1,387 research outputs found

    A 0.3 V rail-to-rail ultra-low-power OTA with improved bandwidth and slew rate

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    In this paper, we present a novel operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) topology based on a dual-path body-driven input stage that exploits a body-driven current mirror-active load and targets ultra-low-power (ULP) and ultra-low-voltage (ULV) applications, such as IoT or biomedical devices. The proposed OTA exhibits only one high-impedance node, and can therefore be compensated at the output stage, thus not requiring Miller compensation. The input stage ensures rail-to-rail input common-mode range, whereas the gate-driven output stage ensures both a high open-loop gain and an enhanced slew rate. The proposed amplifier was designed in an STMicroelectronics 130 nm CMOS process with a nominal supply voltage of only 0.3 V, and it achieved very good values for both the small-signal and large-signal Figures of Merit. Extensive PVT (process, supply voltage, and temperature) and mismatch simulations are reported to prove the robustness of the proposed amplifier

    An ultra-low-voltage class-AB OTA exploiting local CMFB and body-to-gate interface

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    In this work a novel bulk-driven (BD) ultra-low-voltage (ULV) class-AB operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) which exploits local common mode feedback (LCMFB) strategies to enhance performance and robustness against process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations has been proposed. The amplifier exploits body-to-gate (B2G) interface to increase the slew rate and attain class-AB behaviour, whereas two pseudo-resistors have been employed to increase the common mode rejection ratio (CMRR). The architecture has been extensively tested through Monte Carlo and PVT simulations, results show that the amplifier is very robust in terms of gain-bandwidth-product (GBW), power consumption and slew rate. A wide comparison against state-of-the-art has pointed out that best small-signal figures of merit are attained and good large-signal performance is guaranteed, also when worst-case slew rate is considered

    ±0.3V Bulk-Driven Fully Differential Buffer with High Figures of Merit

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    A high performance bulk-driven rail-to-rail fully differential buffer operating from ±0.3V supplies in 180 nm CMOS technology is reported. It has a differential–difference input stage and common mode feedback circuits implemented with no-tail, high CMRR bulk-driven pseudo-differential cells. It operates in subthreshold, has infinite input impedance, low output impedance (1.4 kΩ), 86.77 dB DC open-loop gain, 172.91 kHz bandwidth and 0.684 μW static power dissipation with a 50-pF load capacitance. The buffer has power efficient class AB operation, a small signal figure of merit FOMSS = 12.69 MHzpFμW−1, a large signal figure of merit FOMLS = 34.89 (V/μs) pFμW−1, CMRR = 102 dB, PSRR+ = 109 dB, PSRR− = 100 dB, 1.1 μV/√Hz input noise spectral density, 0.3 mVrms input noise and 3.5 mV input DC offset voltage.Junta de Andalucía - Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidades P18-FR-4317Agencia Estatal de Investigación - FEDER PID2019-107258RB-C3

    360 nW gate-driven ultra-low voltage CMOS linear transconductor with 1 MHz bandwidth and wide input range

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    A low voltage linear transconductor is introduced. The circuit is a pseudo differential architecture that operates with ±0.2V supplies and uses 900nA total biasing current. It employs a floating battery technique to achieve low voltage operation. The transconductor has a 1MHz bandwidth. It exhibits a SNR = 72dB, SFDR = 42dB and THD = 0.83% for a 100mVpp 10kHz sinusoidal input signal. Moreover, stability is not affected by the capacitance of the signal source. The circuit has been validated with a prototype chip fabricated in a 130nm CMOS technology.This work was supported in part by the Agencia Estatal de Investigacion/Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional under Grant TEC2016-80396-C2. The work of Hector D. Rico-Aniles was supported by the Mexican Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia for the through an Academic Scholarship under Grant 408946

