2,294 research outputs found

    New mathematical formulation for designing a fully differential self-biased folded cascode amplifier

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    One of the most important building blocks in analog circuit design is the operational amplifiers. This is because of their versatility and wide spread usage in many applications such as communications transmitters and receivers, analog to digital converters, or any other application that requires a small signal to be amplified. The basic amplifier topologies are introduced. Then, some operational amplifiers topologies are introduced with some techniques to self bias these amplifiers. The folded cascode fully differential Op-Amp with self bias is presented. This is one of the newest amplifier topologies which provide stable self-biased amplifiers. A new mathematical model for fully differential folded cascode amplifiers is presented and generalized to include the family of fully differential complementary amplifiers. This formulation focuses on deriving detailed design equations for the amplifier gain and frequency response. The equations are verified through time domain and frequency domain simulations of different fabrication processes to ensure the validity of the model across a wide range of processes. The model was verified against TMSC 180nm, 250nm, and 350nm fabrication processes. The new model agrees well with simulations; with 1% error for the amplifier gain and \u3c7% error for amplifier bandwidth. The relatively high error value for the bandwidth is because the model considers the worst case scenario and overestimates the output capacitance. Finally, the algorithm of getting this formulation is extended to include special and commonly used cases. This formulation proved to be very useful in designing stable, self-biased, fully differential folded cascode amplifiers

    Design architectures of the CMOS power amplifier for 2.4 GHz ISM band applications: An overview

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    Power amplifiers (PAs) are among the most crucial functional blocks in the radio frequency (RF) frontend for reliable wireless communication. PAs amplify and boost the input signal to the required output power. The signal is amplified to make it sufficiently high for the transmitter to propagate the required distance to the receiver. Attempted advancements of PA have focused on attaining high-performance RF signals for transmitters. Such PAs are expected to require low power consumption while producing a relatively high output power with a high efficiency. However, current PA designs in nanometer and micrometer complementary metal–oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology present inevitable drawbacks, such as oxide breakdown and hot electron effect. A well-defined architecture, including a linear and simple functional block synthesis, is critical in designing CMOS PA for various applications. This article describes the different state-of-the art design architectures of CMOS PA, including their circuit operations, and analyzes the performance of PAs for 2.4 GHz ISM (industrial, scientific, and medical) band applications

    Design of Inverter Based CMOS Amplifiers in Deep Nanoscale Technologies

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    In this work, it is proposed a fully differential ring amplifier topology with a deadzone voltage created by a CMOS resistor with a biasing circuit to increase the robustness over PVT variations. The study focuses on analyzing the performance of the ring amplifier over process, temperature, and supply voltage variations, in order to guarantee a viable industrial employment in a 7 nm FinFET CMOS technology node for being used as residue amplifier in ADCs. A ring amplifier is a small modular amplifier, derived from a ring oscillator. It is simple enough that it can quickly be designed using only a few inverters, capacitors, and switches. It can amplify with rail-to-rail output swing, competently charge large capacitive loads using slew-based charging, and scale well in performance according to process trends. In typical process corner, a gain of 72 dB is achieved with a settling time of 150 ps. Throughout the study, the proposed topology is compared with others presented in literature showing better results over corners and presenting a faster response. The proposed topology isn’t yet suitable for industry use, because it presents one corner significantly slower than the rest, namely process corner FF 125 °C, and process corner FS -40 °C with a small oscillation throughout the entire amplification period. Nevertheless, it proved itself to be a promising technique, showing a high gain and a fast settling without oscillation phase, with room for improvement.Neste trabalho, é proposta uma topologia de ring amplifier com a deadzone a ser criada através de uma resistência CMOS com um circuito de polarização para aumentar a robustez para as variações PVT. O estudo foca-se em analisar a performance do ring amplifier nas variações de processo, temperatura e tensão de alimentação, de forma a garantir um uso viável em indústria na tecnologia de 7 nm FinFET CMOS, para ser usado como amplificador de resíduo em ADCs. Um ring amplifier é um pequeno amplificador modular, derivado do ring oscillator. É simples o suficiente para ser facilmente projetado usando apenas poucos inversores, condensadores e interruptores. Consegue amplificar com rail-to-rail output swing, carregar grandes cargas capacitivas com carregamento slew-based e escalar bem em termos de performance de acordo com o processo. No typical process corner, foi obtido um ganho de 72 dB com um tempo de estabilização de 150 ps. Durante o estudo, a topologia proposta é comparada com outras presentes na literatura mostrando melhores resultados over corners e apresentando uma resposta mais rápida. A topologia proposta ainda não está preparada para uso industrial uma vez que apresenta um corner significativamente mais lento que os restantes, nomeadamente, process corner FF 125 °C, e outro process corner, FS -40 °C, com uma pequena oscilação durante todo o período de amplificação. Todavia, provou ser uma técnica promissora, apresentando um ganho elevado e uma rápida estabilização sem fase de oscilação, com espaço para melhoria

