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Dive into the research topics where Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez is active.

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Featured researches published by Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez.


international symposium on circuits and systems | 1997

Mismatch distance term compensation in centroid configurations with nonzero-area devices

E.S. Karhunen; Francisco V. Fernández; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez

This paper presents an analytical approach to distance term compensation in mismatch models of integrated devices. Firstly, the conditions that minimize parameter mismatch are examined under the assumption of zero-area devices. The analytical developments are illustrated using centroid configurations. Then, deviations from the previous approach due to the nonzero device areas are studied and evaluated.


international conference on electronics, circuits, and systems | 2012

CMOS SPADs selection, modeling and characterization towards image sensors implementation

Mauro García; O. G. Vinuesa; R. del Rio Fernandez; Belén Pérez Verdú; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez

The selection, modeling and characterization of Single Photon Avalanche Diodes (SPADs) are presented. Working with the standard 180nm UMC CMOS process, different SPAD structures are proposed in combination with several quenching circuits in order to compare their relative performances. Various configurations for the active region and the prevention of the premature edge breakdown are tested, looking for a miniaturization of the devices to implement image sensor arrays without loses in their performance.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Geometrically constrained parasitic-aware synthesis of analog ICs

R. Castro-López; Francisco V. Fernández; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez

In order to speed up the design process of analog ICs, iterations between different design stages should be avoided as much as possible. More specifically, spins between electrical and physical synthesis should be reduced for this is a very time-consuming task: if circuit performance including layout-induced degradations proves unacceptable, a re-design cycle must be entered, and electrical, physical, or both synthesis processes, would have to be repeated. It is also worth noting that if geometric optimization (e.g., area minimization) is undertaken after electrical synthesis, it may add up as another source of unexpected degradation of the circuit performance due to the impact of the geometric variables (e.g., transistor folds) on the device and the routing parasitic values. This awkward scenario is caused by the complete separation of said electrical and physical synthesis, a design practice commonly followed so far. Parasitic-aware synthesis, consisting in including parasitic estimates to the circuit netlist directly during electrical synthesis, has been proposed as solution. While most of the reported contributions either tackle parasitic-aware synthesis without paying special attention to geometric optimization or approach both issues only partially, this paper addresses the problem in a unified way. In what has been called layout-aware electrical synthesis, a simulation-based optimization algorithm explores the design space with geometric variables constrained to meet certain user-defined goals, which provides reliable estimates of layout-induced parasitics at each iteration, and, thereby, accurate evaluation of the circuit ultimate performance. This technique, demonstrated here through several design examples, requires knowing layout details beforehand; to facilitate this, procedural layout generation is used as physical synthesis approach due to its rapidness and ability to capture analog layout know-how.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

A reuse-based framework for the design of analog and mixed-signal ICs

R. Castro-López; Francisco V. Fernández; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez

Despite the spectacular breakthroughs of the semiconductor industry, the ability to design integrated circuits (ICs) under stringent time-to-market (TTM) requirements is lagging behind integration capacity, so far keeping pace with still valid Moore’s Law. The resulting gap is threatening with slowing down such a phenomenal growth. The design community believes that it is only by means of powerful CAD tools and design methodologies - and, possibly, a design paradigm shift - that this design gap can be bridged. In this sense, reuse-based design is seen as a promising solution, and concepts such as IP Block, Virtual Component, and Design Reuse have become commonplace thanks to the significant advances in the digital arena. Unfortunately, the very nature of analog and mixed-signal (AMS) design has hindered a similar level of consensus and development. This paper presents a framework for the reuse-based design of AMS circuits. The framework is founded on three key elements: (1) a CAD-supported hierarchical design flow that facilitates the incorporation of AMS reusable blocks, reduces the overall design time, and expedites the management of increasing AMS design complexity; (2) a complete, clear definition of the AMS reusable block, structured into three separate facets or views: the behavioral, structural, and layout facets, the two first for top-down electrical synthesis and bottom-up verification, the latter used during bottom-up physical synthesis; (3) the design for reusability set of tools, methods, and guidelines that, relying on intensive parameterization as well as on design knowledge capture and encapsulation, allows to produce fully reusable AMS blocks. A case study and a functional silicon prototype demonstrate the validity of the paper’s proposals.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

On the suitability and development of layout templates for analog layout reuse and layout-aware synthesis

R. Castro-López; Francisco V. Fernández; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez

Accelerating the synthesis of increasingly complex analog integrated circuits is key to bridge the widening gap between what we can integrate and what we can design while meeting ever-tightening time-to-market constraints. It is a well-known fact in the semiconductor industry that such goal can only be attained by means of adequate CAD methodologies, techniques, and accompanying tools. This is particularly important in analog physical synthesis (a.k.a. layout generation), where large sensitivities of the circuit performances to the many subtle details of layout implementation (device matching, loading and coupling effects, reliability, and area features are of utmost importance to analog designers), render complete automation a truly challenging task. To approach the problem, two directions have been traditionally considered, knowledge-based and optimization-based, both with their own pros and cons. Besides, recently reported solutions oriented to speed up the overall design flow by means of reuse-based practices or by cutting off time-consuming, error-prone spins between electrical and layout synthesis (a technique known as layout-aware synthesis), rely on a outstandingly rapid yet efficient layout generation method. This paper analyses the suitability of procedural layout generation based on templates (a knowledge-based approach) by examining the requirements that both layout reuse and layout-aware solutions impose, and how layout templates face them. The ability to capture the know-how of experienced layout designers and the turnaround times for layout instancing are considered main comparative aspects in relation to other layout generation approaches. A discussion on the benefit-cost trade-off of using layout templates is also included. In addition to this analysis, the paper delves deeper into systematic techniques to develop fully reusable layout templates for analog circuits, either for a change of the circuit sizing (i.e., layout retargeting) or a change of the fabrication process (i.e., layout migration). Several examples implemented with the Cadences Virtuoso tool suite are provided as demonstration of the papers contributions.


International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos | 2004

Implementing the multilayer retinal model on the complex-cell CNN-UM chip prototype

David Balya; István Petrás; Tamás Roska; R. Carmona; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez


Diseño de circuitos integrados: actas del VI Congreso, Santander, 11/15 de noviembre de 1991, 1991, ISBN 84-87412-61-0, págs. 61-66 | 1991

Sobre el diseño de comparadores de intensidad

Rafael Domínguez Castro; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez; José Luis Huertas Díaz


Archive | 1998

High-order cascade multi-bit Σ∆ modulators for high-speed A/D conversion

Rocío del Río Fernández; Fernando Medeiro Hidalgo; Belén Pérez Verdú; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez


Archive | 2001

A complete retargeting methodology for mixed-signal IC designs

Rafael Castro López; Francisco V. Fernández; M. Delgado Restituto; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez


Archive | 2001

ACE16k: A programmable focal plane vision processor with 128 x 128 resolution

Gustavo Liñán Cembrano; Rafael Domínguez Castro; Servando Espejo Meana; Ángel Benito Rodríguez Vázquez

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José Luis Huertas Díaz

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Francisco V. Fernández

Spanish National Research Council

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R. Castro-López

Spanish National Research Council

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J. D. Martín

Spanish National Research Council

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R. Carmona

Spanish National Research Council

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Rafael Castro López

Spanish National Research Council

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Servando Espejo Meana

Spanish National Research Council

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David Balya

The Catholic University of America

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István Petrás

The Catholic University of America

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