Logic Voltage Levels
The two states of a wire are usually represented by some measurement of an electrical property: Voltage is the most common, but current is used in some logic families. A threshold is designed for each logic family. When below that threshold, the wire is "low," when above "high." Digital circuits establish a "no man's area" or "exclusion zone" that is wider than the tolerances of the components. The circuits avoid that area, in order to avoid indeterminate results.
It is usual to allow some tolerance in the voltage levels used; for example, 0 to 2 volts might represent logic 0, and 3 to 5 volts logic 1. A voltage of 2 to 3 volts would be invalid, and occur only in a fault condition or during a logic level transition. However, few logic circuits can detect such a condition and most devices will interpret the signal simply as high or low in an undefined or device-specific manner. Some logic devices incorporate schmitt trigger inputs whose behaviour is much better defined in the threshold region, and have increased resilience to small variations in the input voltage.
The levels represent the binary integers or logic levels of 0 and 1. In active-high logic, "low" represents binary 0 and "high" represents binary 1. Active-low logic uses the reverse representation.
Technology | L voltage | H voltage | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
CMOS | 0 V to VDD/2 | VDD/2 to VDD | VDD = supply voltage |
TTL | 0 V to 0.8 V | 2 V to VCC | VCC is 4.75 V to 5.25 V |
ECL | -1.175 V to -VEE | 0.75 V to 0 V | VEE is about -5.2 V. VCC=Ground |
Read more about this topic: Digital Signal
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