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Lecture on PSpice

Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975). Simulation Program for Integrated

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Page 1: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Lecture on PSpice

Page 2: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Introduction to SPICE

SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).

Simulation Program for Integrated Circuits Emphasis HSPICE = High-performance SPICE  PSpice = PC version of SPICE

Page 3: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

SPICE Functions DC analysis:

DC transfer curve Transient analysis:

voltage and current as a function of time AC Analysis:

output as a function of frequency Noise analysis and more …. SPICE has analog and digital libraries for standard

components(Transistor, NAND, NOR, …)

Different temperatures Default temperature is 300K

Page 4: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Components

Independent voltage and current sources Dependent voltage and current sources Resistor Capacitor Inductor Operational amplifier Transistor Digital gates …

Page 5: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

SPICE Source File

Title statement: first line Data statements: specify the Circuit, components,

interconnections Control statements: specify what types of analysis to

perform on the circuit. Output statements: specify outputs Comment statements: begin with an asterisk (*) End statement: .END <carriage return> "+" sign (continuation sign)

Page 6: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Suffixes

T Tera (10+12) G Giga (10+9) MEG Mega (10+6) K Kilo (10+3) M Mili (10-3) U Micro (10-6) N Nano (10-9) P Pico (10-12) F Femto (10-15)

Page 7: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Independent DC Sources Voltage source: Vname N+ N- Type Value Current source: Iname N+ N- Type Value

Type: DC, AC or TRAN (transient) (like PULSE, …) Vin 2 0 DC 10 Vin 2 0 AC 10 Is 3 4 DC 1.5 Voltage and Current Conventions

N1(+)

N2(-)

N1(+)

N2(-)

Page 8: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Dependent DC Sources Voltage controlled voltage source:

Ename N+ N- NC+ NC- Value Voltage controlled current source:

Gname N+ N- NC+ NC- Value Current controlled voltage source:

Hname N+ N- Vmeas Value Current controlled current source:

Fname N+ N- Vmeas Value N+ and N- are terminals of the dependent source NC+ and NC- are terminals of the controlling voltage source

Page 9: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Ename N+ N- NC+ NC- α Gname N+ N- NC+ NC- γ

Hname N+ N- Vmeas ρ Fname N+ N- Vmeas β

Vmeas

N+

N-

Vmeas

Page 10: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example

F1 0 3 Vmeas 0.5

Vmeas 4 0 DC 0

Page 11: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Resistors, Capacitors, Inductors

Rname N+ N- Value Cname N+ N- Value <IC> Lname N+ N- Value <IC> IC = initial condition (DC voltage or current)

Example: C1 3 4 1pF 5V C2 1 2 2pF L1 3 4 1mHL2 7 3 2mH 1mA

1pF_

4

3

+5V

Page 12: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Damped Sinusoidal Sources Vname N+ N- SIN(VO VA FREQ TD THETA PHASE)

VO - offset voltage in volt. VA - amplitude in volt. f = FREQ in Hz TD - delay in seconds THETA - damping factor per second Phase - phase in degrees If TD, THETA and PHASE are not specified, it is assumed to be zero. Example: V1 1 2 SIN(5 10 50 0.2 0.1)

V2 3 4 SIN(0 10 50)

360/PHASE)TD(2sinVAVOVname )(THET tfe TDtA

Page 13: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.50

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

F=1, THETA=.4, VO=5, VA=3, TD=0, Phase=600

Page 14: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Piecewise linear source (PWL)

Vname N+ N- PWL(T1 V1 T2 V2 T3 V3 ...)

Vi is the value source at time Ti

 Example: Vg 1 2 PWL(0 0 10U 5 100U 5 110U 0)

Page 15: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Pulse Vname N+ N- PULSE(V1 V2 TD Tr Tf PW Period) V1 - initial voltage V2 - peak voltage TD - initial delay time Tr - rise time Tf - fall time pw- pulse-width Period - period

Page 16: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Subcircuits A subcircuit allows you to define a collection of

elements as a subcircuit (e.g. an operational amplifier).SUBCKT SUBNAME N1 N2 N3 ... Element statements . .ENDS SUBNAME

N1, N2, N3 are the external nodes of the subcircuit. The external nodes cannot be 0.

The node numbers used inside a subcircuit are strictly local, except for node 0 which is always global.

