15 research outputs found

    Diseño de circuitos electrónicos de ultra-bajo consumo en tecnologías nanométricas

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    El escalado de los procesos de fabricación de semiconductores, predicho por el Dr. Moore en los años sesenta, ha tenido un gran impacto en el desarrollo de la electrónica integrada actual. Por una parte, la reducción del tamaño de los transistores ha permitido incrementar la densidad de integración, dando la posibilidad a los diseñadores de introducir un mayor número de funcionalidades dentro de una misma área. Por otro lado, este fenómeno ha llevado consigo una reducción de los costes asociados a la fabricación, logrando abaratar el producto final. Esta continua evolución e incremento de la funcionalidad dentro de un mismo circuito integrado, implica, a su vez, un aumento de la complejidad a la hora de planificar la generación y distribución de las distintas tensiones de alimentación, necesarias para cada uno de los bloques incluidos en el chip. Esto provoca que las especificaciones de ruido, regulación y/o estabilidad asociadas a cada dominio de alimentación varíen según la naturaleza del sistema al que se pretende alimentar. Por esta razón, los circuitos destinados a la gestión de la potencia han tomado una mayor relevancia en los últimos años, puesto que las restricciones impuestas por los sistemas integrados son cada vez mayores. Dentro de los circuitos destinados a la gestión de potencia, los reguladores lineales y, en concreto, los de bajo dropout se corresponden con un bloque básico, ya que permiten la generación de tensiones de alimentación muy estables, precisas y de bajo ruido. Estas características los convierten en el circuito ideal para alimentar a sistemas analógicos o de radio-frecuencia, muy sensibles a variaciones de la alimentación. Otra característica de estos bloques, que ha provocado el creciente interés de la comunidad científica en ellos, es la posibilidad de poder integrarlos sin necesidad de incluir ningún dispositivo externo, con el consecuente ahorro económico y de área en la tarjeta impresa. Sin embargo, dentro de los inconvenientes cabe destacar dos. Por una parte, la eficiencia máxima teórica que pueden lograr es baja frente a soluciones basadas en capacidades conmutadas o inductores. Por otro lado, al buscarse un esquema de compensación interna, el polo dominante del sistema viene fijado por un nodo interno del circuito, provocando que el polo no-dominante esté dominado por la carga. Esto se traduce en un gran problema de estabilidad, debido a que las variaciones que sufre la carga se traducen en un desplazamiento en frecuencia del polo no dominante, degradando el margen de fase de todo el sistema. Según lo descrito anteriormente, esta investigación se ha centrado en el estudio de reguladores lineales de tipo Low-DropOut o LDO compensados internamente y sus propiedades, dada la problemática de este tipo de celdas cuando se busca minimizar su consumo quiescente. Para ello, uno de los objetivos marcados versa sobre la búsqueda de topologías alternativas que permitan el diseño de LDOs de altas prestaciones, sin suponer un incremento del consumo quiescente y que sean válidos para entornos de baja tensión de alimentación. En este sentido, se ha apostado por el uso de la celda Flipped Voltage Follower como regulador debido a su baja impendancia de salida, gran estabilidad y sencillez. Una segunda línea, se ha centrado en la búsqueda de esquemas de compensación simples que permitan extender la estabilidad de este tipo de regulador en todo el rango de funcionamiento. Para ello, se ha explorado un esquema basado en la compensación clásica de Miller donde se ha utilizado un esquema de replica para ajustar de forma dinámica el valor de la resistencia según la carga del sistema. Por último, con el objetivo de minimizar lo máximo posible el consumo quiescente de los reguladores LDOs sin degradar las prestaciones de la respuesta transitoria, se ha explorado el uso de buffers clase AB para gestionar la puerta del transistor de paso. Esta técnica permite mejorar la respuesta transitoria, al ser capaz de crear corrientes elevadas durante las transiciones sin necesidad de penalizar la eficiencia del regulador.The continuous downscaling of semiconductor fabrication processes, which was predicted by PhD. Moore in 1965, have had a great impact in the development of nowadays integrated electronics. The reduction of transistor size has allowed, on one hand, the integration of more devices in the same área, increasing the integration density, while, on the other hand, has led to the reduction of fabrication costs, making the final product cheaper and accessible. However, this increase in the functionality of a single integrated circuit entails greater complexity in the generation and distribution of the different biasing voltages needed throughout one chip. Thus, as more different systems are integrated in the same chip, more different biasing domains coexists in it, leading several different requirements of noise, regulation and/or stability that need to be satisfied simultaneously. Therefore, power management circuits have been acquiring greater significance as technology downscales, reaching its maximum nowadays, when the nanoscale had taken those issues to its culmen. Linear regulators, and more concretely, low-dropout linear regulators, are an essential block in any power management system, able to generate precise and extremely-stable low-noise biasing voltages what make them the ideal choice for extremely biasing-sensitive circuits such as analog or radio-frequency systems. In addition to this, low-dropout linear regulators can be completely integrated without needing any external device, what translates to expenses and area savings. For all these reasons, low-dropout linear regulators have been lately acquiring extensive attention from the scientific community. However, those circuits also have some disadvantages, indeed, the maximum theoretical efficiency that can be achieved though low-dropout linear regulators is lower than switched capacitor or inductor-based solutions efficiency. In addition to this, as internal compensation is required, the system’s dominant pole is given by an internal node, making the non-dominant pole to be fixed by the charge. This leads to a great stability concern as charge variations translate to a frequency displacement of the non-dominant pole that degrades the whole system phase margin. In accordance with previously described issues, this research has been focused on the study of minimum-quiescent consumption internally compensated low-dropout linear regulators (LDO). The first objective of this research is the proposal of low-voltage high-performance LDO structures that do not increase quiescent consumption. Thus, the Flipped Voltage Follower cell has been proposed as regulator due to its inherent low output impedance, great stability and simplicity. The second aim of this research has been the proposal of simple compensation schemes that allow full-operation range stability. So that, a classical Miller compensation based scheme where a replica circuit dynamically adjust the charge resistance has been proposed. Finally, in order to minimize quiescent consumption of LDOs regulators without degrading transient response performance, class-AB buffers have been proposed to drive the pass transistor gate. This technique enhances the transient response as it generates high currents during transitions without compromising efficiency.Premio Extraordinario de Doctorado U

