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FACULTY OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMMUNICATION BRNO UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY NEW CIRCUIT PRINCIPLES FOR INTEGRATED CIRCUITS Part 2: Special Function Blocks for Analog Current Signal Processing Author: Igor Mucha Brno 2010 Contents Introduction 1 Chapter I Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing 10 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits 19 page i Contents Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications 42 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers 63 page ii Contents Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers 74 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers 96 page iii Contents Conclusions 118 Acknowledgments 120 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors 121 page iv Introduction Since the discovery of the electricity in the last century a number of electric and later electronic devices have taken over large parts of human's activities. From their most traditional domain of exploitation in household and communication these devices have spread to practically each single part of human life. Nowadays electric and electronic devices control manufacturing processes, traffic, are parts of educational and health processes, etc., to make our life more comfortable and safer. With the fabrication of the first integrated circuits it has become possible to design larger electronic circuits on a single chip. In this way the space occupied by the electronics lowered, the power consumption went down, the circuits became faster and more reliable. With improvements on the technologies it was possible to integrate more and more discrete elements on a single chip and VLSI systems were born. Today practically everything concerning electronics turns around VLSI systems. 1. Analog Signal Processing The growing integration allowed digital circuits to become superior to the conventional analog circuits for signal processing. This is because the digital signal is defined only in discrete values of time and amplitude, typically in a binary weighted sum of signals having only two defined values of amplitude. On the contrary, the analog signal is defined in a continuous range of time and amplitude, what makes it much more sensitive to interferences due to technology variations and noise. In addition, digital circuits offer a better possibility to memorize the processed signal, the signal processing can be changed by software inside a solidly designed hardware, and last but not least, the simulation of digital signal processing can be done on block or system level without requiring sophisticated models for active devices. Taking these advantages into account, the designers are forced to look for digital solutions rather than analog in VLSI systems. Therefore much more effort has been devoted to the development of circuits, technologies, design tools, for digital rather than analog signal processing. Nevertheless, there are two reasons, why analog signal processing will be always required in some form. The main reason is that the real world is analog. Practically all signals in the physical world are continuous in both amplitude and time, and hence always analog techniques will be required for conditioning of such signals before they can be processed in digital signal processing circuits. A typical example of this is illustrated in Fig. L 1. Another important reason for the existence of analog signal processing is the bandwidth, which can be some order of magnitudes higher, if the signal is processed in analog circuits than in digital. In Fig. L2 the signal bandwidth requirements for signal processing in various application areas can be found and Fig. I.3 indicates the possibilities of various technologies. page 1 Introduction Figure I. 1 General signal processing system Figure I. 2 Bandwidths of signals used in signal processing applications Figure I. 3 Bandwidths that can be processed by present-day technologies page 2 Introduction Figure I. 4 Example of a digital stereo processing system Modern electronic signal processing systems include usually both analog and digital processing, as it can be seen in the example of a stereo processing system in Fig. L4. Here the physical signal is sensed by a sensor and captured as an analog electrical signal. This signal must firstly be filtered to remove unwanted background noise signals and some analog preprocessing is performed. Then the analog signal is converted to digital and the main processing is done by digital circuits. To be able to control the outside physical world the digital signal must be converted back to analog. The superiority of digital signal processing is also expressed by the technologies for the fabrication of the chips, which are tailored mainly for digital signal processing. The classical analog bipolar technology is abdicating to the favour of the much cheaper and for digital signal processing more suitable CMOS technology. To be able to keep the high performance of analog signal processing circuits also on `digital' technologies the designers have to look for new principles for the design of circuits for analog signal processing. Terms like `switched capacitors,' `current mode' and `switched currents' are appearing more and more in diverse scientific and technical journals and educational publications. The current signal processing as a part of analog signal processing is gaining an increasing attention of analog designers because of its supplemental properties to the more classical voltage signal processing and it offers also some advantages before the old, continuous-time, voltage-mode design techniques. 2. Current Signal Processing During the years the analog, but also the digital designers began the think and calculate only in terms of voltages rather than currents, although many of the signals handled by the analog circuits are actually currents in their initial state. Examining the analog paths of the signal processing system in Fig. L 1 shows that the output signals of the sensors, which are very often currents or charge, were first converted to voltages by I/V converters, before they were processed in pure voltage signal processing circuits; see Fig. I.5a. The pre-processed voltage was then converted back to current, because many of the A/D converters need current as input signal. A similar situation occurred at the output of the signal processing system, page 3 Introduction Figure I.5 Signal processing systems using a) voltage processing circuits b) current processing circuits where the output current of the D/A converter was first converted to voltage, then postprocessed and finally often converted back to current to drive a physical transducer. A much simpler way here is to use analog circuits directly processing the signals in form of currents, like indicated in Fig. I.5b. This would skip the V/I and I/V converters necessary to adjust the input signal for voltage processing and for converting to digital signals. The chip area as well as the energy needed to drive the V/I and I/V converters would be saved, and in addition, the accuracy of the signal processing could be higher, because a possible sources of errors would be canceled too. 3. Outline of the Thesis The reason, why current signal processing was not able to establish itself until now, was the missing of high-performance current processing circuits. While there are a number of well established building blocks for voltage processing circuits, e.g. operational amplifiers, comparators, etc., there was not enough attention paid to the design of similar building blocks for current processing circuits. In this thesis two different approaches to the design of linear, continuous-time, current processing circuits will be given, the current-mode approach page 4 lntroduction and the design of high-current-gain devices able to work in negative-feedback configurations. In Chapter 1 a comparison of the current signal processing to the voltage signal processing is given. This chapter offers all theoretical background for the design of current processing circuits described in the following chapters. Basic building blocks, not only for current processing circuits, are described and their various modifications are compared in Chapter 2. Everything about current conveyors, which are very useful building blocks of both voltage and current processing circuits, is told in Chapter 3. Beside already well known and established circuits based on current conveyors some new current conveyor implementations are proposed and the results obtained from measurements on fabricated test chips are briefly presented. The main part of the thesis concerns high-current-gain devices. In Chapter 4 the principle of achieving a high current gain is explained and some high-current-gain stages are presented. Built on these high-current-gain stages current operational amplifiers are proposed in Chapter 5. Here the theoretical considerations about the configuration of the current operational amplifiers, as adjoint elements to the voltage operational amplifiers, can be found, and their first and second order parameters are defined. This ís followed by experimental results obtained from simulations done on two current operational amplifiers considered for fabrication. In the end of the chapter also some examples of the possible exploitation of current operational amplifiers are illustrated. Some more proposals of current operational amplifiers for high-performance current signal processing are given in Chapter 6. In this chapter some general properties of the current operational amplifiers suitable for VLSI design are indicated, 