650 research outputs found

    Energy-Efficient Amplifiers Based on Quasi-Floating Gate Techniques

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    Energy efficiency is a key requirement in the design of amplifiers for modern wireless applications. The use of quasi-floating gate (QFG) transistors is a very convenient approach to achieve such energy efficiency. We illustrate different QFG circuit design techniques aimed to implement low-voltage, energy-efficient class AB amplifiers. A new super class AB QFG amplifier is presented as a design example, including some of the techniques described. The amplifier has been fabricated in a 130 nm CMOS test chip prototype. Measurement results confirm that low-voltage, ultra-low-power amplifiers can be designed, preserving, at the same time, excellent small-signal and large-signal performance.Agencia Estatal de Investigación PID2019-107258RB-C32Unión Europea PID2019-107258RB-C3

    Energy-efficient amplifiers based on quasi-floating gate techniques

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    Energy efficiency is a key requirement in the design of amplifiers for modern wireless applications. The use of quasi-floating gate (QFG) transistors is a very convenient approach to achieve such energy efficiency. We illustrate different QFG circuit design techniques aimed to implement low-voltage energy-efficient class AB amplifiers. A new super class AB QFG amplifier is presented as a design example including some of the techniques described. The amplifier has been fabricated in a 130 nm CMOS test chip prototype. Measurement results confirm that low-voltage ultra low power amplifiers can be designed preserving at the same time excellent small-signal and large-signal performance.This research was funded by AEI/FEDER, grant number PID2019-107258RB-C32

    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

    Low Voltage Low Power Analogue Circuits Design

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    Disertační práce je zaměřena na výzkum nejběžnějších metod, které se využívají při návrhu analogových obvodů s využití nízkonapěťových (LV) a nízkopříkonových (LP) struktur. Tyto LV LP obvody mohou být vytvořeny díky vyspělým technologiím nebo také využitím pokročilých technik návrhu. Disertační práce se zabývá právě pokročilými technikami návrhu, především pak nekonvenčními. Mezi tyto techniky patří využití prvků s řízeným substrátem (bulk-driven - BD), s plovoucím hradlem (floating-gate - FG), s kvazi plovoucím hradlem (quasi-floating-gate - QFG), s řízeným substrátem s plovoucím hradlem (bulk-driven floating-gate - BD-FG) a s řízeným substrátem s kvazi plovoucím hradlem (quasi-floating-gate - BD-QFG). Práce je také orientována na možné způsoby implementace známých a moderních aktivních prvků pracujících v napěťovém, proudovém nebo mix-módu. Mezi tyto prvky lze začlenit zesilovače typu OTA (operational transconductance amplifier), CCII (second generation current conveyor), FB-CCII (fully-differential second generation current conveyor), FB-DDA (fully-balanced differential difference amplifier), VDTA (voltage differencing transconductance amplifier), CC-CDBA (current-controlled current differencing buffered amplifier) a CFOA (current feedback operational amplifier). Za účelem potvrzení funkčnosti a chování výše zmíněných struktur a prvků byly vytvořeny příklady aplikací, které simulují usměrňovací a induktanční vlastnosti diody, dále pak filtry dolní propusti, pásmové propusti a také univerzální filtry. Všechny aktivní prvky a příklady aplikací byly ověřeny pomocí PSpice simulací s využitím parametrů technologie 0,18 m TSMC CMOS. Pro ilustraci přesného a účinného chování struktur je v disertační práci zahrnuto velké množství simulačních výsledků.The dissertation thesis is aiming at examining the most common methods adopted by analog circuits' designers in order to achieve low voltage (LV) low power (LP) configurations. The capability of LV LP operation could be achieved either by developed technologies or by design techniques. The thesis is concentrating upon design techniques, especially the non–conventional ones which are bulk–driven (BD), floating–gate (FG), quasi–floating–gate (QFG), bulk–driven floating–gate (BD–FG) and bulk–driven quasi–floating–gate (BD–QFG) techniques. The thesis also looks at ways of implementing structures of well–known and modern active elements operating in voltage–, current–, and mixed–mode such as operational transconductance amplifier (OTA), second generation current conveyor (CCII), fully–differential second generation current conveyor (FB–CCII), fully–balanced differential difference amplifier (FB–DDA), voltage differencing transconductance amplifier (VDTA), current–controlled current differencing buffered amplifier (CC–CDBA) and current feedback operational amplifier (CFOA). In order to confirm the functionality and behavior of these configurations and elements, they have been utilized in application examples such as diode–less rectifier and inductance simulations, as well as low–pass, band–pass and universal filters. All active elements and application examples have been verified by PSpice simulator using the 0.18 m TSMC CMOS parameters. Sufficient numbers of simulated plots are included in this thesis to illustrate the precise and strong behavior of structures.

    An ultra-low-voltage class-AB OTA exploiting local CMFB and body-to-gate interface

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    In this work a novel bulk-driven (BD) ultra-low-voltage (ULV) class-AB operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) which exploits local common mode feedback (LCMFB) strategies to enhance performance and robustness against process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations has been proposed. The amplifier exploits body-to-gate (B2G) interface to increase the slew rate and attain class-AB behaviour, whereas two pseudo-resistors have been employed to increase the common mode rejection ratio (CMRR). The architecture has been extensively tested through Monte Carlo and PVT simulations, results show that the amplifier is very robust in terms of gain-bandwidth-product (GBW), power consumption and slew rate. A wide comparison against state-of-the-art has pointed out that best small-signal figures of merit are attained and good large-signal performance is guaranteed, also when worst-case slew rate is considered

    Nano-Watt Modular Integrated Circuits for Wireless Neural Interface.

