some basic electronics and truth tables some material on truth tables can be found in chapter 3 of...
TRANSCRIPT
Some basic electronics and truth tables
Some material on truth tables can be found in Chapter 3 of Digital Principles (Tokheim)
Logic Digital Electronics In Logic, one refers to Logical
statements (propositions which can be true or false). What a computer scientist would
represent by a Boolean variable. In Electronics, one refers to inputs
which will be high or low.
Boola Boola! The expression
(Booleans) and the rules for combining them (Boolean algebra) are named after George Boole (1815-64), a British mathematician.
Boolean operators AND: when two or more Boolean
expressions are ANDed, both must be true for the combination to be true.
OR: when two or more Boolean expressions are ORed, if either one or the other or both are true, then the combination is true.
NOT: takes one Boolean expression and yields the opposite of it, true false and vice versa.
Representations of Standard Boolean Operators
Boolean algebra
expressionGate symbol
NOT A A´
A AND B AB
A OR B A+B
A XOR B AB
A NOR B (A+B)´
A NAND B (AB)´
Our Notation NOT is represented by a prime or an
apostrophe. A’ means NOT A
OR is represented by a plus sign. A + B means A OR B
AND is represented by placing the two variables next to one another. AB means A AND B The notation is like multiplication in regular
algebra since if A and B are 1’s or 0’s the only product that gives 1 is when A and B are both 1.
Other Notations means NOT A A means NOT A AB means A OR B A&B means A AND B Tokheim uses the overbar notation
for NOT, but we will use the prime notation because it is easier to type.
Other vocabulary We will tend to refer to A and B as
“inputs.” (Electronics) Another term for them is “Boolean
variables.” (Programming) Still another term for them is
“propositions.” (Logic) And yet another term for them is
“predicates.” (Logic and grammar)
(AB)’ A’B’
A B AB (AB)’
0 0 0 1
0 1 0 1
1 0 0 1
1 1 1 0
A B A’ B’ A’B’
0 0 1 1 1
0 1 1 0 0
1 0 0 1 0
1 1 0 0 0
Note that the output is different
A Truth Table A Truth table lists all possible
inputs, that is, all possible values for the propositions. For a given numbers of inputs, this is
always the same. Then it lists the output for each
possible combination of inputs. This varies from situation to situation.
The true one Traditionally we take a 1 to
represent true and a 0 to represent false
In addition, we will usually interpret a high voltage as a true and a low voltage as a false
Generating Inputs The truth-table inputs consist of all the
possible combinations of 0’s and 1’s for that number of inputs.
One way to generate the inputs for is to count in binary. For two inputs, the combinations are 00, 01, 10
and 11 (binary for 0, 1, 2 and 3). For three inputs, the combinations are 000,
001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 110 and 111 (binary for 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7).
For n inputs there are 2n combinations (rows in the truth table).
Expressing truth tables Every truth table can be expressed in
terms of the basic Boolean operators AND, OR and NOT operators.
The circuits corresponding to those truth tables can be build using AND, OR and NOT gates.
The input in each line of a truth table can be expressed in terms of AND’s and NOT’s.
A B A’B’
0 0 1
0 1 0
1 0 0
1 1 0
A B A’B
0 0 0
0 1 1
1 0 0
1 1 0
A B AB’
0 0 0
0 1 0
1 0 1
1 1 0
A B AB
0 0 0
0 1 0
1 0 0
1 1 1
Note that these expressions have the property that their truth table output has only 1 row with a 1.
In a sense, each line has an expression
Input A Input B Expression
0 0 (NOT A) AND (NOT B) A´B´
0 1 (NOT A) AND B A´B
1 0 A AND (NOT B) AB´
1 1 A AND B AB
It’s true; it’s true The following steps will allow you to generate
an expression for the output of any truth table. Take the true (1) outputs Write the expressions for that input line (as shown
on the previous slide) Then feed all of those expressions into an OR gate
Sometimes we have multiple outputs (e.g. bit addition had a sum output and a carry output). Then each output is treated separately.
Example: Majority Rules
A B C Majority
0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 1 0 0
0 1 1 1
1 0 0 0
1 0 1 1
1 1 0 1
1 1 1 1
If two or more of the three inputs are high, then the output is high.
Row Expressions
A B C Row expressions
0 0 0 A’B’C’
0 0 1 A’B’C
0 1 0 A’BC’
0 1 1 A’BC
1 0 0 AB’C’
1 0 1 AB’C
1 1 0 ABC’
1 1 1 ABC
The highlighted rows correspond to the high outputs.
Majority rules A´BC + AB´C + ABC´ + ABC
NOTs
ANDs
OR
Electronics Workbench
Where the logic gates are
EWB
gates
chips
Be careful above the NAND chip is the NOT gate.
NOT Gate and NOT Chip
Gates and Chips EWB gates focus purely on the logic
(the inputs and outputs). EWB chips, while simulated, are
closer to a real-world device Chips need power: VCC must be
connected to high (5 volts) and GND must be connected to ground.
Another complication is that the NOT chip houses four NOT gates.
HELP! (Right click choose Help from the menu)
Connectors: allow up to four wires to meet
Resistors:
Component Properties: Right click
Value and units
Value of resistance
Kilo-Ohm: Unit of resistance
Switch
Battery and ground
Ground
Battery
Voltmeter, ammeter, 7-segment display(s)
Venn Diagram A Venn diagram is a pictorial
representation of a truth table. Venn diagrams come from set
theory. The correspondence between set
theory and logic is that either one belongs to a set or one does not, so set theory and logic go together.
Venn (Cont.)
Belongs to set True
Does not belong to set False
Overlapping sets
A true, but B false
B true, but A false
A false and B false
A and B true
Ohm’s Law V = I R, where V is voltage: the amount of energy per
charge. I is current: the rate at which charge
flows, e.g. how much charge goes by in a second.
R is resistance: the “difficulty” a charge encounters as moves through a part of a circuit.
Circuit A circuit is a closed path along which
charges flow. If there is not a closed path that allows
that the charge can get back to where it started (without retracing its steps), the circuit is said to be “open” or “broken.”
The path doesn’t have to be unique; there may be more than one path.
An analogy A charge leaving a battery is like
you starting the day after a good night’s rest; you are full of energy.
Being the kind of person you are, you will expend all of your energy and collapse utterly exhausted into bed at the end of the day; the charge uses up all of its energy in traversing a circuit.
Analogy (cont.) You look ahead to the tasks of the day
and divide your energy accordingly, the more difficult the task the more of your energy it requires (resistors in series).
The tasks are resistors, so more energy (voltage) is used up working through the more difficult tasks (higher resistances). The higher the resistance, the greater the
voltage drop (energy used up) across it.
One charge among many You are just one charge among many. If the task at hand is very difficult (the
resistance is high), not many will do it (the current is low);
V=IR, if R is big, I must be small. If the task is easy, everyone rushes to do
it. V=IR, if R is small, I will be large.
More energetic If we had more energy, more of us
would attempt a given task. V=IR, if V is bigger, I is bigger. If we are all tired out, few of us will
perform even the most basic task. V=IR, if V is small, I will be small.
Given the choice Given the choice between a difficult
task and an easy task, most will choose the easier task.
If there is more than one path, most take the “path of least resistance” (resistors in parallel).