622 research outputs found

    Design consideration in low dropout voltage regulator for batteryless power management unit

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    Harvesting energy from ambient Radio Frequency (RF) source is a great deal toward batteryless Internet of Thing (IoT) System on Chip (SoC) application as green technology has become a future interest. However, the harvested energy is unregulated thus it is highly susceptible to noise and cannot be used efficiently. Therefore, a dedicated low noise and high Power Supply Ripple Rejection (PSRR) of Low Dropout (LDO) voltage regulator are needed in the later stages of system development to supply the desired load voltage. Detailed analysis of the noise and PSRR of an LDO is not sufficient. This work presents a design of LDO to generate a regulated output voltage of 1.8V from 3.3V input supply targeted for 120mA load application. The performance of LDO is evaluated and analyzed. The PSRR and noise in LDO have been investigated by applying a low-pass filter. The proposed design achieves the design specification through the simulation results by obtaining 90.85dB of open-loop gain, 76.39º of phase margin and 63.46dB of PSRR respectively. The post-layout simulation shows degradation of gain and maximum load current due to parasitic issue. The measurement of maximum load regulation is dropped to 96mA compared 140mA from post-layout. The proposed LDO is designed using 180nm Silterra CMOS process technology

    Design and implementation of a sliding-mode controller for digital low-dropout/linear regulators

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    This paper presents an approach to utilize of sliding-mode (SM) controller in digital low-dropout/linear regulators. Various design aspects, including the extraction of the regulator state-space model and sliding coefficients by considering the hitting, existence, and stability conditions are described. Moreover, the freeze control block is introduced as a solution to compensate the high frequency chattering phenomenon of SM, resulting in reduction of switching losses. In order to verify the statements, a quasi digital low-dropout/linear regulator (QDLDO) is implemented in a discrete form on a PCB. The circuit consists of the proposed current-mode current feedback amplifier (CFA)-based SM controller and switchedmode PMOS array driven by a bidirectional serial shift register, which is controlled by the SM controller. The results reveal that the controller detects the load changes rapidly, and eliminates the output limit-cycle oscillation, providing a robust and stable output voltage.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Integrated Circuits for Programming Flash Memories in Portable Applications

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    Smart devices such as smart grids, smart home devices, etc. are infrastructure systems that connect the world around us more than before. These devices can communicate with each other and help us manage our environment. This concept is called the Internet of Things (IoT). Not many smart nodes exist that are both low-power and programmable. Floating-gate (FG) transistors could be used to create adaptive sensor nodes by providing programmable bias currents. FG transistors are mostly used in digital applications like Flash memories. However, FG transistors can be used in analog applications, too. Unfortunately, due to the expensive infrastructure required for programming these transistors, they have not been economical to be used in portable applications. In this work, we present low-power approaches to programming FG transistors which make them a good candidate to be employed in future wireless sensor nodes and portable systems. First, we focus on the design of low-power circuits which can be used in programming the FG transistors such as high-voltage charge pumps, low-drop-out regulators, and voltage reference cells. Then, to achieve the goal of reducing the power consumption in programmable sensor nodes and reducing the programming infrastructure, we present a method to program FG transistors using negative voltages. We also present charge-pump structures to generate the necessary negative voltages for programming in this new configuration

    Efficiency Improvement of LDO Output Based Linear Regulator With Supercapacitor Energy Recovery – A versatile new technique with an example of a 5V to 1.5V version

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    Supercapacitors are used in various industrial applications and the supercapacitors technology is gradually progressing into a mature state. Common applications of supercapacitors are in electric vehicles, hybrid electric vehicles, uninterruptible power supply (UPS) and in portable devices such as cellular phones and laptops. The capacitance values range from fractional Farads to few thousand Farads and their continuos DC voltage ratings are from 2V to 6V. At University of Waikato, a team works on using supercapacitors for improving the efficiency of linear voltage regulators. In particular, this patented technique aims at combining off the shelfs LDO ICs and a supercapacitor array for improving end to end efficiency of linear regulator. My work is aimed at developing the theoretical background and designing prototype circuitry for a voltage regulator for the case of unregulated input supply is more than 3 times of the minimum input voltage requirement of the LDO which is applicable for a 5V to 1.5V regulator. Experimental results are indicated with future suggestions for improvement