4. Notation, Symbology and Terminology The notation, symbology and terminology used throughout this thesis coincides with the standards proposed by technical societies and given by the International System of Units. Signals, as voltages and currents, are designated as a quantity with a subscript, both either upper or lower case according to the convention illustrated in the Table I.1 and Fig. L6. In accordance with Table I_ 1 also large-signal parameters are given by an upper case quantity as well as upper case subscript and small-signal parameters opposite by a lower case quantity and subscript. The notations for signals and parameters associated with elements of circuits illustrated in figures are supplemented by their names in the subscript. To maintain a good survey also in large circuits, the symbols of MOS transistors shown in Fig. L7 have been chosen. The bulk terminals are missing here, while the bulks of all MOS transistors are connected either to the positive supply voltage for the p-channel or to the negative supply voltage for the n-channel devices, respectively, if not stated else in the text. page 5 Introduction Table I. I Figure I. 6 Notation for signals Figure I. 7 Symbols of MOS transistors a) n-channel MOS (bulk is connected to the negative supply voltage) b) p-channel MOS (bulk is connected to the positive supply voltage) page 6 Introduction 5. List of Symbols page 7 Introduction page 8 Introduction page 9 Chapter 1 Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing Any signal processing done in electric or electronic circuits is performed by means of more or less organized movement of charge, where voltages and currents are usually the variables of the signal processing, and time, resistances, capacitances and inductances are parameters of the circuit defining the properties of the signal processing. The main reason for using only voltages and currents in analog signal processing is that active devices, which are exploited in analog electronics, operate mostly with resistances, or their inverted counterparts conductances, as parameters for controlling the signal processing. The signal is then processed by miscellaneous voltage-current and current-voltage conversions, amplification, weighted addition and multiplication, etc. The starting chapter of the thesis gives a global overview above the basic laws and rules of signal processing. It identifies and compares both the so-called voltage signal processing and the so-called current signal processing as a complementary view onto signal processing. At the end also the adjoint network theorem, which can be seen as the coupling link between voltage and current signal processing, will set the theoretical fundamentals for the design of current processing circuits. 1. Fundamentals of Signal Processing A. A Very Brief Definition of Basic Variables and Parameters The possibility of any electrical operation is due to the existence of charged microparticles able to transport or trap the charge. The smallest existing particles used in electronics are electrons carrying the charge Since the electrons are parts of larger systems, crystals, which appear electrically neutral from outside, the missing of an electron in a part of the crystal can be modeled by defining a quasiparticle called `hole' carrying the opposite value of the charge carried by the electron page 10 Chapter l Current Signal Processing vs. Voltae Signal Processing Any electrical operation done in solid-state electronics makes use of these two microparticles. The term current is used to express any organized flow of the charge. Thus the current is defined as the amount of charge being transported in a unity time period and it is usually used as a continuous time variable, although the carriers of the charge creating the current by their movement are actually discrete. The relationship between the flow of discrete carriers of charge and the continuous variable current can be expressed by the noise, which has its origin in the probability of grouping and ungrouping of the discrete carriers, their trapping and releasing in the conductive `channels,' and the probability of penetrating potential barriers. In this way the noise establishes a nature bottom limit for the size of the recognizable signal current, called also the dynamic range. Any organized movement of the carriers of charge needs to consume energy, which is expressed in terms of voltage. The voltage is defined as the energy needed for moving a unity charge from a lower energy state to a higher state Two points inside an electric field have a difference of potentials - voltage of 1 V, if the movement of a unity positive charge from one point to the other requires the energy of 1 J. The relationship between the voltage and current is expressed by the Ohm's law where a new variable, the electrical resistance R = V _ I has been defined as the ability of conductors to hinder the organized movement of the carriers of charge. Thus, a conductor has the resistance I S2 (ohm), if the current 1 A flowing inside is achieved by the voltage of 1 V. By inverting the resistance R the conductance is obtained The ability of storing of the charge is expressed by the definition of the capacitance page 11 Chapter 7 Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing where the charge 1 C increases the voltage by 1 V if the storage capacitance is 1 F. B. Voltage Signal Processing To simplify the design of signal processing circuits only one of the two main variables of signal processing, either voltage or current, is taken into account for the considerations and calculations, while the other is usually handled only as an unwanted parasitic. Historically voltage has been used as the main variable for signal processing, probably because the thinking in terms of voltages is easier and simpler for the designers, then the thinking in terms of currents. However, during the years the analog electronics became practically only voltage processing and the most building blocks used by analog electronics are typical voltage processing circuits. A block diagram of a pure voltage processing system is shown in Fig. 1.1. The input terminals of voltage processing blocks are usually high-impedance, ideally approaching infinite ohms, so that there is only a small current, ideally no current, flowing into or out of these terminals. This allows to supply more input terminals connected in parallel by a single output terminal. The output terminals are opposite to the inputs low-impedance, ideally having zero ohms. That makes it possible both to supply more input terminals and to drive heavy loads by a single output, without a severe degradation of the processed signal. A general model of a voltage processing circuit is illustrated in Fig. 1.2. The input terminals exhibit parasitic input resistances as well as capacitances, which may affect the interblock performance of the voltage processing system the blocks are used in. The outputs of the voltage processing block are voltage sources controlled by the voltages at the input nodes of the block. The outputs are influenced by parasitic resistances and capacitances, which do not allow a too heavy loading of the output terminals. The influence of parasitic inductances has no significant meaning in real VLSI signal processing systems. Internally the block can content any circuitry Figure 1.1 Block diagram of a voltage processing system page 12 Chapter I Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing Figure 1.2 Model of a voltage processing circuit ensuring the input-output transfer function T„ . The output voltages can be in general obtained from an equation similar to In a linear signal processing circuits this equation can be modified to where Tvjk,j = 1, 2,..., n, and k= 1, 2, .. , m are the respective voltage transfer functions from the k-th input to the j-th output. A remarkable property of voltage processing circuits that has to be underlined once again is that a single voltage-output terminal can supply more voltage-input terminals connected in parallel. page 13 Chapter l Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing Figure 1.3 Block diagram of a current processing system Figure 1.4 Model of a current processing circuit C. Current Signal Processing Opposite to the pure voltage processing circuits stand the pure current processing circuits. An example of a current processing system can be found in Fig. 1.3. A current processing circuit has low-impedance input terminals capable of accepting current without high voltage swings occurring at these nodes. The outputs need to be high-impedance terminals, what should make it possible to supply also inputs with relatively high impedances. A typical current processing building block with included parasitic resistances and capacitances is drawn in Fig. 1.4. The input currents, which are flowing through the parasitic input resistances to a reference voltage source, usually ground with symmetrical supply voltages, are sensed and further processed by the internal page 14 Chapter I Current Signal Processing vs. Iioltage Signal Processing circuitry. The processing can be described by the input-output transfer function T; . The output currents are then calculated from If the current processing circuit is linear, the output currents are given by where Tijk, j = 1, 2, ..., n, and k = 1, 2, ..., m are the respective current transfer functions from the k-th input to the j-th output. The difference between voltage and current processing circuits is that a single output terminal of a current processing block is able to supply only a single input terminal, since the inputs of current processing blocks can not be arranged into a serial connection. Therefore, if more input terminals are required to be supplied by the same input signal, it is necessary to design current processing building blocks with multiple outputs giving the same output signal. 