    Digital-based analog processing in nanoscale CMOS ICs for IoT applications

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    The Internet-of-Things (IoT) concept has been opening up a variety of applications, such as urban and environmental monitoring, smart health, surveillance, and home automation. Most of these IoT applications require more and more power/area efficient Complemen tary Metal–Oxide–Semiconductor (CMOS) systems and faster prototypes (lower time-to market), demanding special modifications in the current IoT design system bottleneck: the analog/RF interfaces. Specially after the 2000s, it is evident that there have been significant improvements in CMOS digital circuits when compared to analog building blocks. Digital circuits have been taking advantage of CMOS technology scaling in terms of speed, power consump tion, and cost, while the techniques running behind the analog signal processing are still lagging. To decrease this historical gap, there has been an increasing trend in finding alternative IC design strategies to implement typical analog functions exploiting Digital in-Concept Design Methodologies (DCDM). This idea of re-thinking analog functions in digital terms has shown that Analog ICs blocks can also avail of the feature-size shrinking and energy efficiency of new technologies. This thesis deals with the development of DCDM, demonstrating its compatibility for Ultra-Low-Voltage (ULV) and Power (ULP) IoT applications. This work proves this state ment through the proposing of new digital-based analog blocks, such as an Operational Transconductance Amplifiers (OTAs) and an ac-coupled Bio-signal Amplifier (BioAmp). As an initial contribution, for the first time, a silicon demonstration of an embryonic Digital-Based OTA (DB-OTA) published in 2013 is exhibited. The fabricated DB-OTA test chip occupies a compact area of 1,426 µm2 , operating at supply voltages (VDD) down to 300 mV, consuming only 590 pW while driving a capacitive load of 80pF. With a Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) lower than 5% for a 100mV input signal swing, its measured small-signal figure of merit (FOMS) and large-signal figure of merit (FOML) are 2,101 V −1 and 1,070, respectively. To the best of this thesis author’s knowledge, this measured power is the lowest reported to date in OTA literature, and its figures of merit are the best in sub-500mV OTAs reported to date. As the second step, mainly due to the robustness limitation of previous DB-OTA, a novel calibration-free digital-based topology is proposed, named here as Digital OTA (DIG OTA). A 180-nm DIGOTA test chip is also developed exhibiting an area below the 1000 µm2 wall, 2.4nW power under 150pF load, and a minimum VDD of 0.25 V. The proposed DIGOTA is more digital-like compared with DB-OTA since no pseudo-resistor is needed. As the last contribution, the previously proposed DIGOTA is then used as a building block to demonstrate the operation principle of power-efficient ULV and ultra-low area (ULA) fully-differential, digital-based Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA), suitable for microscale biosensing applications (BioDIGOTA) such as extreme low area Body Dust. Measured results in 180nm CMOS confirm that the proposed BioDIGOTA can work with a supply voltage down to 400 mV, consuming only 95 nW. The BioDIGOTA layout occupies only 0.022 mm2 of total silicon area, lowering the area by 3.22X times compared to the current state of the art while keeping reasonable system performance, such as 7.6 Noise Efficiency Factor (NEF) with 1.25 µVRMS input-referred noise over a 10 Hz bandwidth, 1.8% of THD, 62 dB of the common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) and 55 dB of power supply rejection ratio (PSRR). After reviewing the current DCDM trend and all proposed silicon demonstrations, the thesis concludes that, despite the current analog design strategies involved during the analog block development

    A 0.3V Rail-to-Rail Three-Stage OTA With High DC Gain and Improved Robustness to PVT Variations

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    This paper presents a novel 0.3V rail-to-rail body-driven three-stage operational transconductance amplifier (OTA). The proposed OTA architecture allows achieving high DC gain in spite of the bulk-driven input. This is due to the doubled body transconductance at the first and third stages, and to a high gain, gate-driven second stage. The bias current in each branch of the OTA is accurately set through gate-driven or bulk-driven current mirrors, thus guaranteeing an outstanding stability of main OTA performance parameters to PVT variations. In the first stage, the input signals drive the bulk terminals of both NMOS and PMOS transistors in a complementary fashion, allowing a rail-to-rail input common mode range (ICMR). The second stage is a gate-driven, complementary pseudo-differential stage with an high DC gain and a local CMFB. The third stage implements the differential-to-single-ended conversion through a body-driven complementary pseudo-differential pair and a gate-driven current mirror. Thanks to the adoption of two fully differential stages with common mode feedback (CMFB) loop, the common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) in typical conditions is greatly improved with respect to other ultra-low-voltage (ULV) bulk-driven OTAs. The OTA has been fabricated in a commercial 130nm CMOS process from STMicroelectronics. Its area is about 0.002 mm2 , and power consumption is less than 35nW at the supply-voltage of 0.3V. With a load capacitance of 35pF, the OTA exhibits a DC gain and a unity-gain frequency of about 85dB and 10kHz, respectively

    Digital-Based Analog Processing in Nanoscale CMOS ICs for IoT Applications

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    L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen

