195 research outputs found

    CMOS Design of Reconfigurable SoC Systems for Impedance Sensor Devices

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    La rápida evolución en el campo de los sensores inteligentes, junto con los avances en las tecnologías de la computación y la comunicación, está revolucionando la forma en que recopilamos y analizamos datos del mundo físico para tomar decisiones, facilitando nuevas soluciones que desempeñan tareas que antes eran inconcebibles de lograr.La inclusión en un mismo dado de silicio de todos los elementos necesarios para un proceso de monitorización y actuación ha sido posible gracias a los avances en micro (y nano) electrónica. Al mismo tiempo, la evolución de las tecnologías de procesamiento y micromecanizado de superficies de silicio y otros materiales complementarios ha dado lugar al desarrollo de sensores integrados compatibles con CMOS, lo que permite la implementación de matrices de sensores de alta densidad. Así, la combinación de un sistema de adquisición basado en sensores on-Chip, junto con un microprocesador como núcleo digital donde se puede ejecutar la digitalización de señales, el procesamiento y la comunicación de datos proporciona características adicionales como reducción del coste, compacidad, portabilidad, alimentación por batería, facilidad de uso e intercambio inteligente de datos, aumentando su potencial número de aplicaciones.Esta tesis pretende profundizar en el diseño de un sistema portátil de medición de espectroscopía de impedancia de baja potencia operado por batería, basado en tecnologías microelectrónicas CMOS, que pueda integrarse con el sensor, proporcionando una implementación paralelizable sin incrementar significativamente el tamaño o el consumo, pero manteniendo las principales características de fiabilidad y sensibilidad de un instrumento de laboratorio. Esto requiere el diseño tanto de la etapa de gestión de la energía como de las diferentes celdas que conforman la interfaz, que habrán de satisfacer los requisitos de un alto rendimiento a la par que las exigentes restricciones de tamaño mínimo y bajo consumo requeridas en la monitorización portátil, características que son aún más críticas al considerar la tendencia actual hacia matrices de sensores.A nivel de celdas, se proponen diferentes circuitos en un proceso CMOS de 180 nm: un regulador de baja caída de voltaje como unidad de gestión de energía, que proporciona una alimentación de 1.8 V estable, de bajo ruido, precisa e independiente de la carga para todo el sistema; amplificadores de instrumentación con una aproximación completamente diferencial, que incluyen una etapa de entrada de voltaje/corriente configurable, ganancia programable y ancho de banda ajustable, tanto en la frecuencia de corte baja como alta; un multiplicador para conformar la demodulación dual, que está embebido en el amplificador para optimizar consumo y área; y filtros pasa baja totalmente integrados, que actúan como extractores de magnitud de DC, con frecuencias de corte ajustables desde sub-Hz hasta cientos de Hz.<br /

    0.6-V-VIN 7.0-nA-IQ 0.75-mA-IL CMOS Capacitor-Less LDO for Low-Voltage Micro-Energy-Harvested Supplies

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    A capacitor-less (CL) low-dropout (LDO) regulator suitable to be incorporated in an on-chip system with low-voltage micro-energy-harvested supply, is proposed in this contribution. The differential input stage of the error amplifier includes bulk-driven MOS transistors, thus providing the LDO with an output voltage range that extends from the negative rail up to a level very close to the input voltage without the need of using a resistive feedback network. The circuit parameters relying on the feedback factor, , are maximized thanks to the use of a unitary value for this parameter. The CL-LDO has been designed and fabricated in standard 180-nm CMOS technology and optimized to operate with an input voltage equal to 0.6 V and a reference level of 0.5 V. The experimental characterization of the fabricated prototypes shows that, under these operating conditions, the LDO is able to deliver a load current above 0.75 mA with a total quiescent current of only 7.0 nA. Furthermore, the proposed voltage regulator is able to operate from input voltages as low as 0.4 V, delivering in this case a maximum load current of 30 μA.RTI2018- 095994-B-I00 ED431G-2019/04 GRC2021/48 IB18079S

    An 11 mA Capacitor-Less LDO With 3.08 nA Quiescent Current and SSF-Based Adaptive Biasing

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    This brief presents an ultra-low power low-dropout (LDO) regulator with an experimental total quiescent current consumption of only 3.08 nA. The circuit is designed to operate with a load current in the range 0 - 11 mA. A novel adaptive biasing scheme based on a super source follower (SSF) structure is proposed, which measures the absolute voltage difference between the two inputs of the LDO’s error amplifier and modifies the biasing current accordingly. Thus, the transient response of the regulator is improved by counteracting the effect of using such a low bias current. The proposed LDO has been fabricated in a standard CMOS 180 nm process and the experimental characterization showed an outstanding performance in terms of maximum load current over quiescent current consumption ratio.S