2. The Adjoint Network Theorem To simplify the design of current processing circuits, by using already well known and well- explored voltage processing networks, the adjoint network theorem [1, 2], originally defined to facilitate the expressing of network sensitivities, can be used. The adjoint network theorem is based on the definition of reciprocal and interreciprocal networks. Two networks are considered reciprocal if the same input-output transfer function results as the excitation and the response are interchanged, like indicated in Fig. 1.5. If the network N from Fig. 1.5 contents active elements, it does not posses this reciprocal behavior. Nevertheless, to any given network N a corresponding network Na, referred to as the adjoint network to N, can be created such that when the excitation and response of network N are interchanged and network N is replaced by page 15 Chapter l Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing Figure 1.5 Reciprocal networks of a a) voltage processing circuit b) current processing circuit Figure 1.6 Interreciprocal networks of a a) voltage processing circuit b) current processing circuit network Na the input-output transfer function remains the same, like expressed by (1.12). The networks N and Na are said to be interreciprocal to each other. This situation is depicted in Fig. 1.6. By definition, reciprocal networks are interreciprocal with themselves. The design of current processing circuits becomes a simple task, if the adjoint elements to ones used in voltage processing circuits can be found. Fig. 1.7 gives a list of elements used in voltage processing circuits with their adjoint counterparts for current signal processing. Already from Fig. 1.5 and Fig. 1.6 it is apparent that the input voltage source of the voltage processing network has been replaced by a short circuit and the current flowing through it has become the output response variable. Accordingly, the output voltage port of the voltage processing network is being excited by an input current source in the current processing network. Passive elements R, C, and L remain the same in both voltage and current processing networks. Finally, a voltage controlled voltage source (voltage amplifier) with infinite input impedance and zero output impedance is converted into a current controlled current source (current amplifier) exhibiting zero input impedance and infinite output impedance. page 16 Chapter I Current Signal Processing vs. Voltage Signal Processing Figure 1.7 Some elements for voltage signal processing and their adjoint elements for current processing 3. Voltage Processing Circuits versus Current Processing Circuits The increasing popularity of digital designs and the respective tailoring of the technologies for digital signal processing requires new design techniques for analog circuits, which are considered to be fabricated on a common chip with digital functions [3, 4]. The scaling down of the dimensions of the devices is also accompanied by a respective scaling of supply voltages [5], what sets directly an upper limit for the dynamic range of the signal, if this is processed as voltage. The result of such a development is that special rail-to-rail building blocks for voltage signal processing have to be designed and used [6, 7, 8]. An alternative for solving the above described problems offer current processing circuits. Here the decreasing of the supply voltage does not directly limit the dynamic range of the signal processing circuits. In addition, the immunity of current processing circuits to the `digital' noise, which can be found on supply voltage rails of mixed analog and digital circuits, expressed by the means of power supply rejection ratio having the dimension of ohms, is better to control in current processing circuits [9]. A very interesting feature of current processing circuits is also their ability to be used in high- performance voltage processing applications. Recently voltage amplifiers based on current controlled current sources, which achieve much higher frequency parameters than conventional voltage operational amplifiers, were reported [ 10, 11]. Obviously, taking the adjoint network theorem into account, voltage controlled voltage sources can be used in high-performance current processing applications too, but this is not the scope of this thesis. page 17 Chapter 7 Current Signal Processing v.s. Voltage Signal Processing In the following chapters real current processing building blocks considered to be used in real current processing circuits will be described. References page 18 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Current-mode circuits have been gaining the attention of analog designers over the last decades as an important class of analog circuits. Using current as the medium of signal processing allows to influence the power supply rejection ratio as well as to set the signal range more effective than it is done in voltage processing circuits, where the maximal signal range is solidly given by the size of the supply voltage. The key performance feature of current-mode circuits is however their inherent wide bandwidth capability [1]. This is due to the fact that current-mode circuits do not include any internal high-impedance node and because of this all poles and zeroes of their transfer functions lie very high on the frequency axis, approaching the fTs of transistors in the used technology. At the begin of this chapter the translinear principle, which is the theoretical basis for all current-mode circuits, will be defined. After that basic building blocks for current-mode and current processing circuits generally, current mirrors and voltage followers, will be described and the presented alternatives will be compared. 1. The Translinear Principle The translinear principle was introduced by Gilbert in 1975 [2] and originally defined for circuits with bipolar transistors. The term translinear expresses the property of translinear circuits that the transconductance of a bipolar junction transistor (BJT) is linearly proportional to its collector current [3]. Although this principle has mostly been used to describe the performance of nonlinear circuits like multipliers, dividers, squarers, function generators, r.m.s. convertors, vector magnitude generators, etc. it holds also for circuits performing linear functions like current mirrors, voltage followers; and/or current conveyors, current feedback amplifiers, current-mode amplifiers, and other more. A. Definition of the Translinear Principle In a closed loop, see Fig. 2.1, containing N PN junctions biased into forward conduction the junction voltages VFk must sum to zero: page 19 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.1 Bipolar single-loop translinear circuit The junctions represent here usually the base-emitter junctions of BJTs, so that the VFks represent base-emitter voltages VBEs of the transistors and the junction currents represent usually collector currents ICk ideally equal to emitter currents IEk . Then (2.1) can be rewritten to and For the product to remain unity two fundamental conditions must be met: 1) There must be an even number of junctions in the translinear loop. 2) There must be an equal number of clockwise-facing (CVV) and counterclockwise-facing (CCW) junctions. Considering this symmetry conditions (2.3) can be stated as: where the subscript with even values stands for clockwise faced junctions and the subscript with odd values denotes the counterclockwise faced junctions. The saturation current of a PN junction ISk is directly proportional to the base-emitter junction area Ak, resulting in the adjustment of (2.4) to page 20 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits and recognizing that the ratios ICk /Ak are just the emitter current densities the translinear principle can be written in its most succint form: Summing up [3]: In a closed loop containing an even number of forward biased junctions, arranged so that there are an equal number of clockwise-facing and counterclockwise-facing polarities, the product the current densities in the clockwise direction is equal to the product of the current densities in the counterclockwise direction. Since this thesis is on circuit design in CMOS we will leave the bipolar transistors now and concentrate on their unipolar counterparts only. B. Translinear Principle for MOS Transistors The translinear principle was redefined for use with MOS transistors by Seevinck and Wiegerink in 1991 [4]. The derivation of the MOS translinear principle will be redraught in the next lines. Let us consider a loop of even number of MOS transistors with equal numbers of clockwise and counterclockwise arranged gate-source voltages VGSs, like illustrated in Fig. 2.2. From Kirchhofs voltage law Figure 2.2 MOS single-loop translinear circuit page 2l Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits If all transistors in the loop are saturated and we apply the square-law model from (A.2) and we neglect for the moment the channel length modulation effect, (2.7) can be rewritten to Assuming well-matched threshold voltages VTk ~ and neglecting the body effect allows the threshold voltages to be dropped. The technology parameters μO and COX will be considered common so that they can be Equation (2.9) is the statement of the translinear principle for MOS transistors. However, for the application of the translinear principle in real MOS circuits two important considerations have to be made: I ) We cannot expect well-matched n-channel and p-channel transistor parameters. If a good matching is required, only single-channel transistors must be used. 2) Drain currents of MOS transistors are also influenced by body effect and channel length modulation. An extensive description of using the square-law characteristics of MOS transistors in analog circuit design for nonlinear signal processing has been given already by Bult and Waflinga in [5] without defining the translinear principle for MOS transistors. 