input • Also known as a RIPPLE COUNTER • Two or more “T” flip-flops interconnected, output of each flip-flop connected to clock input of the next. • Modulus- number of stable states in each flip-flop cycle • Modulus = N= number of flip-flops • Highest number in count =

  7. BUILD A 4 BIT RIPPLE COUNTER 1. 4 JK flip-flops in toggle mode- all JK inputs tied high 2. Q outputs connected to clock input of following flip-flop 3. FF A = LSB (one with clock input); toggles when input clock toggles from high to low; FF D = MSB 4. FF B, C, D do not toggle till receive NGT from proceeding FF 5. Direction of count can be reversed by complementing each FF’s output or complementing each FF’s input

  8. TEST 1. What is the term for the number of counts in one counter cycle? Modulus of the counter 2. How is the modulus determined? 3. Since only the first flip-flop of a ripple counter is controlled by a clock, the counter is ____________________? Asynchronous 4. What is the mod number of a counter containing 5 flip-flops? 32 5. What is the highest count of a four bit counter? 31

  9. UNSTABLE STATE PROGRAMMING A RIPPLE COUNTER • Counters may be made to recycle after any desired count by using a gate to reset the counter. CONVERT MOD 8 TO MOD6

  10. 1. Determine smallest number of FF’s such that HOW TO BUILD A COUNTER TO GO FROM ZERO TO MOD NUMBER X 2. Connect a NAND gate output to asynchronous clears of all FF’s 3. Determine which FF’s will be high at count = X Connect the Q outputs of these FF’s to NAND gate inputs

  11. 1. Determine smallest number of FF’s such that thus 4 FF’s are required 1 1 0 0 BUILD A COUNTER THAT COUNTS FROM ZERO TO NINE (X=MOD 10) 2. Connect a NAND gate to asynchronous clears of all FF’s 3. Determine which FF’s will be high at count = X Connect the Q outputs of these FF’s to NAND gate inputs

  12. D C B A SELF-STOPPING COUNTER • Counters may be made to stop counting after any desired count by using a gate to inhibit the clock. • Stop at desired count:

  13. PROGRAMMING COUNTERS USING JK INPUTS • Counters can be controlled using the JK inputs • Low on JK of 1st FF will cause it to stop toggling on any count • High or low at JK inputs forces counter to skip states

  14. ASYNCHRONOUS DOWN COUNTER • Direction of count can be reversed by (a) complementing each FF’s output or (b) complementing each FF’s input

  15. COUNTER PROBLEM 1. What is the value of the last usable state before the NAND gate resets the circuitry? 2. What value does the NAND gate reset the value to? 3. What is the modulus of this counter? 4. If count starts at decimal 11 and receives seven clock pulses, what is the new value on the counter? 5. What is the unstable state of the counter?

  16. COUNTER PROBLEM 1. What is the value of the unstable state, in decimal? 2. At what value does the NAND gate set the counter to? 3. If QA=1, QB=1, and QC=0, and 5 clock pulses are applied: QC= QB= QA= 4. What is the modulus of this counter?

  17. IC ASYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS

  18. 7493 AS A MOD-16 COUNTER

  19. TEST Build a MOD 10 counter with a 7493

  20. BCD COUNTER • Binarycounter that counts from 0000 to 1001 before it recycles (MOD-10). • Widespread applications where pulses or events are to be counted and the results displayed on a decimal numerical read-out. • Also used for dividing a pulse frequency exactly by 10. Cascading BCD counters to count and display from 000 to 999.

  21. MOD-60 COUNTER Two 7493s can be combined to produce a MOD-60 Counter

  22. DIGITAL CLOCK

  23. COUNTERS ASYNCHRONOUS SYNCHRONOUS

  24. SYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS • Two or more FF’s connected as “T” FF’s. • All FF’s in the counter are clocked at the same time. • Advantage over the ripple counter is speed and accuracy but more complex.

  25. SYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS MOD <2 N • A NAND control gate is used to clear the counter before the full count.

  26. SYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS UP/DOWN

  27. PRESETTABLE COUNTERS Can be preset to any desired count. To operate: 1. Apply desired count to parallel data inputs P2, P1, P0. 2. Apply a low pulse to the parallel load input PL.

  28. COUNTER TYPES Asynchronous Counter (a.k.a. Ripple or Serial Counter): each FF is triggered one at a time with output of one FF serving as clock input of next FF in the chain. Synchronous Counter (a.k.a. Parallel Counter): all the FF’s in the counter are clocked at the same time. Up Counter: counter counts from zero to a maximum count. Down Counter: counter counts from a maximum count down to zero. BCD Counter: counter counts from 0000 to 1001 before it recycles. Pre-settable Counter: counter that can be preset to any starting count either synchronously or asynchronously Ring Counter: shift register in which the output of the last FF is connected back to the input of the first FF. Johnson Counter: shift register in which the inverted output of the last FF is connected to the input of the first FF.