    Low-Noise Micro-Power Amplifiers for Biosignal Acquisition

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    There are many different types of biopotential signals, such as action potentials (APs), local field potentials (LFPs), electromyography (EMG), electrocardiogram (ECG), electroencephalogram (EEG), etc. Nerve action potentials play an important role for the analysis of human cognition, such as perception, memory, language, emotions, and motor control. EMGs provide vital information about the patients which allow clinicians to diagnose and treat many neuromuscular diseases, which could result in muscle paralysis, motor problems, etc. EEGs is critical in diagnosing epilepsy, sleep disorders, as well as brain tumors. Biopotential signals are very weak, which requires the biopotential amplifier to exhibit low input-referred noise. For example, EEGs have amplitudes from 1 μV [microvolt] to 100 μV [microvolt] with much of the energy in the sub-Hz [hertz] to 100 Hz [hertz] band. APs have amplitudes up to 500 μV [microvolt] with much of the energy in the 100 Hz [hertz] to 7 kHz [hertz] band. In wearable/implantable systems, the low-power operation of the biopotential amplifier is critical to avoid thermal damage to surrounding tissues, preserve long battery life, and enable wirelessly-delivered or harvested energy supply. For an ideal thermal-noise-limited amplifier, the amplifier power is inversely proportional to the input-referred noise of the amplifier. Therefore, there is a noise-power trade-off which must be well-balanced by the designers. In this work I propose novel amplifier topologies, which are able to significantly improve the noise-power efficiency by increasing the effective transconductance at a given current. In order to reject the DC offsets generated at the tissue-electrode interface, energy-efficient techniques are employed to create a low-frequency high-pass cutoff. The noise contribution of the high-pass cutoff circuitry is minimized by using power-efficient configurations, and optimizing the biasing and dimension of the devices. Sufficient common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) and power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) are achieved to suppress common-mode interferences and power supply noises. Our design are fabricated in standard CMOS processes. The amplifiers’ performance are measured on the bench, and also demonstrated with biopotential recordings

    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

    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 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

    Differential temperature sensors: Review of applications in the test and characterization of circuits, usage and design methodology

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    Differential temperature sensors can be placed in integrated circuits to extract a signature ofthe power dissipated by the adjacent circuit blocks built in the same silicon die. This review paper firstdiscusses the singularity that differential temperature sensors provide with respect to other sensortopologies, with circuit monitoring being their main application. The paper focuses on the monitoringof radio-frequency analog circuits. The strategies to extract the power signature of the monitoredcircuit are reviewed, and a list of application examples in the domain of test and characterizationis provided. As a practical example, we elaborate the design methodology to conceive, step bystep, a differential temperature sensor to monitor the aging degradation in a class-A linear poweramplifier working in the 2.4 GHz Industrial Scientific Medical—ISM—band. It is discussed how,for this particular application, a sensor with a temperature resolution of 0.02 K and a high dynamicrange is required. A circuit solution for this objective is proposed, as well as recommendations for thedimensions and location of the devices that form the temperature sensor. The paper concludes with adescription of a simple procedure to monitor time variability.Postprint (published version
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