    A Silicon Carbide Linear Voltage Regulator for High Temperature Applications

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    Current market demands have pushed the capabilities of silicon to the edge. High temperature and high power applications require a semiconductor device to operate reliably in very harsh environments. This situation has awakened interests in other types of semiconductors, usually with a higher bandgap than silicon\u27s, as the next venue for the fabrication of integrated circuits (IC) and power devices. Silicon Carbide (SiC) has so far proven to be one of the best options in the power devices field. This dissertation presents the first attempt to fabricate a SiC linear voltage regulator. This circuit would provide a power management option for developing SiC processes due to its relatively simple implementation and yet, a performance acceptable to today\u27s systems applications. This document details the challenges faced and methods needed to design and fabricate the circuit as well as measured data corroborating design simulation results

    Design of VCOs in Deep Sub-micron Technologies

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    This work will present a more accurate frequency prediction model for single-ended ring oscillators (ROs), a case-study comparing different ROs, and a design method for LC voltage-controlled oscillators (LCVCOs) that uses a MATLAB script based on analytical equations to output a graphical design space showing performance characteristics as a function of design parameters. Using this method, design trade-offs become clear, and the designer can choose which performance characteristics to optimize. These methods were used to design various topologies of ring oscillators and LCVCOs in the GlobalFoundries 28 nm HPP CMOS technology, comparing the performance between different topologies based on simulation results. The results from the MATLAB design script were compared to simulation results as well to show the effectiveness of the design methods. Three varieties of 5 GHz voltage controlled ring oscillators were designed in the GlobalFoundries 28 nm HPP CMOS technology. The first is a low current low dropout regulator (LDO) tuned ring oscillator designed with thin oxide devices and a 0.85 V supply. The second is a high current LDO-tuned ring oscillator designed with medium oxide devices and a 1.5 V supply. The third is varactor-tuned ring oscillator with no LDO, and 0.85 V supply. Performance comparison of these ring oscillator systems are presented, outlining trade-offs between tuning range, phase noise, power dissipation, and area. The varactor-tuned ring oscillator exhibits 8.89 dBc/Hz (with power supply noise) and 16.27 dBc/Hz (without power supply noise) improvement in phase noise over the best-performing LDO-tuned ring oscillator. There are advantages in average power dissipation and area for a minimal tradeoff in tuning range with the varactor-tuned ring oscillator. Four multi-GHz LCVCOs were designed in the GlobalFoundries 28 nm HPP CMOS technology: 15 GHz varactor-tuned NMOS-only, 9 GHz varactor-tuned self-biased CMOS, 14.2 GHz digitally-tuned NMOS-only, and 8.2 GHz digitally-tuned self-biased CMOS. As a design method, analytical ex-pressions describing tuning range, tank amplitude constraint, and startup condition were used in MATLAB to output a graphical view of the design space for both NMOS-only and CMOS LCVCOs, with maximum varactor capacitance on the y-axis and NMOS transistor width on the x-axis. Phase noise was predicted as well. In addition to the standard varactor control voltage tuning method, digitally-tuned implementations of both NMOS and CMOS LCVCOs are presented. The performance aspects of all designed LCVCOs are compared. Both varactor-tuned and digitally-tuned NMOS LCVCOs have lower phase noise, lower power consumption, and higher tuning range than both CMOS topologies. The varactor-tuned NMOS LCVCO has the lowest phase noise of -97 dBc/Hz at 1 MHz offset from 15 GHz center frequency, FOM of -172.20 dBc/Hz, and FOMT of -167.76 dBc/Hz. The digitally-tuned CMOS LCVCO has the greatest tuning range at 10%. Phase noise is improved by 3 dBc/Hz with the digitally-tuned CMOS topology over varactor-tuned CMOS

    A Ringamp-Assisted, Output Capacitor-less Analog CMOS Low-Dropout Voltage Regulator

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    Continued advancements in state-of-the-art integrated circuits have furthered trends toward higher computational performance and increased functionality within smaller circuit area footprints, all while improving power efficiencies to meet the demands of mobile and battery-powered applications. A significant portion of these advancements have been enabled by continued scaling of CMOS technology into smaller process node sizes, facilitating faster digital systems and power optimized computation. However, this scaling has degraded classic analog amplifying circuit structures with reduced voltage headroom and lower device output resistance; and thus, lower available intrinsic gain. This work investigates these trends and their impact for fine-grain Low-Dropout (LDO) Voltage Regulators, leading to a presented design methodology and implementation of a state-of-the-art Ringamp-Assisted, Output Capacitor-less Analog CMOS LDO Voltage Regulator capable of both power scaling and process node scaling for general SoC applications

