Geronimo Stempovski wrote:
I just read an interesting paper about high-speed I/O's power
dissipation.
Unfortunately there is an equation I don't quite understand. Maybe
someone is in the mood for discussing and explaining the correctness
of the equation to me.
The formula I am talking about is (1) in the paper [
http://www.ee.ucla.edu/faculty/papers/yang-ckk_ieeeTransCircSystems2_nov2006.pdf
]
For high-common mode signaling (which standard would that be, anyway?
TTL? CMOS? SSTL?) it is assumed
P = V*Vswing/Z0 = V*Vrx/Z0*H(f)
For low-common mode signaling (LVDS? CML? LVPECL?) it states
P = Vswing^2/2*Z0 = Vrx^2/2*Z0*H(f)^2
What I don't understand is the factor 2 (2*Z0) in the calculation of
the low-common mode signaling. Furthermore I'm not sure if the H(f)^2
is correct.
Any help is highly appreciated! Thanks a lot in advance!
That does seem mangled.
When in doubt, check the dimensions of the answer ?
Normally where frequency is used in power calcs, it is of the form
of power dissipation capacitance : W = Fo * Cp * Vcc^2
-jg