2. Current Mirrors Current mirrors, which are practically the simplest current controlled current sources, are also one of the simplest circuits the translinear principle can be applied to. In the next subsections different current mirrors will be shown and their properties compared. page 22 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.3 Block schematics of ideal current mirrors a) universal b) n-channel c) p-channel A. Ideal Current Mirror The ideal current mirror shown in Fig. 2.3 is a two-port having a low-impedance (ideally zero ohm) grounded input terminal capable of accepting the input current IIN and a highimpedance output terminal (ideally approaching infinity) into which a replication of the input current, the output current IOUT is forced to flow to. The sum of the input current IIN and the output current IOUT flows into a common node, which is usually grounded to either the positive or negative supply voltage. If current mirrors built of either n-channel or p-channel MOS transistors are employed only single polarity input current will be transferred to the output, as indicated by the arrows in Figure 2.3b,c. In many cases the input-output current transfer is unity Iou/IIN = 1, but sometimes current gain or attenuation AI = IOUT/IIN ≠ 1 is required. This input-output current transfer rates are essentially independent of the voltage on the output terminal and the magnitude and frequency of the transferred currents. In addition, the voltage at the input terminal remains constant over a large range of input currents. B. Simple Widlar Current Mirror The simplest current mirror was proposed by Widlar [6, 7], firstly for the bipolar technology. The MOS Widlar current mirror drawn in Fig. 2.4 [8] consists of two singlechannel MOS transistors forming a translinear loop- Transistor M1 with its drain connected to the gate forms the input node of the current mirror giving the input resistance page 23 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.4 Simple Widlar MOS current mirror Enhancement-mode MOS transistors remain in the saturated mode operation in this configuration. If the condition that the voltage at the output node of the current mirror is larger then the value than the conditions for (2.8) are fulfilled and the statement of the translinear principle for MOS transistors (2.9) can be applied to find the input-output current transfer of this circuit: where AI is the large-signal current gain and at the same time the small-signal current gain of the current mirror at low frequency. Keeping in mind the second consideration for the application of the translinear principle with MOS transistors, the definition of the input-output current transfer stands precise only if the output voltage equals the input voltage vOUT = vIN and so vDSM2 = vDSM1 = vGSM1 . With a variation of the voltage at the output node of the current mirror the input-output current transfer varies in a relatively large range due to the channel length modulation effect of M2. The influence of the channel length modulation effect can be expressed by the small-signal output resistance of the current mirror given by [9] page 24 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits C. Wilson Current Mirror An improvement of the properties of the simple Widlar current mirror has been achieved by Wilson [10] by adding a single transistor into the output branch, like illustrated in Fig. 2.5a. In the bipolar technology, where it has been proposed for originally, it suppressed the loss of the transferred current due to the non-infinite beta of the BJTs and thus the appearance of base currents. For the MOS technology this property is irrelevant. Nevertheless, the output resistance of the Wilson current mirror indicates an improvement in comparison with (2.13) If both devices M2 and M3 shall be operated in the saturated region the voltage at the output node must be kept at least as high as page 25 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits D. Improved Wilson Current Mirror The additional transistor M4 of the improved Wilson current mirror drawn in Fig. 2.5b ensures that vGSM1 = vGSM2 and thus improves the accuracy of the input-output current transfer of the current mirror. With the output resistance of the improved Wilson current mirror is only slightly higher than the output resistance expressed by (2.14). The output voltage range of the improved Wilson current mirror is given by (2.15). E. Cascode Current Mirror In the MOS technology the cascode current mirror shown in Fig. 2.6 is often used. Transistor M4 shields M2 from the variation of the voltage that occurs at the output node of the current mirror by the factor of approximately gmM4 /gdsM4. The resulting output resistance of the cascode current mirror is then (2.17) Its output voltage range is given by (2.15) too. Figure 2.6 Cascode current mirror page 26 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.7 Regulated cascode current mirror F. Regulated Cascode Current Mirror A current mirror with improved output resistance as well as voltage range available at the output was introduced by Säckinger and Guggenbühl in [ 11 ] and is described in detail in [12]. The proposed regulated cascode current mirror, which can be found in Fig. 2.7, employs a feedback loop consisting of an amplifier built of M3 and IBIAS , and the source follower M2. In this configuration the drain-source voltage of M1 is regulated to a fixed value defined by the gate-source voltage of M3. The resulting small-signal output resistance is then approximately where gout BIAS is the output conductance of the current source I BIAS. Since M2 does not need to remain in saturation for a proper performance the usable output voltage range of the regulated cascode current mirror is where page 27 Chaptler 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) jor Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.8 Cascode current mirror with gain enhancement G. Cascoded Current Mirror With Gain Stage Enhancement A cascode current mirror employing an amplifier in a negative feedback loop shown in Fig. 2.8 was proposed by Bult and Geelen in [13, 14]. The output resistance of this current mirror is and the size of its output voltage range is identical to that of the regulated cascode current mirror. The advantage of this current mirror is a very high output resistance which can be achieved by using high-gain operational amplifiers. On the other hand, the using of operational amplifiers may be also treated as a drawback of this current mirror configuration since they are additional devices of the current mirrors and which usually have to be operated very close to one of the supply voltages. H. High Swing Current Mirrors In order to increase the voltage range available at the output terminal of current mirrors the cascode transistor M4 has to be biased in such a way that M2 is kept in saturation only by a minimal exceed of vDSatM2 . The voltage at the output of the current mirrors must be higher than page 28 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.9 High-swing cascode current mirrors of: a) Choi at. al. [ 19] b) Babanezhad and Gregorian [20], generalized by Crawley and Roberts [21 ] c) Gruziński and Kulej [22], found in [23 ] page 29 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits what is only approximately as twice as high than the value for the simple Widlar current mirror from (2.11). Different proposals for very high swing current mirrors [ 19, 20, 22] can be found in Fig. 2.9. I. The Folded Cascode Principle A very interesting opportunity for obtaining a high output voltage swing as well as negative current mirroring is offered by the folded cascode principle. A folded cascode current mirror is drawn in Fig. 2.10. Transistor M1 of the current mirror is a constant current source either sinking or sourcing a DC current IDM1. The input current IIN flowing into the drain of Ml becomes a part of IDM1 and the DC current obtained at the output is The current input-output transfer function of the folded cascode current mirror is then always if the condition IIN < IBIAS is fulfilled. The output resistance of the folded cascode current mirror from Fig. 2.10 equals the output resistance of cascode current mirror given by (2.17). Of course, different cascoding methods can be applied to M1 to obtain folded cascode current mirrors. These cascoding methods refer to the above described various cascode current mirrors and the resulting output impedances of such folded cascode current mirrors are given by the respective expressions. Figure 2.10 Folded cascode current mirror page 30 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Since the gate voltage of M2 needs to be kept only as high as Ml remains in the saturated region, the minimal voltage at the output node of the folded cascode current mirror for a proper operation is as high as (2.22). This property makes the folded cascode current mirror also preferable if high-voltage-swings are needed [24]. 