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RF.Spice A/D: Getting Started

1 byte removed, 12:59, 2 August 2015
/* Welcome to RF.Spice A/D Wiki! */
* Device Manager with Symbol Editor
[[Schematic Editor]] occupies the main window, where you assemble your circuit. A circuit is made up of a number of parts like resistors, capacitors, diodes, transistors, voltage and current sources, logic gates, transmission line segments, etc., which are connected to one another using wires. [[RF.Spice A/D]] comes with a very large Parts Database, parts database featuring thousands of passive and active devices including generic models and real parts supplied by major semiconductor device manufacturers. Active device models include no less than six distinct MOSFET models including BSIM3 and BSIM4.
Once your circuit is ready for simulation, [[RF.Spice A/D]] generates a Netlist input and calls its SPICE engine(s). [[RF.Spice A/D]] supports the full Berkeley SPICE 3F5 set of commands, options and models. These include a variety of simulation types such as DC and AC sweeps, transient and Fourier analyses, pole-zero and distortion analyses, network analysis, Monte Carlo and sensitivity analyses, and more. [[RF.Spice A/D]] also provides a large number of black-box blocks including all of XSPICE models such as differentiator, integrator and s-domain transfer function blocks and mutual coupling for transformer modeling. Event-driven [[Digital Simulation|digital simulation]] is fully supported as well as A/D and D/A bridge models for mixed-mode simulation. With [[RF.Spice A/D]] you can perform live simulations, where output data are generated and animated as the simulation proceeds. You can vary the circuit [[parameters]] in real time during a live simulation. You can also run a large variety of [[tests]] (DC bias, AC, transient, etc.) and visualize, manipulate and process the output data in the form of graphs or tables.
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