transistor noise in TRAN simulation

Discussion in 'Cadence' started by Alexey Borodenkov, May 24, 2004.

  1. Sorry, if this question is stupid, but anyway...

    Is the transistor noise included in the transient simulation??
    If yes, than which kinds of noise (thermal, flicker etc)?

    Regards, Alex
     
    Alexey Borodenkov, May 24, 2004
    #1

  2. No simulators that I know of add nosie to transient simulations. This
    would make the transient simulation non-repetable without specifying a
    noise seed value.

    Noise analysis usually means computing the transfer function (AC
    analysis type) from all noise sources to the desired output node. Gain
    from input to output nodes is then used to calculate input referred
    noise and noise figure. Each noise source gets its "gain" to the output
    node noted and the type of the noise source (thermal,flicker,etc) is
    noted to allow plots vs freqency and tabulate information.

    In spectreRF the PSS dynamic operating point is used to compute the
    noise transfer function as a function of time point within the periodic
    interval. This can cause single frequency noise points to be mapped back
    over several harmonics to a single point.
     
    Richard Griffith, May 25, 2004
    #2
  3. Alexey Borodenkov

    Paul Muller Guest

    Hi Alexey,

    as Christian mentioned, Eldo has transient noise simulation mode, which
    contains thermal noise and if the device parameters are set, also
    flicker noise. It can be useful to analyze folding of flicker noise
    components, e.g. in downsampling filters, but is not so trivial to
    set-up and especially interprete.

    You don't need to run MC-like multiple simulations, but your simulation
    time anyway gets quite long due to the extra calculations at each
    simulation point.

    If you have MGC products, have a look at the Eldo doc, there's a full
    chapter about it. If you don't, except flicker noise folding, which can
    be tough to calculate, you should be able to do almost everything with
    frequency domain simulations.

    Paul
     
    Paul Muller, May 25, 2004
    #3
  4. A better approach may be to use something like spectre's tdnoise analysis (part
    of pnoise in SpectreRF).

    There are issues with any transient noise based approach - see my previous
    append:

    http://groups.google.com/groups?q=&rnum=1

    Regards,

    Andrew.
     
    Andrew Beckett, May 25, 2004
    #4
  5. Alexey Borodenkov

    Paul Muller Guest

    Andrew,

    thank you for this info on tdnoise, I was not aware of this feature!
    This seems indeed to be more interesting than transient noise analysis.
    BTW, as an additional comment to Alexey, MGC doesn't make a big deal out
    of transient noise analysis, which seems to show that it may not be so
    useful...

    Paul
     
    Paul Muller, May 26, 2004
    #5
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