3. Voltage Followers Although voltage followers are usually not treated as current-mode or current processing circuits, because both the input and the output variables are voltages; they are typical voltage controlled voltage sources, they will be mentioned in this chapter too. This is because voltage followers are used to implement the voltage follower function of current conveyors [ 15, 16] and input stages of class AB current mirrors [ 17] and current amplifiers. These implementations will be also the topic of the following chapters. If voltage followers are used as input stages of current processing circuits, their voltage range is irrelevant, since they operate always at a stable voltage defining the reference voltage of current input terminals, usually ground with symmetrical supply voltages. Therefore lowering the supply voltage does not have a negative influence onto the performance of the input stage implementations of the voltage followers. Some of the transistor-implemented voltage buffers fit the translinear principle described at the begin of this chapter A. Ideal Voltage Follower Likewise the ideal current mirror the ideal voltage follower illustrated in Fig. 2.11 is a two port. The voltage follower has a high-impedance, voltage-input terminal, which ideally approaches infinity and a low-impedance output terminal with ideally zero ohms onto which a replica of the input voltage VOUT = VIN can be found. The input-output voltage transfer function of the ideal voltage follower is always unity and it is essentially independent of the current flowing in or out of the output terminal, of the magnitude and frequency of the voltages the follower operates with. In addition, there is no current flowing into the input terminal. Figure 2.11 Block schematic of an ideal voltage follower page 31 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.12 Single MOS transistor source follower B. Class A MOS Transistor Source Follower The simplest voltage follower is a transistor in a common drain arrangement shown in Fig. 2.12. The input resistance of this class A voltage follower is very high, given by the high resistance of the insulator at the gate of a MOS transistor, the output resistance is The input-output voltage transfer of this voltage follower at low frequency is [18] It means that the bulk effect as well as the output conductance of M1 gdsMl and the output conductance of the current source IBIAS goutBIAS are responsible for the non-unity inputoutput voltage transfer of the voltage follower. If M1 is not put into a well with the source connected to the bulk, the influence of the output conductances can be neglected due to their much smaller influence onto the voltage transfer function. For both voltage and current processing mostly class AB voltage followers are required. They are able to deliver current of both polarities into the load connected to the output of the voltage follower. In the following sections a number of class AB voltage followers will be described. C. Class AB Complementary Source Follower Cascade The voltage follower in Fig. 2.13, consisting of two cascaded class A source followers M1M4 and M2-M3 connected in parallel, and creating so a translinear loop, was firstly used page 32 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.13 Complementary source follower cascade in bipolar technology [25]. In this technology the fabrication of well matched NPN and PNP transistors on a single chip is possible and therefore an accurate input- output voltage transfer can be achieved. In MOS technology this voltage follower exhibits some reduction on accuracy of the transfer function [26, 27]. The input resistance of the voltage follower is again very high due to the gates of M1 and M2 creating the input terminal. Its output resistance is Following the translinear principle for MOS transistors [4] (2.9) the drain currents of M3 and M4 should equal the drain currents of M 1 and M2 if the sizes of the respective transistors are equal and their parameters are perfectly matched. Because the threshold voltages of n-channel devices do not match well the threshold voltages of p-channel devices, and in addition, the bulk effect increases the threshold voltages of M3 and M4 in comparison to Ml and M2 [18], the drain current of M3 and M4 will be something higher than they should be ideally and the output voltage will be shifted against the input voltage. The smallsignal gate and bulk transconductances of the respective transistors, derived for transistors in saturation in Table A.3, will have different values and the input-output voltage transfer of this follower expressed by [26] becomes then less than unity. The attenuation factor of this voltage follower measured in [26] is approximately 0.9 and the follower exhibits a remarkable input-output voltage offset of more than 0.5V. page 33 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.14 Single stage complementary source follower D. Class AB Single Stage Complementary Source Follower The voltage follower in Fig. 2.14 [28, 26, 27] showing similarities with the earlier described simple Widlar current mirror [6] is a translinear loop where the gate-source voltages VGS of two n-channel (Ml-M3) and two p-channel (M2-M4) devices are supposed to match. In this loop the input voltage is transferred to the output of the follower precisely, if the drain currents of M1- M2 equal the drain current of M3-M4 and vice versa, the drain current of Ml-M2 is transferred precisely to M3-M4 if the input and the output voltages and so the gate-source voltages VGS of the respective transistors as well as the sizes of the respective devices are equal. The resulting transfer function is now [26] Since the output voltage of this source follower approaches the input voltage, the source voltages of all transistors in the loop are equal and so the influence of the bulk effect of MlM2 is canceled by the bulk effect of M3-M4 very precisely. The equilibrium between the input and output voltage and the quiescent drain currents of M1-M2 and M3-M4 is disturbed only by the non-zero output conductances gds of the transistors and their different drainsource voltages VDS. The offset voltage measured in [26] has the size of only some milivolts and the gain approaches unity very closely. While the definition of the output resistance of this voltage follower is the same as derived in (2.27), the input resistance is inversely dependent on the output conductances of the two bias current sources IBIAS page 34 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.15 Voltage operational amplifier based voltage follower E. very-Low-Output-Impedance voltage Followers Utilizing Voltage Operational Amplifiers One of the very critical parameters of voltage followers is their output impedance. To prevent the voltage gain or closed-loop stability from degrading while driving heavy resistive and/or capacitive loads; understand low resistances and/or high capacitances, the output resistance of voltage output devices must be very low. A commonly used voltage follower is here a voltage operational amplifier in a unity-gain feedback configuration, see Fig. 2.1 S, too often treated as the adjoint element to current mirrors [30]. At low frequency its output resistance is where routOL is the small-signal, open-loop output resistance and Av is the open-loop gain of the operational amplifier. Another operational amplifier based very-low-output-impedance voltage follower, a pseudo source follower can be found in Fig. 2.16 [28]. The output resistance of this voltage follower is where Av1 and Av2 are the open loop gains of the respective operational amplifiers. The main problem of this structure is the controlling of the quiescent drain currents of MS and M6. A too high open-loop gain of the used operational amplifiers associated with the variation of their input offsets can create an unacceptable chip-to-chip variation of the drain currents of MS and M6, a short connection of the supply voltages in the worst case [28]. Second, the frequency characteristics must be given a careful attention to, if the buffer will be used in feedback configurations. And third, a high input common mode range as well as output voltage swing of the operational amplifeirs is welcome. page 35 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.16 Pseudo source follower The drawbacks of the previous voltage follower is solved by merging the single stage complementary source follower together with the lately described pseudo source follower, like illustrated in Fig. 2.17 [29]. By building a small input offset voltage into the two operational amplifiers, transistors MS and M6 are turned off, if the follower is operated close to the quiescent state. In this state the output current is supplied by transistors M3 and M4. If the output current becomes very high, its main portion is sinked by MS or sourced by M6, respectively. Following these considerations the definition of the output resistance of this voltage follower at the quiescent state equals the definition from (2.27), while with high output current it approaches (2.32). Figure 2.17 Combined voltage follower of Fisher [29] page 36 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Figure 2.18 Voltage follower exploiting current gain F. Voltage Follower Exploiting Current Gain Although high-current-gain stages will be described in detail in Chapter 4 a voltage follower exploiting a high-current-gain amplifier in a unity-gain feedback configuration [31] will be shown here. Transistors Ml-M4 in Fig. 2.18 build the basic core of the voltage follower, similarly to Fig. 2.14. If the drains of M3, M4 are connected to the high-impedance constant current sources M5, M6 instead of low-impedance supply voltage rails or inputs of current mirrors, a strong voltage variation occurs at the high-impedance nodes T 1 and T2 with an imbalance of the drain currents of M3, M4. The connection of the gates of the common