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    In this work, a nano-watt modular neural interface circuit is proposed for ECoG neuroprosthetics. The main purposes of this work are threefold: (1) optimizing the power-performance of the neural interface circuits based on ECoG signal characteristics, (2) equipping a stimulation capability, and (3) providing a modular system solution to expand functionality. To achieve these aims, the proposed system introduces the following contributions/innovations: (1) power-noise optimization based on the ECoG signal driven analysis, (2) extreme low-power analog front-ends, (3) Manchester clock-edge modulation clock data recovery, (4) power-efficient data compression, (5) integrated stimulator with fully programmable waveform, (6) wireless signal transmission through skin, and (7) modular expandable design. Towards these challenges and contributions, three different ECoG neural interface systems, ENI-1, ENI-16, and ENI-32, have been designed, fabricated, and tested. The first ENI system(ENI-1) is a one-channel analog front-end and fabricated in a 0.25µm CMOS process with chopper stabilized pseudo open-loop preamplifier and area-efficient SAR ADC. The measured channel power, noise and area are 1.68µW at 2.5V power-supply, 1.69µVrms (NEF=2.43), and 0.0694mm^2, respectively. The fabricated IC is packaged with customized miniaturized package. In-vivo human EEG is successfully measured with the fabricated ENI-1-IC. To demonstrate a system expandability and wireless link, ENI-16 IC is fabricated in 0.25µm CMOS process and has sixteen channels with a push-pull preamplifier, asynchronous SAR ADC, and intra-skin communication(ISCOM) which is a new way of transmitting the signal through skin. The measured channel power, noise and area are 780nW, 4.26µVrms (NEF=5.2), and 2.88mm^2, respectively. With the fabricated ENI-16-IC, in-vivo epidural ECoG from monkey is successfully measured. As a closed-loop system, ENI-32 focuses on optimizing the power performance based on a bio-signal property and integrating stimulator. ENI-32 is fabricated in 0.18µm CMOS process and has thirty-two recording channels and four stimulation channels with a cyclic preamplifier, data compression, asymmetric wireless transceiver (Tx/Rx). The measured channel power, noise and area are 140nW (680nW including ISCOM), 3.26µVrms (NEF=1.6), and 5.76mm^2, respectively. The ENI-32 achieves an order of magnitude power reduction while maintaining the system performance. The proposed nano-watt ENI-32 can be the first practical wireless closed-loop solution with a practically miniaturized implantable device.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98064/1/schang_1.pd

    Robust Circuit Design for Low-Voltage VLSI.

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    Voltage scaling is an effective way to reduce the overall power consumption, but the major challenges in low voltage operations include performance degradation and reliability issues due to PVT variations. This dissertation discusses three key circuit components that are critical in low-voltage VLSI. Level converters must be a reliable interface between two voltage domains, but the reduced on/off-current ratio makes it extremely difficult to achieve robust conversions at low voltages. Two static designs are proposed: LC2 adopts a novel pulsed-operation and modulates its pull-up strength depending on its state. A 3-sigma robustness is guaranteed using a current margin plot; SLC inherently reduces the contention by diode-insertion. Improvements in performance, power, and robustness are measured from 130nm CMOS test chips. SRAM is a major bottleneck in voltage-scaling due to its inherent ratioed-bitcell design. The proposed 7T SRAM alleviates the area overhead incurred by 8T bitcells and provides robust operation down to 0.32V in 180nm CMOS test chips with 3.35fW/bit leakage. Auto-Shut-Off provides a 6.8x READ energy reduction, and its innate Quasi-Static READ has been demonstrated which shows a much improved READ error rate. A use of PMOS Pass-Gate improves the half-select robustness by directly modulating the device strength through bitline voltage. Clocked sequential elements, flip-flops in short, are ubiquitous in today’s digital systems. The proposed S2CFF is static, single-phase, contention-free, and has the same number of devices as in TGFF. It shows a 40% power reduction as well as robust low-voltage operations in fabricated 45nm SOI test chips. Its simple hold-time path and the 3.4x improvement in 3-sigma hold-time is presented. A new on-chip flip-flop testing harness is also proposed, and measured hold-time variations of flip-flops are presented.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111525/1/yejoong_1.pd

    Performance analysis and design optimization of parallel-type slew-rate enhancers for switched-capacitor applications

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    The design of single-stage OTAs for accurate switched-capacitor circuits involves challenging trade-offs between speed and power consumption. The addition of a Slew-Rate Enhancer (SRE) circuit placed in parallel to the main OTA (parallel-type SRE) constitutes a viable solution to reduce the settling time, at the cost of low-power overhead and no modifications of the main OTA. In this work, a practical analytical model has been developed to predict the settling time reduction achievable with OTA/SRE systems and to show the effect of the various design parameters. The model has been applied to a real case, consisting of the combination of a standard folded-cascode OTA with an existing parallel-type SRE solution. Simulations performed on a circuit designed with a commercial 180-nm CMOS technology revealed that the actual settling-time reduction was significantly smaller than predicted by the model. This discrepancy was explained by taking into account the internal delays of the SRE, which is exacerbated when a high output current gain is combined with high power efficiency. To overcome this problem, we propose a simple modification of the original SRE circuit, consisting in the addition of a single capacitor which temporarily boosts the OTA/SRE currents reducing the internal turn-on delay. With the proposed approach a settling-time reduction of 57% has been demonstrated with an SRE that introduces only a 10% power-overhead with respect of the single OTA solution. The robustness of the results have been validated by means of Monte-Carlo simulations
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