The 7400 series of transistor-transistor logic (TTL) integrated circuits are the most popular family of TTL integrated circuit logic. Quickly replacing diode-transistor logic, it was used to build the mini and mainframe computers of the 1960s and 1970s. Several generations of pin-compatible descendants of the original family have since become de facto standard electronic components.
Video 7400 series
Overview
The 7400 series contains hundreds of devices that provide everything from basic logic gates, flip-flops, and counters, to special purpose bus transceivers and arithmetic logic units (ALU). Specific functions are described in a list of 7400 series integrated circuits.
Today, surface-mounted CMOS versions of the 7400 series are used in various applications in electronics and for glue logic in computers and industrial electronics. The original through-hole devices in dual in-line packages (DIP/DIL) were the mainstay of the industry for many decades. They are useful for rapid breadboard-prototyping and for education and remain available from most manufacturers. The fastest types and very low voltage versions are typically surface-mount only, however.
The first part number in the series, the 7400, is a 14-pin IC containing four two-input NAND gates. Each gate uses two input pins and one output pin, with the remaining two pins being power (+5 V) and ground. This part was made in various through-hole and surface-mount packages, including flat pack and plastic/ceramic dual in-line. Additional characters in a part number identify the package and other variations.
While designed as a family of digital logic, some TTL chips were used in analogue circuits, such as Schmitt triggers. Like the 4000 series, the newer CMOS versions of the 7400 series are also usable as analogue amplifiers using negative feedback (similar to operational amplifiers with only an inverting input). However, this type of circuit suffers from significant harmonic distortion and shortened component life. As the parts are not designed to operate in the partially on/off region except when switching states, heat buildup can be severe.
Maps 7400 series
7400 series derivative families
7400 series parts were constructed using bipolar transistors, forming what is referred to as transistor-transistor logic or TTL. Newer series, more or less compatible in function and logic level with the original parts, use CMOS technology or a combination of the two (BiCMOS). Originally the bipolar circuits provided higher speed but consumed more power than the competing 4000 series of CMOS devices. Bipolar devices are also limited to a fixed power supply voltage, typically 5 V, while CMOS parts often support a range of supply voltages.
Milspec-rated devices for use in extended temperature conditions are available as the 5400 series. Texas Instruments also manufactured radiation-hardened devices with the prefix RSN, and the company offered beam-lead bare dies for integration into hybrid circuits with a BL prefix designation.
Regular-speed TTL parts were also available for a time in the 6400 series - these had an extended industrial temperature range of -40 °C to +85 °C. While companies such as Mullard listed 6400-series compatible parts in 1970 data sheets, by 1973 there was no mention of the 6400 family in the Texas Instruments TTL Data Book. Some companies have also offered industrial extended temperature range variants using the regular 7400 series part numbers with a prefix or suffix to indicate the temperature grade.
As integrated circuits in the 7400 series were made in different technologies, usually compatibility was retained with the original TTL logic levels and power supply voltages. An integrated circuit made in CMOS is not a TTL chip, since it uses field-effect transistors (FETs) and not bipolar junction transistors, but similar part numbers are retained to identify similar logic functions and electrical (power and I/O voltage) compatibility in the different subfamilies. Over 40 different logic subfamilies use this standardized part number scheme.
- Bipolar
- 74 - Standard TTL. the original logic family had no letters between the "74" and the part number. 10 ns gate delay, 10 mW dissipation, 4.75-5.25 V, released in 1966.
- 74L - Low-power. Larger resistors allowed 1 mW dissipation at the cost of a very slow 33 ns gate delay. Obsolete, replaced by 74LS or CMOS technology. Introduced 1971.
- 74H - High-speed. 6 ns gate delay but 22 mW power dissipation. Used in 1970s era supercomputers. Still produced but generally superseded by the 74S series. Introduced in 1971.
- 74S - High-speed Schottky. Implemented with Schottky diode clamps at the inputs to prevent charge storage, this provides faster operation than the 74 and 74H series at the cost of increased power consumption and cost. 3 ns gate delay, 20 mW dissipation, released in 1971.
- 74LS - Low-power Schottky. Implemented using the same technology as 74S but with reduced power consumption and switching speed. Typical 10 ns gate delay, a remarkable (for the time) 2 mW dissipation, 4.75-5.25 V.
- 74AS - Advanced Schottky, the next iteration of the 74S series with greater speed and fan-out despite lower power consumption. Implemented using the 74S's technology with "miller killer" circuitry to speed up the low-to-high transition. 1.7 ns gate delay, 8 mW, 4.5-5.5 V.