source transistors M7, M8 to these nodes accomplishes the current gain action. If the output of the current amplifier, the drains of M7, M8 are connected to the output of the voltage follower, the major fraction of the output current flows through M7, M8 instead of M3, M4. When this occurs, the output resistance of the voltage follower becomes The output impedance of the voltage follower exhibits a dominant zero at page 37 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits where CT1 and CT2 are the capacitances associated with the high-impedance nodes T1 and T2, respectively. Behind this zero the output resistance given by (2.33) increases. The function of transistors M9, M10 is to control the quiescent drain currents of M7, M8 by controlling their gate voltages at the quiescent state [32], without affecting the resistive part of the impedance of the nodes T 1, T2 and so the definition of the output resistance of the voltage follower itself. G. Compensated Low-Output-Impedance Voltage Follower A different possibility for obtaining a very-low-output-impedance voltage follower offers the compensation technique shown in Fig. 2.19 [33]. Transistors M1-M4 build again the basic voltage follower from Fig. 2.14 and the devices MS-M9 establish an additional gatesource voltage, VGS stage to M1-M4. Transistors M8, M9 are biased by the current mirror M13-M16 sensing the output current of the voltage follower in such a way that any variation of the gate- source voltages of M3, M4 caused by the variation of the output current of the voltage follower across the non-infinite gate transconductances of M3, M4 is outcompensated by the opposite variation of the gate-source voltages of M7, M8. The outcompensated output resistance is then (2.3 5) The dominant zero of the output impedance can be found at Figure 2.19 Compensated voltage follower page 38 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode where M is the mirroring ratio or the gain of the current mirror M 13-M I 6 and CT1 and CT2 are capacitances associated with the nodes T1, T2. H. Further Improvements on Accuracy of Voltage Followers From (2.27) and (2.29) it is obvious that if the influence of the bulk effect on the accuracy of the input-output voltage transfer of voltage followers is suppressed by a symmetrical MOS transistor arrangement in a translinear loop, like it has been done in the single stage complementary source follower from Fig. 2.14, the non-zero output conductances of the output transistors together with the different drain-source voltage of the input and output transistor pairs are beside mismatching the major source of inaccuracy. This problem can be solved by cascoding of the transistors of the voltage followers [34], similarly to the cascoding of transistors in current mirrors shown in Fig. 2.5-9. An example of a voltage follower build of cascoded transistors is shown in Fig. 2.20. Using such a cascoding the drain current of M3 and M4 approaches much more the drain current of M1 and M2. This results in closer values for their gate and bulk transconductances given by (A.14) and (A. I5); see also Table A.3. Thus, the gate and bulk transconductances of (2.29) cancel each other much better than without cascoded transistors. Figure 2.20 Single stage complementary source follower with cascoded transistors page 39 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits Of course, the fee paid for higher accuracy is here the restricted voltage range of this follower which is not too serious, if it is used as an input stage of a current processing circuit. References page 40 Chapter 2 Basic Building Blocks (not only) for Current Mode Circuits page 41 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Applications Implementations and Current conveyors were introduced in the late sixties, early seventies by Smith and Sedra [1, 2]. They were considered to be used as controlled voltage and current sources, impedance converters and inverters, etc., but also as function generators, amplifiers, filters, etc., in current processing circuits mainly for instrumentation and measurement applications [3]. In the first years of their appearance the performance of current conveyors was severally limited by the available technologies, which did not allow well-matched devices on fabricated chips [4]. Since the technologies have improved in the eighties, the current conveyors gained the attention of many analog designers. Today the current conveyors have developed to very useful building blocks of analog electronics. They are parts of a number of very often used circuits, like active filters, transimpedance and `current feedback' operational amplifiers, voltage and current operational amplifiers and other more, and their main application areas are in high-speed, high-frequency circuits for both voltage and current signal processing. Since the current conveyor approach to the design of current operational amplifiers was the first attempt to design high-current-gain amplifiers, which are described later in Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 and the adjoint network mechanisms are better to understand by means of these devices too, a partial attention of this thesis is given to them. This chapter gives a wide overview above the current conveyors, their basic implementations as well as a brief contribution of the author to the research of the exploitation of the current conveyors in both voltage and current processing circuits. I. Definition of Current Conveyors A. First Generation of Current Conveyors (CCI) The current conveyor concept was introduced by Smith and Sedra in 1969 [1]. The current conveyor was defined as a three-port device, which can be represented by a box drawn in Fig. 3.1a. This device operates so that the voltage applied to its high-impedance Y-terminal appears also at its low-impedance X-terminal. The current being forced into the X-terminal is conveyed to the highimpedance output terminal Z of the current conveyor as well as to its input terminal Y. Mathematically the performance of the current conveyor can be described by the hybrid equation page 42 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3. I A first generation current conveyor a) symbol b) nullator-norator representation where the + sign applies for positive current conveyors denoted as CCI+, in which the current flows into both the X- and Z-terminal in the same direction, and the - sign stands for the opposite polarity of the X-to-Z-terminal current transfer of the negative current conveyor CCI-. The orientation of the voltages and currents expressed in (3.1) follows the denotation from Fig. 3.1a. A nullator-norator representation of the first generation current conveyors can be found in Fig. 3.1 b. Although some reports on applications using the first generation current conveyors can be found [5, 6], this device has not gained as much importance in analog circuit design as its second generation counterpart. B. Second Generation Current Conveyors (CCII) To increase the versatility of the current conveyors the second generation of current conveyors was proposed [2]. In this device no current flows into its input terminal Y and so the mathematical representation of the CCI from (3.1) changes to for the CCII, where again the + sign denotes the positive X-to-Z current transfer of the positive current conveyor CCII+ and the - sign determines the negative X-to-Z page 43 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.2 Second generation current conveyor a) nullator-norator representation b) voltage/current-follower representation current transfer of the negative current conveyor CCTI-. Utilizing the same block representation of the CCII as illustrated in Fig. 3.1 a for the CCI including the denotation of the voltages and currents given in (3.2) the nullator-norator diagram of the second generation current conveyor can be seen in Fig. 3.2a. For practical reasons also a voltage- and current-follower representation of the CCII can be derived, as presented in Fig. 3.2b [7). Here the voltage follower (buffer) VB represents the Y-toX terminal voltage following function and the current mirrors CMn and CMp accomplish the Xto-Z-terminal current follower function of the CCII. According to the Kirchhof s current low the current flowing in/out of the X-terminal of the current conveyor must be equal to the sum of the currents from the supply rails to the voltage buffer, if the condition of a zero current flowing into the Y-terminal of the current conveyor is fulfilled. Sensing the supply currents of the voltage buffer by the inputs of the current mirrors CMn, CMp gives the replica of the input current flowing into the X-terminal at the output terminal Z of the current conveyor. C. Current Conveyors and Current Gain In most of their applications the X-to-Y-terminal current transfer of the current conveyors is required to be unity, like indicated in (3.1) and (3.2). However, in some cases a certain amplification of the input current is needed. In this case the aspect ratios of the transistors implementing the current mirrors CMn, CMp determine the current gain of the current conveyors. Equation (3.2) can be generalized to where A ; represents the X-to-Z-terminal current gain of the current conveyor. page 44 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications 2. Implementation of Current Conveyors Since the second generation current conveyors are the mostly used current conveyors and they are also used throughout the work described in this thesis, all implementations of the current conveyors and applications based on these devices shown in the following sections of this chapter will concern only the CCII. A. Voltage Operational Amplifier