    FVF-Based Low-Dropout Voltage Regulator with Fast Charging/Discharging Paths for Fast Line and Load Regulation

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    A new internally compensated low drop-out voltage regulator based on the cascoded flipped voltage follower is presented in this paper. Adaptive biasing current and fast charging/discharging paths have been added to rapidly charge and discharge the parasitic capacitance of the pass transistor gate, thus improving the transient response. The proposed regulator was designed with standard 65-nm CMOS technology. Measurements show load and line regulations of 433.80 μV/mA and 5.61 mV/V, respectively. Furthermore, the output voltage spikes are kept under 76 mV for 0.1 mA to 100 mA load variations and 0.9 V to 1.2 V line variations with rise and fall times of 1 μs. The total current consumption is 17.88 μA (for a 0.9 V supply voltage).Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TEC2015-71072-C3-3-RConsejería de Economía, Innovación y Ciencia. Junta de Andalucía P12-TIC-186

    LDO compensation with variable Miller series resistance

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    A new compensation method for low dropout (LDO) voltage regulators is proposed, where the series resistor of the conventional Miller compensation changes with the load current to track the variations in the first non‐dominant pole

    ±0.25-V Class-AB CMOS Capacitance Multiplier and Precision Rectifiers

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    Reduction of minimum supply requirements is a crucial aspect to decrease the power consumption in VLSI systems. A high-performance capacitance multiplier able to operate with supplies as low as ±0.25 V is presented. It is based on adaptively biased class-AB current mirrors which provide high current efficiency. Measurement results of a factor 11 capacitance multiplier fabricated in 180-nm CMOS technology verify theoretical claims. Moreover, low-voltage precision rectifiers based on the same class-AB current mirrors are designed and fabricated in the same CMOS process. They generate output currents over 100 times larger than the quiescent current. Both proposed circuits have 300-nW static power dissipation when operating with ±0.25-V supplies

    Analog CMOS Readout Channel for Time and Amplitude Measurements With Radiation Sensitivity Analysis for Gain-Boosting Amplifiers

