XNOR Gate, XNOR
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The XNOR gate (sometimes XORN'T, ENOR, EXNOR or NXOR and pronounced as Exclusive NOR. Alternatively XAND, pronounced Exclusive AND) is a digital
logic gate A logic gate is an idealized or physical device implementing a Boolean function, a logical operation performed on one or more binary inputs that produces a single binary output. Depending on the context, the term may refer to an ideal logic gate, ...
whose function is the logical complement of the Exclusive OR (
XOR Exclusive or or exclusive disjunction is a logical operation that is true if and only if its arguments differ (one is true, the other is false). It is symbolized by the prefix operator J and by the infix operators XOR ( or ), EOR, EXOR, , ...
) gate. It is equivalent to the logical connective (\leftrightarrow) from mathematical logic, also known as the material biconditional. The two-input version implements logical equality, behaving according to the truth table to the right, and hence the gate is sometimes called an "equivalence gate". A high output (1) results if both of the inputs to the gate are the same. If one but not both inputs are high (1), a low output (0) results. The algebraic notation used to represent the XNOR operation is S = A \odot B. The algebraic expressions (A + \overline) \cdot (\overline + B) and A \cdot B + \overline A \cdot \overline B both represent the XNOR gate with inputs ''A'' and ''B''.


Symbols

There are two symbols for XNOR gates: one with distinctive shape and one with rectangular shape and label. Both symbols for the XNOR gate are that of the XOR gate with an added inversion bubble.


Hardware description

XNOR gates are represented in most TTL and
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IC families. The standard
4000 series The 4000 series is a CMOS logic family of integrated circuits (ICs) first introduced in 1968 by RCA. It had a supply voltage range of 5V to 20V, which is much wider than any contemporary logic family. Almost all IC manufacturers active during thi ...
CMOS IC is the 4077, and the TTL IC is the 74266 (although an open-collector implementation). Both include four independent, two-input, XNOR gates. The (now obsolete) 74S135 implemented four two-input XOR/XNOR gates or two three-input XNOR gates. Both the TTL 74LS implementation, the 74LS266, as well as the CMOS gates (CD4077, 74HC4077 and 74HC266 and so on) are available from most semiconductor manufacturers such as Texas Instruments or
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, etc. They are usually available in both through-hole DIP and SOIC formats (SOIC-14, SOC-14 or TSSOP-14). Datasheets are readily available in most datasheet databases and suppliers.


Pinout

Both the 4077 and 74x266 devices (SN74LS266, 74HC266, 74266, etc.) have the same pinout diagram, as follows: Pinout diagram of the 74HC266N, 74LS266 and CD4077 quad XNOR plastic
dual in-line package In microelectronics, a dual in-line package (DIP or DIL), is an electronic component package with a rectangular housing and two parallel rows of electrical connecting pins. The package may be through-hole mounted to a printed circuit board (P ...
14-pin package (PDIP-14)
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.


Alternatives

If a specific type of gate is not available, a circuit that implements the same function can be constructed from other available gates. A circuit implementing an XNOR function can be trivially constructed from an XOR gate followed by a NOT gate. If we consider the expression (A + \overline) \cdot (\overline + B), we can construct an XNOR gate circuit directly using AND, OR and NOT gates. However, this approach requires five gates of three different kinds. As alternative, if different gates are available we can apply Boolean algebra to transform (A + \overline) \cdot (\overline + B) \equiv (A \cdot B) + ( \overline A \cdot \overline B ) as stated above, and apply de Morgan's Law to the last term to get (A \cdot B) + \overline which can be implemented using only three gates as shown on the right. An XNOR gate circuit can be made from four NOR gates. In fact, both NAND and NOR gates are so-called "universal gates" and any logical function can be constructed from either NAND logic or NOR logic alone. If the four NOR gates are replaced by NAND gates, this results in an XOR gate, which can be converted to an XNOR gate by inverting the output or one of the inputs (e.g. with a fifth NAND gate). An alternative arrangement is of five NAND gates in a topology that emphasizes the construction of the function from (A \cdot B) + (\overline \cdot \overline), noting from de Morgan's Law that a NAND gate is an inverted-input OR gate. Another alternative arrangement is of five NOR gates in a topology that emphasizes the construction of the function from (A + \overline) \cdot (\overline + B), noting from de Morgan's Law that a NOR gate is an inverted-input AND gate. For the NAND constructions, the lower arrangement offers the advantage of a shorter propagation delay (the time delay between an input changing and the output changing). For the NOR constructions, the upper arrangement requires fewer gates. From the opposite perspective, constructing other gates using only XNOR gates is possible though XNOR is not a fully
universal logic gate A logic gate is an idealized or physical device implementing a Boolean function, a logical operation performed on one or more binary inputs that produces a single binary output. Depending on the context, the term may refer to an ideal logic gate, ...
. NOT and XOR gates can be constructed this way.


More than two inputs

Although other gates (OR, NOR, AND, NAND) are available from manufacturers with three or more inputs per gate, this is not strictly true with XOR and XNOR gates. However, extending the concept of the binary logical operation to three inputs, the SN74S135 with two shared "C" and four independent "A" and "B" inputs for its four outputs, was a device that followed the truth table: This is effectively Y = NOT ((A XOR B) XOR C). Another way to interpret this is that the output is true if an even number of inputs are true. It does not implement a logical "equivalence" function, unlike two-input XNOR gates. Additionally, the XOR function seems to act as a parity function or Mod2 for the sum of all inputs. Note how *y* is equal to 1 if the sum of all inputs is even, which implies that y = 0 if the sum of all inputs is odd. We may conclude from this that x XOR y XOR z = is even (x+y+z).


See also

* AND gate * OR gate * NOT gate * NAND gate * NOR gate * XOR gate *
Kronecker delta function In mathematics, the Kronecker delta (named after Leopold Kronecker) is a function of two variables, usually just non-negative integers. The function is 1 if the variables are equal, and 0 otherwise: \delta_ = \begin 0 &\text i \neq j, \\ 1 &\t ...
* Logical biconditional * If and only if


References


External links


Texas Instruments© CD4077 Datasheet
{{DEFAULTSORT:Xnor Gate Logic gates it:Algebra di Boole#XNOR