Page 17: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example: µ741 (Op Amp)

* Subcircuit for 741 op amp * +in (=1) -in (=2) out (=3)

.subckt opamp741 1 2 3 rin 1 2 2meg rout 6 3 75 e1 4 0 1 2 100k r1 4 5 0.5meg c1 5 0 31.85nf eout 6 0 5 0 1 .ends opamp741

Page 18: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Using Subcircuit

vs 1 0 dc 5

r1 1 2 200

rf 2 3 1k

x1 0 2 3 opamp741

.dc vs 0 10 1

.option post

.end

Page 19: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

.OP Statement

Instructs SPICE to compute DC operating points voltage at each node current in each voltage source operating point for each element

Page 20: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

.DC Statement

Increment (sweep) an independent source over a certain range with a specified step

  .DC SRCname START STOP STEP

SRCname = name of the source START and STOP = starting and ending values STEP = size of increments Example: .DC V1 0 20 2

Page 21: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

.TRAN Statement

Specifies time interval for transient analysis  

.TRAN TSTEP TSTOP <TSTART>  

TSTEP = increment TSTOP = final time TSTART = starting time

Page 22: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

.AC Statement Specify frequency (AC) analysis 

 

.AC LIN NP FSTART FSTOP  

LIN = linear frequency variation NP = number of points. FSTART and FSTOP = start and stopping frequencies

(Hz)  Example: .AC LIN 10 1000 2000

Page 23: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Output Statements

.PLOT plots selected output variables, to design.lis using ASCII characters. .PLOT is useful for looking at plotted results without access to AvanWaves.

.PRINT DC V(2) prints node voltage value for node 2 in the design.lis file.

Page 24: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

.PRINT & .PLOT .PRINT TYPE OV1 OV2 OV3 ... .PLOT TYPE OV1 OV2 OV3 ... TYPE = type of analysis printed or plotted

DC TRAN AC

OV1, OV2 = output variables

Examples:  .PLOT DC V(1,2) V(3) I(Vmeas) .PRINT TRAN V(3,1) I(Vmeas)

Page 25: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example 1

Page 26: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

* We are interested in finding the following characteristics:

* 1. Node voltages v12, v2 and current i4 when vin=10V

* 2. Thevenin equivalent voltage and resistance, seen

* at the output terminals v(3,0)

VIN 1 0 DC 10

VMEAS 4 0 DC 0

*VMEAS is a 0V source to measure i4

F1 0 3 VMEAS 0.5

R1 1 2 1K

R2 2 3 10K

R3 1 3 15K

R4 2 4 40K

R5 3 0 50K

.tran .01n 50n

.TF V(3,0) VIN

.DC VIN 0 20 2

.PLOT DC V(1,2)

.END

Page 27: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example 2

Pulse

0.1n

50n

0.1n

100n

10M

10M

1uF

5V

Page 28: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

* pulse generator

* +node -node V1 V2 TD TR TF PW PER

VIN 1 0 PULSE ( 0 5 0 0.1N 0.1N 50N 100N)

R1 1 2 10M

R2 2 0 10M

C1 2 0 1uF

* transient simulation for 50ns with 0.01ns step size

.tran .1n 500n

* dc simulation with stimulus voltage (source VIN) from 0 to 5V in 0.1V steps

.DC VIN 0 5 0.01

.end

Page 29: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example 3

* TheveninVs 1 0 DC 10VE1 3 2 4 6 5R1 1 2 5R2 1 4 5R3 0 4 5R4 3 4 10R5 2 5 10R6 2 6 10R7 5 4 10R8 4 6 10.TF V(5,6) Vs

.plot DC V(5,6)

.plot DC I(Vs)

.DC Vs 0 100 10

.END

0

1 2

3 65

4

+

10V

_

5V46

-

+

5

5

5

10 10 10

10 10

Page 30: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example 4

Page 31: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

OLD_HW1_Solution* TheveninVs 2 5 DC 100VVmeas 2 3 DC 0VFx 6 7 Vmeas 4.0Ex 2 1 5 4 3.0R1 3 4 5.0R2 4 7 5.0R3 5 4 4.0R4 7 0 4.8R5 5 6 1.0R10 1 0 1MEG.TF V(4,0) Vs.plot DC V(5,4).plot DC V(1,0).plot DC I(Vmeas).DC Vs 0 100 10.tran 1n 50n 0.END

Page 32: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

Example 5

10MVs =

1V AC1nF

1mH

21

0

Page 33: Lecture on PSpice. Introduction to SPICE  SPICE was originally developed at the University of California, Berkeley (1975).  Simulation Program for Integrated

OLD_HW2_Solution

Vs 1 0 AC 1L1 1 2 1mC1 1 2 1nR1 2 0 10M.AC LIN 10 1000 2000plot AC V(1,2) I(Vs).END