499 research outputs found

    Low-Voltage Ultra-Low-Power Current Conveyor Based on Quasi-Floating Gate Transistors

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    The field of low-voltage low-power CMOS technology has grown rapidly in recent years; it is an essential prerequisite particularly for portable electronic equipment and implantable medical devices due to its influence on battery lifetime. Recently, significant improvements in implementing circuits working in the low-voltage low-power area have been achieved, but circuit designers face severe challenges when trying to improve or even maintain the circuit performance with reduced supply voltage. In this paper, a low-voltage ultra-low-power current conveyor second generation CCII based on quasi-floating gate transistors is presented. The proposed circuit operates at a very low supply voltage of only ±0.4 V with rail-to-rail voltage swing capability and a total quiescent power consumption of mere 9.5 µW. Further, the proposed circuit is not only able to process the AC signal as it's usual at quasi-floating gate transistors but also the DC which extends the applicability of the proposed circuit. In conclusion, an application example of the current-mode quadrature oscillator is presented. PSpice simulation results using the 0.18 µm TSMC CMOS technology are included to confirm the attractive properties of the proposed circuit

    High-frequency two-input CMOS OTA for continuous-time filter applications

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    “This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder." “Copyright IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.”A high-frequency fully differential CMOS operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) is presented for continuous-time filter applications in the megahertz range. The proposed design technique combines a linear cross-coupled quad input stage with an enhanced folded-cascode circuit to increase the output resistance of the amplifier. SPICE simulations show that DC-gain enhancement can be obtained without significant bandwidth limitation. The two-input OTA developed is used in high-frequency tuneable filter design based on IFLF and LC ladder simulation structures. Simulated results of parameters and characteristics of the OTA and filters in a standard 1.2 μm CMOS process (MOSIS) are presented. A tuning circuit is also discussed.Peer reviewe

    An Energy-Efficient, Dynamic Voltage Scaling Neural Stimulator for a Proprioceptive Prosthesis

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    Accepted versio

    Design of Low Voltage Improved performance Current Mirror

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    This paper proposes a low voltage current mirror circuit with low input impedance and high output impedance. These improvements are obtained by adding an amplifier which provides biasing voltage to the transistors. Its operation and results are compared with conventional and cascode current mirror circuits. The circuits are designed using Tanner EDA Tool in 90nm CMOS technology with 0.8V supply voltage. Simulation results shows that the minimum output voltage is reduced to 0.1 V, also input resistance is reduced to 0.179k? and consumes only 46µW power. Keywords: Current mirror, Input resistance Output resistance, Input compliance voltage, Output compliance voltage

    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

    Trade-off and Design optimization of the Notch filter for ultralow power ECG application

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    ECG acquisition, several leads combined with signals from different body parts (i.e., from the right wrist and the left ankle) are utilized to trace the electric activity of the heart. ECG acquisition board translates the body signal to six leads and processes the signal using a low-pass filter (LPF) and SAR ADC. The acquisition board is composed of: an instrumentation amplifier, a high-pass filter, a 60-Hz notch filter, and a common-level adjuster. But miniaturization or need of portable devices for measuring Bio-Potential parameters has led to design of IC’s for biomedical application with ultra-low power Because of miniaturization i.e. use of lower technology nodes has led to non-idealities which reduces the attenuation of Common Mode to differential component i.e. not CMRR. Because of this demerit the power line interference signal can’t be assumed as a common mode signal. Hence we need to design a power line interference filter to avoid the contamination of the signal

    High Performance Current Amplifier [TK7871.58.P4 G896 2006 f rb] [Microfiche 8561].

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    A high bandwidth class AB current amplifier by using few compensation resistor technique and current mirrors is presented and analyzed. The simulation results are obtained using TSpice tool using 0.35μm CMOS TSMC process, at 2.5V power supply. The amplifier utilizes Class AB amplifier topology to achieve high bandwidth. Sebuah penguat arus kelas AB berjalur lebar tinggi yang menggunakan teknik “compensation” resistor dibentang dan dianalisis dalam tesis ini. Keputusan penyelakuan ini didapati dengan mengunakan Teknology TSMC 0.35μm CMOS bekalan kuasa 2.5V melalui alat penyelakuan TSPice. Penguat Kelas AB diimplementasikan untuk mencapai jalur lebar yang tinggi
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