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    The front-end readout channel consists of a charge sensitive amplifier (CSA) and two different unipolar-shaping circuits to generate pulses suitable for time and energy measurement. The signal processing chain of the single channel is built of two different parallel processing paths: a fast path with a peaking time of 30 ns to obtain the time of arrival for each particle impinging the detector; and a slow path with a peaking time of 400 ns dedicated for low noise amplitude measurements, which is formed by a pole-zero cancellation circuit and a 4th order complex shaper based on a bridged-T architecture. The tunability of the system is accomplished by the discharge time constant of the CSA in order to accommodate various event rates. The readout system has been implemented in a 180 nm CMOS technology with the size of 525 μm x 290 μm . The building blocks use compact gain-boosting techniques based on quasi-floating gate (QFG) transistors achieving accurate energy measurement with good resolution. The high impedance nodes of QFG transistors require a detailed study of sensitivity to single-effect transients (SET). After carrying out this study, this paper proposes a method to select the value of the QFG capacitors, minimizing the area occupancy while maintaining robustness to radiation. The nonlinearity of the CSA-slow-shaper has been found to be less than 1% over a 10–70 fC input charge. The power dissipation of the readout channel is 4.1 mW with a supply voltage of 1.8 V.Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades PGC2018-095640-B-I00Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades P18-FR-3852 y P18-FR-431

    Plataforma basada en microprocesador para el aprendizaje de tecnologías inalámbricas RFID, NFC y Bluetooth

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    El Congreso TAEE 2010, organizado por la Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED) y la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM), se ha celebrado entre el 13 y el 15 de abril de 2010.En este trabajo se presenta el desarrollo de una plataforma, basada en un microprocesador de bajo coste, que pretende acercar a los alumnos al uso y desarrollo de aplicaciones basadas en las tecnologías inalámbricas RFID y Bluetooth. Mientras que el estándar NFC representa el ejemplo más claro del elevado crecimiento que están experimentado recientemente los dispositivos RFID, Bluetooth personifica el grado de desarrollo y uso que pueden alcanzar estas tecnologías inalámbricas gracias a los dispositivos electrónicos de uso cotidiano como son teléfonos mó viles, PDAs y PCs portátiles. Para mostrar a los alumnos el interés de ambas tecnologías, se ha desarrollado un sistema simple para la realización de trabajos prácticos en una asignatura denominada “Laboratorio de Instrumentación Electrónica”, adscrita a la titulación de Ingeniería de telecomunicaciones en la Escuela Superior de Ingenieros de la Universidad de Sevill

    Adaptive Miller Compensation under Extreme Load Variations in IC-LDO regulators

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    A new frequency compensation technique for output buffers able to manage a wide range of loads, is proposed in this paper. To improve the stability, this technique implements a variable zero nulling resistor in a classical Miller compensation. A replica circuit senses the operating region of the output stage and generates the required value of the nulling resistor. In order to validate the effectiveness of the proposed technique, an Internally Compensated Low Dropout (IC-LDO) regulator based on a classical topology has been chosen and designed in a 65 nm standard CMOS technology. Results show that the proposed compensation scheme improves the Phase Margin of the IC- LDO regulator keeping it higher than 54o for load currents from 0 to 100mA at the cost of increasing only 10% the total quiescent power consumption and negligible area

    Class AB Voltage Follower and Low-Voltage Current Mirror with Very High Figures of Merit Based on the Flipped Voltage Follower

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    This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).The application of the flipped voltage follower to implement two high-performance circuits is presented: (1) The first is a class AB cascode flipped voltage follower that shows an improved slew rate and an improved bandwidth by very large factors and that has a higher output range than the conventional flipped voltage follower. It has a small signal figure of merit FOMSS = 46 MHz pF/μW and a current efficiency figure of merit FOMCE = 118. This is achieved by just introducing an addi- tional output current sourcing PMOS transistor (P-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor) that provides dynamic output current enhancement and increases the quiescent power dissipation by less than 10%. (2) The other is a high-performance low-voltage current mirror with a nominal gain accuracy better than 0.01%, 0.212 Ω input resistance, 112 GΩ output resistance, 1 V supply voltage requirements, 0.15 V input, and 0.2 V output compliance voltages. These char- acteristics are achieved by utilizing two auxiliary amplifiers and a level shifter that increase the power dissipation just moderately. Post-layout simulations verify the performance of the circuits in a commercial 180 nm CMOS (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor) technology

    IC-LDO Regulator with 600 nA Quiescent Current Using a Class AB Buffer

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    An ultra-low power Internally Compensated Low- Dropout (IC-LDO) regulator with a quiescent current consumption lower than 600 nA is proposed. It is based on the classical IC-LDO topology, which has been modified to include a class AB buffer between the output of the error amplifier and the gate of the pass transistor (MPASS). This way, a fast charge/discharge of its parasitic capacitance is achieved with the inherent low quiescent power consumption of class AB circuits. The proposed regulator has been fabricated in a standard 0.18- μm CMOS technology. Experimental results show that the proposed regulator has a Figure of Merit in the state of the art
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