High Speed Serdes Devices and Applications von David Robert Stauffer | ISBN 9781441946416

High Speed Serdes Devices and Applications

von David Robert Stauffer und weiteren
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinDavid Robert Stauffer
Autor / AutorinJeanne Trinko Mechler
Autor / AutorinMichael A. Sorna
Autor / AutorinKent Dramstad
Autor / AutorinClarence Rosser Ogilvie
Autor / AutorinAmanullah Mohammad
Autor / AutorinJames Donald Rockrohr
Buchcover High Speed Serdes Devices and Applications | David Robert Stauffer | EAN 9781441946416 | ISBN 1-4419-4641-1 | ISBN 978-1-4419-4641-6

High Speed Serdes Devices and Applications

von David Robert Stauffer und weiteren
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinDavid Robert Stauffer
Autor / AutorinJeanne Trinko Mechler
Autor / AutorinMichael A. Sorna
Autor / AutorinKent Dramstad
Autor / AutorinClarence Rosser Ogilvie
Autor / AutorinAmanullah Mohammad
Autor / AutorinJames Donald Rockrohr
The simplest method of transferring data through the inputs or outputs of a silicon chip is to directly connect each bit of the datapath from one chip to the next chip. Once upon a time this was an acceptable approach. However, one aspect (and perhaps the only aspect) of chip design which has not changed during the career of the authors is Moore’s Law, which has dictated substantial increases in the number of circuits that can be manufactured on a chip. The pin densities of chip packaging technologies have not increased at the same pace as has silicon density, and this has led to a prevalence of High Speed Serdes (HSS) devices as an inherent part of almost any chip design. HSS devices are the dominant form of input/output for many (if not most) high-integration chips, moving serial data between chips at speeds up to 10 Gbps and beyond. Chip designers with a background in digital logic design tend to view HSS devices as simply complex digital input/output cells. This view ignores the complexity associated with serially moving billions of bits of data per second. At these data rates, the assumptions associated with digital signals break down and analog factors demand consideration. The chip designer who oversimplifies the problem does so at his or her own peril.