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But , when I tried this in MODELSIM and Cadence , I found a few discrepancies ..
1) 5V at the input gave 4.6Vat the output
2) 0V at input gave 0.7V at the output
Why is this difference coming ????
itsthepip said:Hi,
If u interchange the roles of NMOS and PMOS , then NMOS would be connected to the supply and PMOS would be connected to the ground .
In that case, if u apply a zero , then NMOS would be OFF and PMOS would be ON ....so the output will be tied to ground ....and ieffect, it will be a zero .
If u apply a one, then NMOS would conduct and PMOS would be OFF ..So the output would be pulled up to the supply voltage ....U will get a one in this case...
If u observe both the cases , a zero at the input is giving rise to zero at the output...Similarly, a one at the input gives a one a the output...This is the operaion of a buffer .......
itsthepip said:Probably the difference might be due to the fact that PMOS conducts a zero easily and doesnot conduct one easily..
NMOS conducts one easily and doesnot conduct zero easily......