"Low-Power Logic Styles: CMOS Versus Pass-Transistor Logic"

Reto Zimmermann and Wolfgang Fichtner

Abstract
--------

Recently reported logic style comparisons based on full-adder circuits claimed
complementary pass-transistor logic (CPL) to be much more power-efficient than
complementary CMOS. However, new comparisons performed on more efficient CMOS
circuit realizations and a wider range of different logic cells, as well as the
use of realistic circuit arrangements demonstrate CMOS to be superior to CPL in
most cases with respect to speed, area, power dissipation, and power-delay
products. An implemented 32-bit adder using complementary CMOS has a
power-delay product of less than half that of the CPL version. Robustness with
respect to voltage scaling and transistor sizing, as well as generality and
ease-of-use, are additional advantages of CMOS logic gates, especially when
cell-based design and logic synthesis are targeted. This paper shows that
complementary CMOS is the logic style of choice for the implementation of
arbitrary combinational circuits, if low voltage, low power, and small
power-delay products are of concern.

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