    Design of a Comparator and an Amplifier in CMOS using standard logic gates

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    Using standard logic gates in CMOS, or standard-cells, has the advantage of full synthe- sizability, as well as the voltage scalability between technologies. In this work a general pur- pose standard-cell-based voltage comparator and amplifier are presented. The objective is to design a general purpose standard-cell-based comparator and ampli- fier in 130 nm CMOS by optimizing the already existing topologies with the aim of improving some of the specifications of the studied topologies. Various simulation testbenches were made to test the studied topologies of comparators and amplifiers, in which the results were compared. The top performing standard-cell com- parator and amplifier were then modified. After successfully designing the comparator, it was used in the design of an opamp-less Sigma-Delta modulator (ΣΔM). The proposed comparator is an OR-AND-Inverter-based comparator with dual inputs and outputs, achieving a delay of 109 ps, static input offset of 591 μV, and random offset of 10.42 μV, while dissipating 890 μW, when clocked at 1.5 GHz. The proposed amplifier is a single-path three-stage inverter-based operational transcon- ductance amplifier (OTA) with active common-mode feedback loop, achieving a DC gain of 63 dB, 1444 MHz of unity-gain bandwidth, 51º of phase margin while dissipating 1098 μW, considering a load of 1 pF. The proposed comparator was employed in the ΣΔM with a standard-cell based edge- triggered flip-flop. The ΣΔM, with a sampling frequency of 2 MHz and a signal bandwidth of 2.5 kHz, achieved a peak SNDR of 69 dB while dissipating only 136.7 μW.Utilizando portas lógicas básicas em CMOS oferece a vantagem de um circuito comple- tamente sintetizável, tal como o escalamento de tensão entre tecnologias. Neste trabalho são apresentados um comparador de tensão e um amplificador utilizando portas lógicas. O objetivo deste trabalho é desenhar um comparador e um amplificador utilizando por- tas lógicas através do estudo e otimização de topologias já existentes com a finalidade de me- lhoramento de algumas das especificações das mesmas. Foram realizados vários bancos de teste para testar as topologias estudadas de compa- radores e amplificadores, em que os resultados foram comparados. As topologias de compa- radores e amplificadores de portas lógicas com melhor performance foram então modificadas. Após o comparador ter sido projetado com sucesso, foi utilizado na projeção de um modula- dor Sigma-Delta (ΣΔM) opamp-less. O comparador proposto é um OR-AND-Inversor com duas entradas e saídas, que apre- senta um atraso de 109 ps, offset estático na entrada de 591 μV, offset aleatório de 10.42 μV, enquanto dissipando 890 μW, utilizando uma frequência de relógio de 1.5 GHz O amplificador proposto é um amplificador operacional de transcondutância single- path three-stage inverter-based com um loop ativo de realimentação do modo-comum, que apresenta um ganho DC de 63 dB, 1444 MHz de ganho-unitário de largura de banda, 51º de margem de fase e dissipando 1098 μW, considerando uma carga de 1 pF. O comparador proposto foi aplicado no ΣΔM com um flip-flop edge-triggered baseado em portas lógicas. O ΣΔM, com uma frequência de amostragem de 2 MHz e uma largura de banda de 2.5 kHz, apresentou um SNDR máximo de 69 dB enquanto dissipando apenas 136.7 μW

    Design methodology for general enhancement of a single-stage self-compensated folded-cascode operational transconductance amplifiers in 65 nm CMOS process

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    The problems resulting from the use of nano-MOSFETs in the design of operational trans-conductance amplifiers (OTAs) lead to an urgent need for new design techniques to produce high-performance metrics OTAs suitable for very high-frequency applications. In this paper, the enhancement techniques and design equations for the proposed single-stage folded-cascode operational trans-conductance amplifiers (FCOTA) are presented for the enhancement of its various performance metrics. The proposed single-stage FCOTA adopts the folded-cascode (FC) current sources with cascode current mirrors (CCMs) load. Using 65 nm complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process from predictive technology model (PTM), the HSPICE2019-based simulation results show that the designed single-stage FCOTA can achieve a high open-loop differential-mode DC voltage gain of 65.64 dB, very high unity-gain bandwidth of 263 MHz, very high stability with phase-margin of 73°, low power dissipation of 0.97 mW, very low DC input-offset voltage of 0.14 uV, high swing-output voltages from −0.97 to 0.91 V, very low equivalent input-referred noise of 15.8 nV/Hz, very high common-mode rejection ratio of 190.64 dB, very high positive/negative slew-rates of 157.5/58.3 V⁄us, very fast settling-time of 5.1 ns, high extension input common-mode range voltages from −0.44to 1 V, and high positive/negative power-supply rejection ratios of 75.5/68.8 dB. The values of the small/large-signal figures-of-merits (s) are the highest when compared to other reported FCOTAs in the literature
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