237 research outputs found

    An improved reversed miller compensation technique for three-stage CMOS OTAs with double pole-zero cancellation and almost single-pole frequency response

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    This paper presents an improved reversed nested Miller compensation technique exploiting a single additional feed-forward stage to obtain double pole-zero cancellation and ideally single-pole behavior, in a three-stage Miller amplifier. The approach allows designing a three-stage operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) with one dominant pole and two (ideally) mutually cancelling pole-zero doublets. We demonstrate the robustness of the proposed cancellation technique, showing that it is not significantly influenced by process and temperature variations. The proposed design equations allow setting the unity-gain frequency of the amplifier and the complex poles' resonance frequency and quality factor. We introduce the notion of bandwidth efficiency to quantify the OTA performance with respect to a telescopic cascode OTA for given load capacitance and power consumption constraints and demonstrate analytically that the proposed approach allows a bandwidth efficiency that can ideally approach 100%. A CMOS implementation of the proposed compensation technique is provided, in which a current reuse scheme is used to reduce the total current consumption. The OTA has been designed using a 130-nm CMOS process by STMicroelectronics and achieves a DC gain larger than 120 dB, with almost single-pole frequency response. Monte Carlo simulations have been performed to show the robustness of the proposed approach to process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variations and mismatches

    Performance enhancement in the desing of amplifier and amplifier-less circuits in modern CMOS technologies.

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    In the context of nowadays CMOS technology downscaling and the increasing demand of high performance electronics by industry and consumers, analog design has become a major challenge. On the one hand, beyond others, amplifiers have traditionally been a key cell for many analog systems whose overall performance strongly depends on those of the amplifier. Consequently, still today, achieving high performance amplifiers is essential. On the other hand, due to the increasing difficulty in achieving high performance amplifiers in downscaled modern technologies, a different research line that replaces the amplifier by other more easily achievable cells appears: the so called amplifier-less techniques. This thesis explores and contributes to both philosophies. Specifically, a lowvoltage differential input pair is proposed, with which three multistage amplifiers in the state of art are designed, analysed and tested. Moreover, a structure for the implementation of differential switched capacitor circuits, specially suitable for comparator-based circuits, that features lower distortion and less noise than the classical differential structures is proposed, an, as a proof of concept, implemented in a ΔΣ modulator

    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

    Design of Operational Transconductance Amplifiers for voltage to current conversion in gas sensing applications

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    This paper presents a study of Operational Transconductance Amplifiers (OTAs) for voltage to current conversion circuits. The paper includes a comparative analysis of three OTA architectures implemented in 0.35\u3bcm CMOS AMS Technology under \ub1 1.65V power supply voltage. The impact of the OTA topology has been investigated by simulation. The designed OTAs managed to deliver large current values of 10mA and 1mA to the load with a worst-case error of 0.02% under worst-case power supply and temperature conditions and a worst percentage error of 0.12% under process variation for both Miller Compensated and Capacitor Multiplier Compensated OTA. \ua9 2016 AEIT

    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

    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

    Transistor-Level Synthesis of Pipeline Analog-to-Digital Converters Using a Design-Space Reduction Algorithm

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    A novel transistor-level synthesis procedure for pipeline ADCs is presented. This procedure is able to directly map high-level converter specifications onto transistor sizes and biasing conditions. It is based on the combination of behavioral models for performance evaluation, optimization routines to minimize the power and area consumption of the circuit solution, and an algorithm to efficiently constraint the converter design space. This algorithm precludes the cost of lengthy bottom-up verifications and speeds up the synthesis task. The approach is herein demonstrated via the design of a 0.13 μm CMOS 10 bits@60 MS/s pipeline ADC with energy consumption per conversion of only 0.54 pJ@1 MHz, making it one of the most energy-efficient 10-bit video-rate pipeline ADCs reported to date. The computational cost of this design is of only 25 min of CPU time, and includes the evaluation of 13 different pipeline architectures potentially feasible for the targeted specifications. The optimum design derived from the synthesis procedure has been fine tuned to support PVT variations, laid out together with other auxiliary blocks, and fabricated. The experimental results show a power consumption of 23 [email protected] V and an effective resolution of 9.47-bit@1 MHz. Bearing in mind that no specific power reduction strategy has been applied; the mentioned results confirm the reliability of the proposed approach.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación TEC2009-08447Junta de Andalucía TIC-0281
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