[SOLVED] a digital circuit without reset signal

Status
Not open for further replies.

Josephchiang

Member level 1
Joined
Oct 2, 2013
Messages
38
Helped
0
Reputation
0
Reaction score
0
Trophy points
6
Location
Hsinchu, Taiwan, Taiwan
Visit site
Activity points
400
Does the digital circuit which without reset signal exist?

if it don't, it mean the "power on reset circuit" is needed in each digital circuit.

The difficulty to implement the power on reset circuit on my chip is that the reset time interval is a very long time (Max. about 1 second) as shown in the figure.



So it need a very large value of Resistor and Capacitor to achieve this goal.

But it is not practicable in the fully on chip design.


Any suggestion is helpful,

Thanks in advance.


Best regards,
Joseph
 

There are certainly digital circuits that don't have a reset. However, they may initialize to an unknown state. This may or may not be a problem, depending on the specific application.

If you really need an on-chip reset, and can't accommodate a large RC (I don't know why), you could use a counter.
 

Thanks a lot,

Would you please elaborate the specific application. I have no idea about it.

Any reference or material is helpful.

Actually, The a large RC value may could be achieve on chip, but it is not economical due to cost lots of chip area.

The one square micro-meter approximate to 1 pF

The sheet resistance of poly resistor is about 30~1xx ohm
 

Use a very short power on reset to reset the counter based reset. Use google to find a counter reset circuit.

Regards
 
Use a very short power on reset to reset the counter based reset. Use google to find a counter reset circuit.

Regards


I'm glad to see your reply again but I was still confused that what type of application don't have a reset. Could you give me more clue?

How to avoid going wrong when using the digital circuit without reset signal?

Have any precaution exist?

Thanks
 


There millions of circuits that don't have a reset. The question is : Does your application require a reset? Does it require that you start from a specific state?
Just as a stupid example, suppose you have a circuit that blinks a light-on for 100 clock cycles, off for 100 cycles. You would use a counter for this application, but it wouldn't be necessary to have a reset-it could power up with an unknown state in the counter, but eventually would settle in to proper operation.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more…