2 research outputs found

    A 0.55V Bandgap reference with a 59ppm/0c Temperature coefficient

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    This paper presents a novel low power, low voltage CMOS bandgap reference (BGR) that overcomes the problems with existing BJT-based reference circuits, by using a MOS transistor operating in subthreshold region. A proportional to absolute temperature (PTAT) voltage is generated by exploiting the self-bias cascode branch, while a Complementary to Absolute Temperature (CTAT) voltage is generated by using the threshold voltage of the transistor. The proposed circuit is implemented in 65nm CMOS technology. Post-layout simulation results show that the proposed circuit works with a supply voltage of 0.55V, and generates a 286mV reference voltage with a temperature coefficient of 59ppm/°C. The circuit takes 413nA current from 0.55V supply and occupies 0.00986mm2 of active are

    Low Power, High PSR CMOS Voltage References

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    With integration of various functional modules such as radio frequency (RF) circuits, power management, and high frequency digital and analog circuits into one system on chip (SoC) in recent applications, power supply noise can cause significant system performance deterioration. This makes supply noise rejection of the embedded voltage reference crucial in modern SoC applications. Also the use of resistors in bandgap voltage references makes them less suitable for modern low power and portable applications. This thesis introduces two resistorless sub-1 V, all MOSFET references. The goal is to achieve a high power supply rejection (PSR) over a wide bandwidth not achieved in previous works. This high PSR over wide bandwidth is achieved by using a combination of a feedback technique and an innovative compact MOSFET low pass filter. The two references were fabricated in a standard 0.18 µm CMOS process. The first reference uses a composite transistor in subthreshold to produce a proportional-to-absolute temperature (PTAT) voltage which is converted to a current used to thermally compensate the threshold voltage of a MOSFET in saturation. The second references uses dynamic-threshold voltage MOSFET (DTMOS) to produce a PTAT voltage which is converted to a current used to thermally compensate the threshold voltage of a MOSFET in saturation. The measurement shows that both references consumes a sub-1 µW power across their entire operating temperatures. The first reference achieves a PSR better than 50 dB for frequencies of up to 70 MHz and a 20 ppm/°C temperature coefficient (TC) for temperatures from -35 °C — 80 °C. It has a compact area of 0.0180 mm2 and operates on a supply of 1.2 V — 2.3 V. The second reference achieves a PSR better than 50 dB for frequencies of up to 60 MHz. This reference achieves a TC of 9.33 ppm/°C after trimming for temperatures from -30 °C — 110 °C and a line regulation of 0.076 %/V for a step from 0.8 V to 2 V supply voltage with 360 nW power consumption at room temperature. It has a compact area of 0.0143 mm^2
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