    Analysis on Supercapacitor Assisted Low Dropout (SCALDO) Regulators

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    State-of-the-art electronic systems employ three fundamental techniques for DC-DC converters: (a) switch-mode power supplies (SMPS); (b) linear power supplies; (c) switched capacitor (charge pump) converters. In practical systems, these three techniques are mixed to provide a complex, but elegant, overall solution, with energy efficiency, effective PCB footprint, noise and transient performance to suit different electronic circuit blocks. Switching regulators have relatively high end-to-end efficiency, in the range of 70 to 93%, but can have issues with output noise and EMI/RFI emissions. Switched capacitor converters use a set of capacitors for energy storage and conversion. In general, linear regulators have low efficiencies in the range 30 to 60%. However, they have outstanding output characteristics such as low noise, excellent transient response to load current fluctuations, design simplicity and low cost design which are far superior to SMPS. Given the complex situation in switch-mode converters, low dropout (LDO) regulators were introduced to address the equirements of noise-sensitive and fast transient loads in portable devices. A typical commercial off-the-shelf LDO has its input voltage slightly higher than the desired regulated output for optimal efficiency. The approximate efficiency of a linear regulator, if the power consumed by the control circuits is negligible, can be expressed by the ratio of Vo/Vin. A very low frequency supercapacitor circulation technique can be combined with commercial low dropout regulator ICs to significantly increase the end-to-end efficiency by a multiplication factor in the range of 1.33 to 3, compared to the efficiency of a linear regulator circuit with the same input-output voltages. In this patented supercapacitor-assisted low dropout (SCALDO) regulator technique developed by a research team at the University of Waikato, supercapacitors are used as lossless voltage droppers, and the energy reuse occurs at very low frequencies in the range of less than ten hertz, eliminating RFI/EMI concerns. This SCALDO technique opens up a new approach to design step-down, DC-DC converters suitable for processor power supplies with very high end-to-end efficiency which is closer to the efficiencies of practical switching regulators, while maintaining the superior output specifications of a linear design. Furthermore, it is important to emphasize that the SCALDO technique is not a variation of well-known switched capacitor DC-DC converters. In this thesis, the basic SCALDO concept is further developed to achieve generalised topologies, with the relevant theory that can be applied to a converter with any input-output step-down voltage combination. For these generalised topologies, some important design parameters, such as the number of supercapacitors, switching matrix details and efficiency improvement factors, are derived to form the basis of designing SCALDO regulators. With the availability of commercial LDO ICs with output current ratings up to 10 A, and thin-prole supercapacitors with DC voltage ratings from 2.3 to 5.5 V, several practically useful, medium-current SCALDO prototypes: 12V-to-5V, 5V-to-2V, 5.5V-to-3.3V have been developed. Experimental studies were carried out on these SCALDO prototypes to quantify performance in terms of line regulation, load regulation, efficiency and transient response. In order to accurately predict the performance and associated waveforms of the individual phases (charge, discharge and transition) of the SCALDO regulator, Laplace transform-based theory for supercapacitor circulation is developed, and analytical predictions are compared with experimental measurements for a 12V-to-5V prototype. The analytical results tallied well with the practical waveforms observed in a 12V-to-5V converter, indicating that the SCALDO technique can be generalized to other versatile configurations, and confirming that the simplified assumptions used to describe the circuit elements are reasonable and justifiable. After analysing the performance of several SCALDO prototypes, some practical issues in designing SCALDO regulators have been identified. These relate to power losses and implications for future development of the SCALDO design

    Efficiency improvement of LDO ouput based linear regulator with supercapacitor energy recovery - a versatile new technique with an example of a 5v to 1.5 v version

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    Supercapacitors are used in various industrial applications and the supercapacitors technology is gradually progressing into a mature state. Common applications of supercapacitors are in electric vehicles, hybrid electric vehicles, uninterruptible power supply (UPS) and in portable devices such as cellular phones and laptops. The capacitance values range from fractional Farads to few thousand Farads and their continuos DC voltage ratings are from 2V to 6V. At University of Waikato, a team works on using supercapacitors for improving the efficiency of linear voltage regulators. In particular, this patented technique aims at combining off the shelfs LDO ICs and a supercapacitor array for improving end to end efficiency of linear regulator. My work is aimed at developing the theoretical background and designing prototype circuitry for a voltage regulator for the case of unregulated input supply is more than 3 times of the minimum input voltage requirement of the LDO which is applicable for a 5V to 1.5V regulator. Experimental results are indicated with future suggestions for improvement
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