- 74ALS - Advanced low-power Schottky. Same technology as 74AS but with the speed/power tradeoff of the 74LS. 4 ns, 1.2 mW, 4.5-5.5 V.
- 74F - Fast. Fairchild's version of TI's 74AS. 3.4 ns, 6 mW, 4.5-5.5 V. Introduced in 1978.
- CMOS
- C - CMOS 4-15 V operation similar to buffered 4000 (4000B) series.
- HC - High-speed CMOS, similar performance to 74LS, 12 ns. 2.0-6.0 V.
- HCT - High speed, compatible logic levels to bipolar parts.
- AC - Advanced CMOS, performance generally between 74S and 74F.
- ACT - Advanced CMOS, performance generally between 74S and 74F. Compatible logic levels to bipolar parts.
- ACQ - Advanced CMOS with Quiet outputs.
- AHC - Advanced high-speed CMOS, three times as fast as 74HC, tolerant of 5.5V on input.
- ALVC - Low-voltage - 1.8-3.3 V, time Propagation Delay (TPD) < 3 ns at 3.3 V.
- ALVT - Low-voltage - 2.5-3.3 V, 5 V tolerant inputs, high current <= 64 mA, TPD < 3 ns at 2.5 V.
- AUC - Low-voltage - 0.8-2.5 V, TPD < 2.5 ns at 1.8 V.
- AUP - Low-voltage - 0.8-3.6 V (3.3 V typically), TPD 15.6/8.2/4.3 ns at 1.2/1.8/3.3V, partial power-down specified (IOFF), inputs protected.
- AVC - Low-voltage - 1.8-3.3 V, TPD < 3.2 ns at 1.8 V, bus hold, IOFF.
- FC - Fast CMOS, performance similar to 74F.
- LCX - CMOS with 3 V supply and 5 V tolerant inputs.
- LV - Low-voltage CMOS - 2.0-5.5 V supply and 5 V tolerant inputs.
- LVC - Low voltage - 1.65-3.3 V and 5 V tolerant inputs, TPD < 5.5 ns at 3.3 V, TPD < 9 ns at 2.5 V.
- LV-A - 2.5-5 V, 5 V tolerant inputs, TPD < 10 ns at 3.3 V, bus hold, IOFF, low noise.
- LVT - Low-voltage - 3.3 V supply, 5 V tolerant inputs, high output current < 64 mA, TPD < 3.5 ns at 3.3 V, IOFF, low noise.
- LVQ - Low-voltage - 3.3 V.
- LVX - Low-voltage - 3.3 V with 5 V tolerant inputs.
- VHC - Very-high-speed CMOS - 74S performance in CMOS technology and power.
- BiCMOS
- BCT - BiCMOS, TTL-compatible input thresholds, used for buffers.
- ABT - Advanced BiCMOS, TTL-compatible input thresholds, faster than 74ACT and 74BCT.
Many parts in the CMOS HC, AC, and FC families are also offered in "T" versions (HCT, ACT, and FCT) which have input thresholds that are compatible with both TTL and 3.3 V CMOS signals. The non-T parts have conventional CMOS input thresholds.
The 74H family is the same basic design as the 7400 family with resistor values reduced. This reduced the typical propagation delay from 9 ns to 6 ns but increased the power consumption. The 74H family provided a number of unique devices for CPU designs in the 1970s. Many designers of military and aerospace equipment used this family over a long period and as they need exact replacements, this family is still produced by Lansdale Semiconductor.
The 74S family, using Schottky circuitry, uses more power than the 74, but is faster. The 74LS family of ICs is a lower-power version of the 74S family, with slightly higher speed but lower power dissipation than the original 74 family; it became the most popular variant once it was widely available.
The 74F family was introduced by Fairchild Semiconductor and adopted by other manufacturers; it is faster than the 74, 74LS and 74S families.
Through the late 1980s and 1990s newer versions of this family were introduced to support the lower operating voltages used in newer CPU devices.
History
Although the 7400 series was the first de facto industry standard TTL logic family (i.e. second-sourced by several semiconductor companies), there were earlier TTL logic families such as the Sylvania SUHL (Sylvania Universal High-level Logic) family, Motorola MC4000 MTTL family (not to be confused with RCA CD4000 CMOS), the National Semiconductor DM8000 family, Fairchild 9300 series, and the Signetics 8200 and 8T00 family.
