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9.6: Demultiplexers

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    A demultiplexer, sometimes abbreviated dmux, is a circuit that has one input and more than one output. It is used when a circuit wishes to send a signal to one of many devices. This description sounds similar to the description given for a decoder, but a decoder is used to select among many devices while a demultiplexer is used to send a signal among many devices.

    A demultiplexer is used often enough that it has its own schematic symbol

    04465.png

    The truth table for a 1-to-2 demultiplexer is

    14172.png

    Using our 1-to-2 decoder as part of the circuit, we can express this circuit easily

    04466.png

    04484.png

    This circuit can be expanded two different ways. You can increase the number of signals that get transmitted, or you can increase the number of inputs that get passed through. To increase the number of inputs that get passed through just requires a larger line decoder. Increasing the number of signals that get transmitted is even easier.

    As an example, a device that passes one set of two signals among four signals is a “two-bit 1-to-2 demultiplexer”. Its circuit is

    04467.png

    or by expressing the circuit as

    04468.png

    04485.png

    shows that it could be two one-bit 1-to-2 demultiplexers without changing its expected behavior.

    A 1-to-4 demultiplexer can easily be built from 1-to-2 demultiplexers as follows.

    04469.png


    This page titled 9.6: Demultiplexers is shared under a GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Tony R. Kuphaldt (All About Circuits) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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