  29. 74193 COUNTER MOD-16 PRESETTABLE UP/DOWN COUNTER

  30. RING COUNTER Shift register counter with feedback from Q of last FF back to first FF input

  31. JOHNSON COUNTER Shift register in which the inverted output of the last FF is fed back to the input of the first FF.

  32. Lab 18. A PROGRAMMABLE COUNTER Design a four-bit counter controlled by two control lines X and Y that behaves according to the truth table.

  33. Lab 18. A PROGRAMMABLE COUNTER

  34. RIPPLE COUNTER Binary Output Clock Input 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 Pulse 5 Pulse 8 Pulse 7 Pulse 6 Pulse 4 Pulse 1 Pulse 2 Pulse 3 This 4-bit counter has 16 states and will count from binary 0000 through 1111 and then reset back to 0000. The counter has amodulus of 16. On the next clock pulse (8) all FFs will toggle because each will receive aH-to-Lpulse- one after another. Watch the count ripple thru the counter. PS and CLR input are INACTIVE All J-K flip-flops in the TOGGLE MODE

  35. Clock input 1s output 2s output 4s output RIPPLE COUNTER WITH WAVEFORMS Binary Output Clock Input 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pulse 5 Pulse 1 Pulse 2 Pulse 3 Pulse 4 FFs triggered on H-to-L pulse. CLK toggles 1s FF. 1s FF toggles 2s FF. 2s FF toggles 4s FF.

  36. Short negative pulse To clear input of each FF DECADE COUNTER Initial count at 0111 Binary Output Clock Input 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Pulse 7 Pulse 6 Pulse 5 Pulse 4 Pulse 3 Pulse 2 Pulse 1 Pulse 8 All J & K inputs = 1 All PR inputs = 1 Count is at 1001. Next clock pulse will increment counter for a short time to 1010 which will activate the NAND gate and reset the counter to 0000. To change mod-16 counter to decade counter: Reset count to 0000 after 1001 (9) count. When count hits 1010 reset to 0000. See added 2-input NAND gate that clears all JK FFs to 0 when count hits 1010.

  37. DOWN COUNTER Initial count set at binary 111 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 Pulse 4 Pulse 2 Pulse 1 Pulse 3 Pulse 5 Changes from Ripple Up Counter are wiring from Q’ outputs (instead of Q outputs) to the CLK input of the next FF.

  38. SELF-STOPPING DOWN COUNTER Watch count on Pulse 8. The count remained at binary 000. 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 Pulse 2 Pulse 4 Pulse 3 Pulse 1 Pulse 5 Pulse 6 Pulse 8 Pulse 7 This is a 3-bit down counter. The 1s FF is in TOGGLE mode when counting (J & K = 1). The 1s FF switches to HOLD mode when the J and K inputs are forced LOW by the OR gate when the count decrements to 000. The count stops at 000.

  39. 200 Hz 400 Hz 100 Hz 50 Hz Clock Input COUNTER USED FOR FREQUENCY DIVISION  4  8  2  16 800 Hz

  40. ? Hz 400 Hz ? Hz 100 Hz ? Hz 800 Hz USING THE 7493 COUNTER IC • Counters are available in IC form. • Either ripple (7493 IC) or synchronous (74192 IC) counters are available. 1600 Hz 7493 Counter IC wired as a 4-bit binary counter

  41. A(0) A(1) 74HC85 Magnitude Comparator A(2) A(3) A > B B(0) A = B B(1) A < B B(2) B(3) MAGNITUDE COMPARATOR A magnitude comparator is a combinational logic device that compares the value of two binary numbers and responds with one of three outputs (A=B or A>B or A<B). Input binary 0111 Input binary 1111 Input binary 0001 HIGH HIGH Input binary 0111 Input binary 0110 Input binary 1100 HIGH

  42. TROUBLESHOOTING EQUIPMENT • Logic Probe • Logic Pulser • Logic Clip (logic monitor) • Digital IC Tester • DMM/Logic Probe • DMM or VOM • Dual-trace Oscilloscope • Logic Analyzer

  43. SIMPLE TROUBLESHOOTING HINTS • Feeltop of IC to determine if it is hot • Lookfor broken connections, signs of excessive heat • Smellfor overheating • Checkpower source • Tracepath of logic through circuit • Knowthe normal operation of the circuit

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