The 7400 quad NAND gate was the first product in the series, introduced by Texas Instruments in a military grade metal flat package (7400W) in October 1964. The extremely popular commercial grade plastic DIP (7400N) followed in the third quarter of 1966.
The 5400 and 7400 series were used in many popular minicomputers in the 1970s and early 1980s. Some models of the DEC PDP series 'minis' used the 74181 ALU as the main computing element in the CPU. Other examples were the Data General Nova series and Hewlett-Packard 21MX, 1000, and 3000 series.
Hobbyists and students equipped with wire wrap tools, a 'breadboard' and a 5-volt power supply could also experiment with digital logic referring to how-to articles in Byte magazine and Popular Electronics which featured circuit examples in nearly every issue. In the early days of large-scale IC development, a prototype of a new large-scale integrated circuit might have been developed using TTL chips on several circuit boards, before committing to manufacture of the target device in IC form. This allowed simulation of the finished product and testing of the logic before the availability of software simulations of integrated circuits.
In 1965, typical quantity-one pricing for the SN5400 (military grade, in ceramic welded flat-pack) was around 22 USD. As of 2007, individual commercial-grade chips in molded epoxy (plastic) packages can be purchased for approximately 0.25 USD each, depending on the particular chip.
Part numbering
Part number schemes varied by manufacturer. The part numbers for 7400 series logic devices often use the following designators:
- Often first, a two or three letter prefix, denoting the manufacturer and flow class of the device (e.g. SN for Texas Instruments using a commercial processing, SNV for Texas Instruments using military processing, M for ST Microelectronics, DM for National Semiconductor, UT for Cobham PLC, SG for Sylvania). These codes are no longer closely associated with a single manufacturer, for example, Fairchild Semiconductor manufactures parts with MM and DM prefixes, and no prefixes.
- Two digits, where "74" denotes a commercial temperature range device and "54" denotes a military temperature range. Historically, "64" denoted a short-lived series with an intermediate "industrial" temperature range.
- No, or up to four letters denoting the logic subfamily (such as "LS", "HCT" or nothing for basic bipolar TTL).
- Two or more arbitrarily assigned digits that identify the function of the device. There are hundreds of different devices in each family.
- Additional suffix letters and numbers may be appended to denote the package type, quality grade, or other information, but this varies widely by manufacturer.
For example, "SN5400N" signifies that the part is a 7400 series IC probably manufactured by Texas Instruments ("SN" originally meaning "Semiconductor Network") using commercial processing, is of the military temperature rating ("54"), and is of the TTL family (absence of a family designator), its function being the quad 2-input NAND gate ("00") implemented in a plastic through-hole DIP package ("N").
Many logic families maintain a consistent use of the device numbers as an aid to designers. Often a part from a different 74x00 subfamily could be substituted ("drop-in replacement") in a circuit, with the same function and pin-out yet more appropriate characteristics for an application (perhaps speed or power consumption), which was a large part of the appeal of the 74C00 series over the competing CD4000B series, for example. But there are a few exceptions where incompatibilities (mainly in pin-out) across the subfamilies occurred, such as:
- some flat-pack devices (e.g. 7400W) and surface-mount devices,
- some of the faster CMOS series (for example 74AC),
- a few low-power TTL devices (e.g. 74L86, 74L9 and 74L95) have a different pin-out than the regular (or even 74LS) series part.
- five versions of the 74x54 (4-wide AND-OR-INVERT gates IC), namely 7454(N), 7454W, 74H54, 74L54W and 74L54N/74LS54, are different from each other in pin-out and/or function,
Second sources in Europe and the Eastern Bloc
Some manufacturers such as Mullard and Siemens had pin-compatible TTL parts but with a completely different numbering scheme, however, data sheets identified the 7400-compatible number as an aid to recognition.
At the time the 7400 series was being made, some European manufacturers (that traditionally followed the Pro Electron naming convention) such as Philips/Mullard produced a series of TTL integrated circuits with part names beginning FJ. Some examples of FJ series are:
- FJH101 (=7430) Single 8-input NAND gate,
- FJH131 (=7400) Quadruple 2-input NAND gate,
- FJH181 (=7454N or J) 2+2+2+2 input AND-OR-NOT gate.
The Soviet Union started manufacturing TTL ICs with 7400 series pin-out in the late 1960s and early 1970s, such as the K155?A3 which was pin-compatible with the 7400 part available in the United States, except for using a metric spacing of 2.5mm between pins instead of the 1/10"-based (2.54mm) spacing used in the west. Another peculiarity of the Soviet made 7400 series was the packaging material used in the 1970s - 80s. Instead of the ubiquitous black resin, they had a brownish-green body colour with subtle swirl marks created during the moulding process. It was jokingly referred to in the Eastern Bloc electronics industry as the "elephant dung packaging", due to its appearance.