implementation of the CCII The first high-performance current conveyor implementations were based on voltage operational amplifiers. Based on the earlier in this chapter described current conveyor representation from Fig. 3.2b, the voltage operational amplifier implementation of the CCII illustrated in Fig. 3.3 can be found [7]. Here the voltage operational amplifier in a unity-gain feedback arrangement; see also Fig. 2.15, replaces the voltage follower VB from Fig. 3.2b and accomplishes so the Y-to-X-terminal voltage following action of the current conveyor. The supply terminals of the voltage operational amplifier are sensed by the current mirrors CMn, CMp in the same manner, like in Fig. 3.2b. Although the voltage operational amplifier implementation of the CCII exhibits remarkable low X-terminal impedances; see (2.31), the speed of the current conveyor is degraded because of the internal high-impedance node of the voltage operational amplifier. However, many of the high-accuracy current conveyors are based on this CCII implementation [8, 9, 10]. Fig. 3.4 shows CMOS implementations of the CCII+ and CCII- using a voltage operational amplifier as the voltage follower [ 10]. The impedance of their Y-terminals in very high, because the gate of an MOS transistor is used as the input of the operational amplifier. The other terminal resistances of the current conveyors are Figure 3 .3 Block diagram of a CCII+ based on voltage operational amplifier page 45 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors. Implementations and Applications Figure 3.4 CMOS implementation of a voltage operational amplifier based a) CCII+ b) CCII proposed by Surakampontorn at.al. [10] and for the two current conveyor implementations, respectively. B. Simple CMOS Implementations of the CCII Since the current conveyors have been proposed to be used mainly in high-frequency circuits, other current conveyor implementations allowing high-speed performance have to be used. Fig. 3.5 presents positive current conveyors based on a single stage complementary source follower from Fig. 2.14 and a complementary source follower cascade shown in Fig. 2.13 [11]. Widlar current mirrors build the current mirrors CMn, CMp transferring the current from the X- terminals of the current conveyors to their Z-terminals. By using two stacked current mirrors or folded cascoded current mirrors at the place of CMn, CMp also CCII- can be designed. Equally to (2.27) the X-terminal resistance of these current conveyors is page 46 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.5 CCII+ based on a) single stage complementary source follower b) complementary source follower cascade studied by Bruun in [11] and according to (2.13) the Z-terminal resistance is While the Y-terminal resistance of the current conveyor based on a single stage complementary source follower is dependent on the output conductances of the bias current sources M 11, M I2 the Y-terminal resistance of the current conveyor based on a complementary source follower cascade is as high as the respective resistance of the previously in Fig. 3.3 shown voltage operational amplifier based CCII. Except of the difference between the Y-terminal impedances of these two CCII implementations another deviation between their performances must be depicted. The inputoutput voltage transfers of the used voltage followers given by (2.29) for the single stage complementary source follower and (2.28) for the complementary source follower cascade appear also with the current conveyors described in this section. In addition there is a significant voltage offset between the Y- and X-terminal of the CCII based on the complementary source follower cascade. page 47 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications C. Current Conveyors with very High Z-Terminal Impedances In order to increase the Z-terminal impedance of the previously shown current conveyors diverse cascoded current mirrors can be used at the place of CMn, CMp in Fig. 3.2b. These cascoded current mirrors have been described in Chapter 2 and will not be shown here again. The same cascoding can be used to improve the Y-terminal impedance of the current conveyor from Fig. 3.5a. D. Current Conveyors with very Low X-Terminal Impedances Similarly, the X-terminal resistance of the current conveyors given by (3.6) can be lowered by using very-low-output-impedance voltage followers also illustrated in Chapter 2. In fact, the in Fig. 3.3 and Fig. 3.4 firstly shown current conveyors based on a voltage operational amplifier in a unity-gain configuration is such a very-low-X-terminal-impedance current conveyor. 3. Applications Based on Current Conveyors Some possible applications of current conveyors have been mentioned already at the begin of this chapter. In the following sections diverse voltage and current operational amplifiers based on current conveyors will be shown and their adjoint properties will be pointed out. Finally, also a current conveyor implementation of a gyrator will be presented. A. ′Current Feedback' Voltage Operational Amplifier ′Current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers were designed in the eighties [12, 13]. Their block diagram based on current conveyors is drawn in Fig. 3.6 [14, 15]. The Y-terminal of the CCII+ is the high-impedance non-inverting input terminal, while its X-terminal creates a low- impedance inverting terminal of the operational amplifier. The output of the `current feedback' operational amplifier is buffered by the voltage follower VB. The high-impedance output Z of the CCII+ connected to the high-impedance input of the voltage follower creates an internal high- impedance node, denoted usually as the transimpedance node. Because the voltage of the X- terminal of the current conveyor is forced to follow the voltage at its Yterminal, the differential voltage at the two input terminals of the operational amplifier is converted to a current flowing out of the X-terminal of the CCII+ page 48 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.6 Block diagram of a ′current feedback' voltage operational amplifier Since this current is conveyed to the Z-terminal of the CCII+, a voltage swing appears at the transimpedance node. This voltage is then buffered to the output of the operational amplifier Both resistances RX and RT would be normally parasitics of the current conveyor and the voltage follower. Taking the parasitic capacitance CT of the transimpedance node into account the overall gain of the current conveyor based ′current feedback' voltage operational amplifier is where pd = - 1 / CT RT is the dominant pole of the transfer function. The capacitance associated with the transimpedance node CT can be also used for compensation of the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier. Although the first current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers found their applications mainly in the bipolar technology, there were attempts to design this circuit in CMOS too. The best results here were obtained by Bruun [11]. He designed two ′current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers, which use different voltage followers in their input current conveyors, already illustrated in Fig. 2.14 and Fig. 2.13. The schematics of both CMOS `current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers can be found in Fig. 3.7. Bruun showed that the configuration with the complementary source follower cascade ín Fig. 3.7b is not appropriate for `current feedback' operational amplifiers due to a large gain error. The other structure, based on the single stage complementary source follower from Fig. 3.7a exhibits a rather small variation of the bandwidth with the gain. This property follows the theoretical predictions on `current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers that their bandwidth is independent on closed-loop gain [ 16], page 49 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.7 CMOS `current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers based on current conveyors with a) a single stage complementary source follower b) a complementary source follower cascade if RT >> RFB +RX |AVCL| and RX << RFB / AVCL, where RFB is the feedback resistance from the output of the operational amplifier to its low-impedance inverting input terminal and A VCL, is the low-frequency, closed-loop gain. These constant bandwidth characteristics determine that the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier belongs to the class of the so-called transimpedance amplifiers. Another key property of the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers is that they are not slew-rate limited. This is because the current needed to charge and discharge the capacitance CT is not limited by a constant tail current source, like in the case of standard voltage operational amplifiers [17]. This current is obtained from the low-impedance inverting input terminal of the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier. The inverting input terminal creates a kind of class AB page 50 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications transconductance stage, built of a class AB voltage follower, in this way. Therefore, the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier is well suited for high-frequency and noncontinuous time processing circuits. B. Voltage Operational Amplifier Bruun also showed that classical voltage operational amplifiers can be designed using current conveyors too [14]. He extended the input of the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier to a fully symmetrical configuration using two CCII+, resulting in the voltage operational amplifier presented in Fig. 3.8. Several CMOS