    A Ringamp-Assisted, Output Capacitor-less Analog CMOS Low-Dropout Voltage Regulator

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    Continued advancements in state-of-the-art integrated circuits have furthered trends toward higher computational performance and increased functionality within smaller circuit area footprints, all while improving power efficiencies to meet the demands of mobile and battery-powered applications. A significant portion of these advancements have been enabled by continued scaling of CMOS technology into smaller process node sizes, facilitating faster digital systems and power optimized computation. However, this scaling has degraded classic analog amplifying circuit structures with reduced voltage headroom and lower device output resistance; and thus, lower available intrinsic gain. This work investigates these trends and their impact for fine-grain Low-Dropout (LDO) Voltage Regulators, leading to a presented design methodology and implementation of a state-of-the-art Ringamp-Assisted, Output Capacitor-less Analog CMOS LDO Voltage Regulator capable of both power scaling and process node scaling for general SoC applications

    Design of a Low Power External Capacitor-Less Low-Dropout Regulator with Gain-Compensated Error Amplifier

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    This thesis introduces a gain-compensated external capacitor-less low-dropout voltage regulator with total 5.7 uA quiescent current at all load conditions. The two-stage gain-compensated error amplifier is implemented with a cross-couple pair negative resistor to make the LDO achieve higher gain (> 50 dB) with very low bias current (< 1.3 uA). The LDO can achieve 52 dB loop gain at no load condition, 64 dB at 1 mA and 54 dB at 100 mA load. During transients (0 A to 100 mA) the undershoot is optimized to 98.6 mV with 100 ns rising and falling time through a differentiator circuit to boost the LDO’s transient response. The phase margin of the proposed LDO is 55◦ at 1 mA and 79.27◦ at max load (100 mA). Figure of merit (FOM) of this work is 2.79 fs which is very small

    A Silicon Carbide Linear Voltage Regulator for High Temperature Applications

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    Current market demands have pushed the capabilities of silicon to the edge. High temperature and high power applications require a semiconductor device to operate reliably in very harsh environments. This situation has awakened interests in other types of semiconductors, usually with a higher bandgap than silicon\u27s, as the next venue for the fabrication of integrated circuits (IC) and power devices. Silicon Carbide (SiC) has so far proven to be one of the best options in the power devices field. This dissertation presents the first attempt to fabricate a SiC linear voltage regulator. This circuit would provide a power management option for developing SiC processes due to its relatively simple implementation and yet, a performance acceptable to today\u27s systems applications. This document details the challenges faced and methods needed to design and fabricate the circuit as well as measured data corroborating design simulation results

    A Case Study in CMOS Design Scaling for Analog Applications: The Ringamp LDO

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    As CMOS process nodes scale to smaller feature sizes, process optimizations are made to achieve improvements in digital circuit performance, such as increasing speed and memory, while decreasing power consumption. Unfortunately for analog design, these optimizations usually come at the expense of poorer transistor performance, such as reduced small signal output resistance and increased channel length modulation. The ring amplifier has been proposed as a digital solution to the analog scaling problem, by configuring digital inverters to function as analog amplifiers through deadzone biasing. As digital inverters naturally scale, the ring amplifier is a promising area of exploration for analog design. This work presents a ring amplifier scaling study by demonstration of scaling an output capacitor-less, ring amplifier based low-dropout voltage regulator designed in a standard 180 nm CMOS process down to a standard 90 nm CMOS process

    Digital LDO modelling techniques for performance estimation at early design stage

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    This work studies the transient responses and steady-state ripples of digital low dropout (LDO) voltage regulators. Simulation models as well as closed-form expressions are provided for estimating the LDO output settling behaviour after load current or reference voltage changes. Estimation equations for the magnitude and frequency of LDO output steady-state ripples are also presented. The accuracy of the developed models is verified by comparing estimation data with results obtained from circuit simulations. The use of the developed estimation equations in design space exploration is also demonstrated

    Proposal and design methodology of switching mode low dropout regulator for Bio-medical applications

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    The switching operation based low dropout (LDO) regulator utilizing on-off control is pre-sented. It consists of simple circuit elements which are comparator, some logic gates, switched capacitor and feedback circuit. In this study, we target the application to the power supply circuit for the analog front end (AFE) of bio-medical system (such as daily-used bio-monitoring devices) whose required maximum load current is 50 A. In this paper, the design procedure of the proposed LDO has been clarified and actual circuit design using the procedure has been done. The proposed LDO has been evaluated by SPICE simulation using 1P 2M 0.6 m CMOS process device parameters. From simulation results, we could confirm that the low quiescent current of 1 A with the output ripple of 5 mVpp. The circuit area is 0.0173 mm2 in spite of using 0.6 m design rules. The proposed circuit is suitable for adopting to the light load and low frequency applications
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