87 research outputs found

    A Survey of Non-conventional Techniques for Low-voltage Low-power Analog Circuit Design

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    Designing integrated circuits able to work under low-voltage (LV) low-power (LP) condition is currently undergoing a very considerable boom. Reducing voltage supply and power consumption of integrated circuits is crucial factor since in general it ensures the device reliability, prevents overheating of the circuits and in particular prolongs the operation period for battery powered devices. Recently, non-conventional techniques i.e. bulk-driven (BD), floating-gate (FG) and quasi-floating-gate (QFG) techniques have been proposed as powerful ways to reduce the design complexity and push the voltage supply towards threshold voltage of the MOS transistors (MOST). Therefore, this paper presents the operation principle, the advantages and disadvantages of each of these techniques, enabling circuit designers to choose the proper design technique based on application requirements. As an example of application three operational transconductance amplifiers (OTA) base on these non-conventional techniques are presented, the voltage supply is only ±0.4 V and the power consumption is 23.5 µW. PSpice simulation results using the 0.18 µm CMOS technology from TSMC are included to verify the design functionality and correspondence with theory

    A Mixed-Signal Demodulator for a Low-Complexity IR-UWB Receiver: Methodology, Simulation and Design

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    This works presents an integrated 0.18μm CMOS 2-PPM demodulator based on a switched capacitor network for an Energy Detection Impulse-Radio UWB receiver. The circuit has been designed using a top-down methodology that allows to discover the impact of low-level non-idealities on system-level performance. Through the use of a mixed signal simulation environment, performance figures have been obtained which helped evaluate the influence at system-level of the non-idealities of the most critical block. Results show that the circuit allows the replacement of the ADC typically employed in Energy Detection receivers and provides about infinite equivalent quantization resolution. The demodulator achieves 190 pJ/bit at 1.8V

    Advances in Solid State Circuit Technologies

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    This book brings together contributions from experts in the fields to describe the current status of important topics in solid-state circuit technologies. It consists of 20 chapters which are grouped under the following categories: general information, circuits and devices, materials, and characterization techniques. These chapters have been written by renowned experts in the respective fields making this book valuable to the integrated circuits and materials science communities. It is intended for a diverse readership including electrical engineers and material scientists in the industry and academic institutions. Readers will be able to familiarize themselves with the latest technologies in the various fields

    Low temperature sensitivity CMOS transconductor based on GZTC MOSFET condition

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    Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) Transconductors, or Gm cells, are key building blocks to implement a large variety of analog circuits such as adjustable filters, multipliers, controlled oscillators and amplifiers. Usually temperature stability is a must in such applications, and herein we define all required conditions to design low thermal sensitivity Gm cells by biasing MOSFETs at Transconductance Zero Temperature Condition (GZTC). This special bias condition is analyzed using a MOSFET model which is continuous from weak to strong inversion, and it is proved that this condition always occurs from moderate to strong inversion operation in any CMOS fabrication process. Additionally, a few example circuits are designed using this technique: a single-ended resistor emulator, an impedance inverter, a first order and a second order filter. These circuits have been simulated in a 130 nm CMOS commercial process, resulting in improved thermal stability in the main performance parameters, in the range from 27 to 53 ppm/ºC

    Customized Integrated Circuits for Scientific and Medical Applications

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    Cancellation of OpAmp virtual ground imperfections by a negative conductance applied to improve RF receiver linearity

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    High linearity CMOS radio receivers often exploit linear V-I conversion at RF, followed by passive down-mixing and an OpAmp-based Transimpedance Amplifier at baseband. Due to nonlinearity and finite gain in the OpAmp, virtual ground is imperfect, inducing distortion currents. This paper proposes a negative conductance concept to cancel such distortion currents. Through a simple intuitive analysis, the basic operation of the technique is explained. By mathematical analysis the optimum negative conductance value is derived and related to feedback theory. In- and out-of-band linearity, stability and Noise Figure are also analyzed. The technique is applied to linearize an RF receiver, and a prototype is implemented in 65 nm technology. Measurement results show an increase of in-band IIP3 from 9dBm to >20dBm, and IIP2 from 51 to 61dBm, at the cost of increasing the noise figure from 6 to 7.5dB and <10% power penalty. In 1MHz bandwidth, a Spurious-Free Dynamic Range of 85dB is achieved at <27mA up to 2GHz for 1.2V supply voltage

    Analogue micropower FET techniques review

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    A detailed introduction to published analogue circuit design techniques using Si and Si/SiGe FET devices for very low-power applications is presented in this review. The topics discussed include sub-threshold operation in FET devices, micro-current mirrors and cascode techniques, voltage level-shifting and class-AB operation, the bulk-drive approach, the floating-gate method, micropower transconductance-capacitance and log-domain filters and strained-channel FET technologies

    Design of Wideband Continuous-Time ΔΣ ADCs Using Two-Step Quantizers

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    Continuous-time delta sigma (CT-ΔΣ) ADCs are established as the data conversion architecture of choice for the next-generation wireless applications. Several efforts have been made to simultaneously improve the bandwidth and dynamic range of ΔΣ ADCs. We proposed using two-step quantizer in a single-loop CT-ΔΣ modulator to achieve higher conversion bandwidth. This paper presents a tutorial for employing the design technique through a 130n CMOS implementation. The proposed 640 MS/s, 4th order continuous-time delta sigma modulator (CT-ΔΣM) incorporates a two-step 5-bit quantizer, consisting of only 13 comparators. The CT-ΔΣM achieves a dynamic range of 70 dB, peak SNDR of 65.3 dB with 32 MHz bandwidth (OSR = 10) while consuming only 30 mW from the 1.2 V supply. The relevant design trade offs have been discussed and presented with simulation results

    Review on Design of OTA Using Non-Conventional Analog Techniques

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    The OTA is an amplifier whose differential input voltage produces an output current. Thus, it is a voltage controlled current source. Operational transconductance amplifier is one of the most significant building-blocks in integrated continuous-time filters. A review of various non-conventional analog design techniques has been done in this paper. Several previous works have been studied and their comparison on various performance parameters is shown. This paper starts with the introduction of OTA, followed by the discussion on various OTA design techniques along with their block diagram in addition to advantages and disadvantages of these techniques. Two comparative tables are shown at the end
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