Abstract
SPICE is one of the most commonly used programs for the simulation of the behaviour of electronic circuits. This article describes in detail the key design characteristics and capabilities of a computer environment called SpiCAD which integrates all the different phases of SPICE based circuitry simulation on a personal computer, i.e., the tracing of the electronics scheme, simulation and visualization of the results so as to help define semiconductor device models, determine input signals, construct macro-models and convert design sketches into formats acceptable to graphic systems.
Citation Formats
D'Amore, D, Padovini, G, and Santomauro, M.
SpiCAD: Integrated environment for circuitry simulation with SPICE code.
Italy: N. p.,
1991.
Web.
D'Amore, D, Padovini, G, & Santomauro, M.
SpiCAD: Integrated environment for circuitry simulation with SPICE code.
Italy.
D'Amore, D, Padovini, G, and Santomauro, M.
1991.
"SpiCAD: Integrated environment for circuitry simulation with SPICE code."
Italy.
@misc{etde_7226356,
title = {SpiCAD: Integrated environment for circuitry simulation with SPICE code}
author = {D'Amore, D, Padovini, G, and Santomauro, M}
abstractNote = {SPICE is one of the most commonly used programs for the simulation of the behaviour of electronic circuits. This article describes in detail the key design characteristics and capabilities of a computer environment called SpiCAD which integrates all the different phases of SPICE based circuitry simulation on a personal computer, i.e., the tracing of the electronics scheme, simulation and visualization of the results so as to help define semiconductor device models, determine input signals, construct macro-models and convert design sketches into formats acceptable to graphic systems.}
journal = []
volume = {78:11}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Italy}
year = {1991}
month = {Nov}
}
title = {SpiCAD: Integrated environment for circuitry simulation with SPICE code}
author = {D'Amore, D, Padovini, G, and Santomauro, M}
abstractNote = {SPICE is one of the most commonly used programs for the simulation of the behaviour of electronic circuits. This article describes in detail the key design characteristics and capabilities of a computer environment called SpiCAD which integrates all the different phases of SPICE based circuitry simulation on a personal computer, i.e., the tracing of the electronics scheme, simulation and visualization of the results so as to help define semiconductor device models, determine input signals, construct macro-models and convert design sketches into formats acceptable to graphic systems.}
journal = []
volume = {78:11}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Italy}
year = {1991}
month = {Nov}
}