The Soviet integrated circuit designation is different from the Western series:
- the technology modifications were considered different series, and were identified by different numbered prefixes - ?155 series is equivalent to plain 74, ?555 series is 74LS, etc.
- the function of the unit is described with a two-letter code followed by a number
- the first letter represents the functional group - logical, triggers, counters, multiplexers, etc.
- the second letter shows the functional subgroup making the distinction between logical NAND and NOR, D- and JK-triggers, decimal and binary counters, etc.
- the number distinguishes variants with different number of inputs, or different number of elements within a die - ??1/??2/??3 (LA1/LA2/LA3) are 2 four-input / 1 eight-input / 4 two-input NAND elements respectively (equivalent to 7420/7430/7400)
Before July 1974 the two letters from the functional description were inserted after the first digit of the series. Examples: ?1??551 and ?155??1 (7420), ?1??552 and ?155??2 (7474) are the same ICs made at different times.
Clones of the 7400 series were also made in other Eastern Bloc countries:
- Bulgaria (Mikroelektronika Botevgrad) used a designation somewhat similar to that of the Soviet Union, e.g. 1??00?? (1LB00ShM) for a 74LS00. Some of the two-letter functional groups were borrowed from the Soviet designation while others differed. Unlike the Soviet scheme, the two or three digit number after the functional group matched the western counterpart. The series followed at the end (i.e. ?? for LS). Only the LS series is known to have been manufactured in Bulgaria.
- Czechoslovakia (TESLA) used the 7400 numbering scheme with manufacturer prefix MH. Example: MH7400.
- Poland (Unitra CEMI) used the 7400 numbering scheme with manufacturer prefixes UCA for the 5400 and 6400 series as well as UCY for the 7400 series. Examples: UCA6400, and UCY7400. Note that ICs with the prefix MCY74 correspond to the 4000 series (e.g. MCY74002 corresponds to 4002 and not to 7402).
- Hungary (Tungsram, later Mikroelektronikai VĂ¡llalat / MEV) also used the 7400 numbering scheme but with manufacturer suffix - 7400 is marked as 7400APC.
- Romania used trimmed 7400 numbering with own manufacturing prefix CDB. Example: CDB4123E is 74123.
- East Germany (HFO) also used trimmed 7400 numbering without manufacturer prefix or suffix. The prefix D (or E) designates digital IC, and not the manufacturer. Example: D174 is 7474. 74LS clones were designated by the prefix DL; e.g. DL000 = 74LS00. In later years East German made clones were also available with standard 74* numbers, usually for export.
A number of different technologies were available from the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and East Germany. The 8400 series in the table below indicates an industrial temperature range from -25 °C to +85 °C (as opposed to -40 °C to +85 °C for the 6400 series).
Around 1990 the production of standard logic ceased in all Eastern European countries except the Soviet Union and later Russia and Belarus. As of 2016, the series 133, ?155, 1533, ??1533, 1554, 1594, and 5584 were in production at "Integral" in Belarus, as well as the series 130 and 530 at "NZPP-KBR", 134 and 5574 at "VZPP", 533 at "Svetlana", 1564, ?1564, ??1564 at "NZPP", 1564, ?1564 at "Voshod", and 1564 at "Exiton" in Russia. The Russian company Angstrem manufactures 54HC circuits as the 5514??1 series, 54AC as the 5514??2 series, and 54LVC as the 5524??2 series.
See also
- List of 4000 series integrated circuits
- List of 7400 series integrated circuits
- Open collector
References
External links
- Fairchild
- Logic Selection Guide (2008, 12 pages)
- Historical Data Books: TTL (1978, 752 pages), FAST (1981, 349 pages)
- Texas Instruments
- Digital Logic Pocket Data Book (2007, 794 pages)
- Logic Reference Guide (2004, 8 pages), Logic Selection Guide (1998, 215 pages)
- Little Logic Guide (2014, 25 pages), Little Logic Selection Guide (2004, 24 pages)
- Historical Databooks: TTL Vol1 (1984, 339 pages), TTL Vol2 (1985, 1402 pages), TTL Vol3 (1984, 793 pages), TTL Vol4 (1986, 445 pages)
Source of article : Wikipedia