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Design of Analog Cmos Integrated Circuits (Mcgraw-Hill Series in Electrical and Computer Engineering. Electronics and Vlsi Circuits)

Design of Analog Cmos Integrated Circuits (Mcgraw-Hill Series in Electrical and Computer Engineering. Electronics and Vlsi Circuits)

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: More of a Reference book than a text book.....
Review: Cannot be used as a text book. Quite a lot of material assumes that u have a very good knowledge of analog design. The auhtor tries to put himslef in the the place of the sutdents while writing the book but its no good. Its definitely good for ppl who have been degining analog circuits for a couple of years.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good book on CMOS analog circuits!
Review: I have all of the books written by Dr. Razavi, and this is the most recent one. CMOS has been the mainstream on analog design today, and more and more books cover this area. From Roubik Gregorian / Gabor Temes's "Analog MOS Integrated Circuits for Signal Processing" to Phillip Allen / Douglas Holberg's "CMOS Analog Circuit Design", from David Johns / Kenneth Martin's "Analog Integrated Circuit Design" to Roubik Gregorian's "Introduction to CMOS OP-AMPs and Comparators", we can see the rapid development of CMOS analog design techniques. And this book is the most updated one among these books. It covers basic CMOS design techniques as well as some important topics, such as common-mode feedback and current feedback amplifiers. Everything is expressed clearly and easy to understand. However, it does not address some of today's popular topics, such as low-voltage design techniques, constant-Gm and rail-to-rail amplifiers. Hope we can see these in the final edition. The readers can find these topics from Johns/Martin and Gregorian's books. Anyway, I still rate it as a 5-star book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Everyone loves it
Review: I've seen one or two other books on analog design, and this is the best. In fact, almost everyone I know (who does analog design) loves the book. Very good information, well explained, good examples. I wish more books were like this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Everyone loves it
Review: I've seen one or two other books on analog design, and this is the best. In fact, almost everyone I know (who does analog design) loves the book. Very good information, well explained, good examples. I wish more books were like this.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not for beginners/students
Review: If you're learning this material for the first time, your best bet would be to look elsewhere. I'm taking a course in analog CMOS design after completing an introductory course in electronic devices. I can refer to the Razavi book and actually find it to be quite useful. In fact, it seems better than the book we're using for the class, (CMOS design by Allen)

But when I first bought this book, which was required for the introductory class, it was not helpful at all. The material was too brief, examples too difficult and not explained in detail, problems were too long and onerous so that you completely lose sight of what you're supposed to get a grasp on. An absolute disaster if you're trying to learn this stuff. That's why it sat on my shelf for the whole semester. But for the advanced class, this book seems to pick up right after the introductory course. Definitely not for the novice reader, and it covers the advanced topics that you don't see when you first learn this stuff. Razavi's writing style and presentation is pretty good too.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good basic design techniques, not quite useful for...
Review: Not quite useful for practicing engineers who are forced to come up with ten building blocks a week, in Spice...

Focusing a little too much on basic conceptual design works, this book will probably make a rockie EE professor's life much easier in preparing for his/her first undergraduate-level CMOS circuit course syllabus, however, most experienced engineers won't be impressed by the "two-transistor-circuitry" that used throughout the book...Moreover, switched-capacitor circuit is not heavily covered, which is a pity for a book claiming to teach people about analog CMOS IC design!

In a word, could be better -- let's wait for the next edition...

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: not a good starting point
Review: This is not a good book to start with. The book by Gray and Meyer and Hurst and Lewis is anyday much much better than this book. This book does not care to explain the meaning of small-signal operation and analysis and even such basic important aspects such as biasing and more subtler aspects in later chaters in feedback theory etc etc. It is not at all a good starting point. The excersises are good. Still not at all comparable to analysis and design of analog integrated circuits by gray and meyer...


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