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![]() | Analog Integrated Circuit Design by David Johns, Ken Martin ISBN-10: 0471144487 ISBN-10: 0-471-14448-7 ISBN-13: 9780471144489 ISBN-13: 978-0-471-14448-9 Hardcover 1996-11-15 Wiley Find Lowest Price | |
Editorials | ||
Product Description Offers a modern look at analog integrated circuit design. Covering everything from processing steps to models to high level circuit design issues, the authors make it a point to emphasize the "real-life" implications of this material for the circuit designer as a professional. This text presents a concise treatment of the wide array of knowledge required for integrated circuit design. Emphasis on the most important and fundamental principles in creating state-of-the-art analog circuits. Coverage includes contemporary topics such as dynamically matched current mirrors, digital error correction and interpolation, and folding D/D converters. | ||
Reviews | ||
Easy to Understand, Simple, Clear I have had this book since 1999 and I use it a lot for my work. I have to give it 5 stars because I really understand what the authors write in this book compared to many other "Analog IC Design" books in the market. Any new circuit that I have to design and/or tweak, I refer this book first. It best suits 95% of the IC design engineers who are average Joe/Jane like me. Thank you authors. | ||
Analog Integrated Circuit Design This book came on time and I use it for class EEC 212 at University of California, Davis | ||
Very good reference A very good book to have in any analog designer's library. It presents analog design tradeoffs in a very simple, intuitive manner. Mathematics is kept to the required minimum so this book should not be used by undergraduates who want to understand how to derive each equation. Many of the topics presented use approximations and hand waving to provide a basic understanding of a circuit. The topic coverage is excellent. In short it provides enough detail for any circuit designer to test his understanding of several topics. That said, Gray and Meyer remains the bible in this field though and Allen and Holberg is the bible for CMOS. | ||
Hopeless I found that the book is just NOT suitable for those who have some foundation. A very few examples are solved and it does not give the explaination in a student friendly manner. I simply DON'T Recommend this book to anyone. I also found that if you buy this book you have to buy 10 other books to understand the concepts. | ||
Good Reference Book; But not for beginner This is an excellent reference book for graduate students/exeperienced engineers. It gives readers a lot of practical tips on designing useful circuits. But sometimes those tips are so practical that a beginner might consider them as distractions. If you are a beginner, I won't recommend this book. | ||