voltage operational amplifiers based on current conveyors have been reported in [ 15, 18, 19, 20]. The device works as follows. The difference of the input voltages is converted to the current flowing between the X-terminals of the two current conveyors at the input of the operational amplifier. This current conveyed to the transimpedance node of the amplifier is converted to the voltage buffered to the output of the device. Following (3.11) the transfer function of this voltage operational amplifier is where pd = - 1 / CT RT is the dominant pole of the open-loop transfer function. A fully differential voltage operational amplifier based on current conveyors was designed and fabricated in a standard industry, commercially available, 2.4μm CMOS technology. The schematic of the circuit extensively reported in [15] is drawn in Fig. 3.9. The current conveyors are based on complementary source follower cascades to obtain very high resistances of the input terminals of the operational amplifier. The non-ideal voltage transfer of these followers does not limit the overall performance of Figure 3.8 Voltage operational amplifier based on current conveyors page 51 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors. Implementations and Applications Figure 3.9 Fully differential, current conveyor based CMOS voltage operational amplifier page 52 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications the input stage of the operational amplifier, if both the offset and the gain of the complementary source follower cascades are equal, and so cancel each other. This requires the transistors M5+ through M8+ to be well matched to their counterparts from the inverting input, MS- through M8- , respectively. The measurement results are collected in Table 3.1 and the ac characteristics of the operational amplifier for different gain settings can be found in Fig. 3.10. Measuring five samples the final input offset of the operational amplifier was less then 10mV. The open-loop gain higher than 90dB was achieved by using regulated cascoded current mirrors M14-M30 at the place of the current conveyors. With the phase margin of approximately 85° the operational amplifier is overcompensated. The unity-gain bandwidth is so with 2MHz less than the maximal possible with the given transistor sizes and the quiescent current consumption of 5mA. Like indicated in Fig. 3.10, the proposed voltage operational amplifier exhibits a typical constant gain-bandwidth product in negative feedback configurations. In spite all properties are indicating classical voltage operational amplifier operation, this operational amplifier configuration does not exhibit slew-rate limitation either, because the current charging and discharging the capacitance CT associated with the transimpedance node is obtained directly from the class AB transconductance stage built of class AB voltage followers of the current conveyors. Table 3.1 Figure 3.10 Measured ac characteristics of the voltage operational amplifier from Fig. 3.9 for different closed-loop gain settings page 53 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications C. Current Operational Amplifier The previous two current conveyor implementations were typical voltage processing circuits, where current as the carrier of the processed signal has appeared only internally. The next two circuits will be considered for true current signal processing. The first circuit shown in Fig. 3.11 is a current operational amplifier intended by Bruun [21 ] and it is supposed to be the adjoint element of the fully differential voltage operational amplifier described in the last section. Thus, the current operational amplifier proposed in [21 ] is a fully differential device and its operation can be described as follows. The input currents iIN+ and iIN are conveyed by a CCII+ and CCII- into the transimpedance node, where their difference is converted to the voltage vT, This voltage is then converted back to differential output current by the transconductance stage built of another current conveyor connected by its Y-terminal to the transimpedance node. The X- terminal of the differential-output CCII following the voltage vT drives the current through the grounded resistance Rx. The current ix is then conveyed to the output terminals of the CCII resulting in the overall open-loop gain Figure 3.11 Current operational amplifier based on current conveyors page 54 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications of the current operational amplifier, where CT is the capacitance associated with the transimpedance node. Based on the;block diagram from Fig. 3.11 Kaulberg designed a CMOS current operational amplifier, which was fabricated in the above mentioned 2.4μtm CMOS technology [22, 23]. With the dc gain approximately 72dB and the gain-bandwidth of 3MHz, while the phase margin was set to 60°, the performance of this current operational amplifier approaches that of the voltage operational amplifier described in the last subsection. In addition, the proposed current operational amplifier exhibits constant gain-bandwidth product characteristics, if it is being used in a classical negative feedback configuration for operational amplifiers; see further in Section 5.4, Fig. 5.11. Similarly, to the previously described voltage operational amplifiers, the current operational amplifier from Fig. 3.11 does not exhibit any slew-rate limitation due to the feedback current conveyed into the transimpedance node. D. 'Voltage Feedback' Current Operational Amplifier? A drawback of the in the last subsection shown current operational amplifier can be its constant gain bandwidth characteristics, which do not allow to use it in high-gain, highfrequency applications. This drawback can be corrected by a transimpedance current operational amplifier configuration introduced by Bruun too [24], derived from the current operational amplifier shown in Fig. 3.11 by pulling out the X-terminal of the CCII at the output and using it in the feedback loop, like indicated in Fig. 3.12. Kaulberg has done the same in his design [22,23] and proved the constant bandwidth characteristics of this configuration given by (3.12), also by measurements of his design in a transimpedance current amplifier feedback arrangement. The transimpedance current amplifier can be simplified by omitting its inverting output and recognizing the outpulled X-terminal as a low-impedance inverting output of the amplifier [26]. The schematic of the proposed configuration presented in Fig 3.13 remains very much, and it really is, an adjoint element of the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier. To underline that the proposed device was given the name 'voltage feedback' current operational amplifier. Figure 3.12 Transimpedance current amplifier page 55 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.13 `Voltage feedback' current operational amplifier Simulations of the `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier shown in Fig. 3.14 were done on SPICE, using LEVEL 2 model parameters for the 2.4μm CMOS process mentioned before. The ac characteristics of the circuit in Fig. 3.15 using different closed-loop gain settings indicates the constant bandwidth characteristics of this configuration. Figure 3.14 CMOS `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier page 56 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.15 Simulated ac characteristics of the `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier from Fig. 3.14 using different gain settings E. Gyrator Based on Current Conveyors A current conveyor implementation of a gyrator derived from the block diagram presented in [2] and shown in Fig. 3.16 has been designed and fabricated in the 2.4μm CMOS technology to verify the versatility of these building blocks again [26]. The impedance matrix of a gyrator, which is defined as a positive immitance inverter [27], is where R01and R02 are the gyration resistances. Then, if the impedance Z2 is connected to one terminal of the gyrator, the other terminal exhibits the impedance This property makes it possible to use the gyrators in filter circuits, where they allow to replace coils, which are not available in fully integrated systems. To show the skills of the proposed current conveyor based gyrator implementation the bandpass function was chosen. The resonance frequency of a bandpass filter exploiting such a gyrator, illustrated in Fig. 3.16, is page 57 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Figure 3.16 Bandpass filter exploiting a gyrator based on current conveyors and its quality is where C1, C2, R01, R02, RY1, and RY2 are the components from Fig. 3.16. RY1, and RY2 represent the parasitic Y-terminal resistances of the current conveyors. The respective sensitivities derived from (3.19) are The full schematic of the fabricated gyrator is drawn in Fig. 3.17. The CCII+ has been described in Fig. 3.5a, the CCII- uses folded cascoded current mirrors to achieve the required negative X-to-Z-terminal current transfer. By using regulated cascoded current mirrors the Yterminal resistances of the current conveyors RYn, n = 1, 2 are increased and so the quality of the gyrator is improved. Using the regulated cascode stages also at the place of single stage voltage followers improves the accuracy of the quiescent current transfer along the whole gyrator and thus the accuracy of the Y-to-X-terminal voltage transfer of the current conveyors is improved too. After a detailed analysis of the final schematic of the gyrator equations (3.19) and (3 20) have to be corrected to [26J page 58 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors. Implementations and Applications Figure 3.17 CMOS implementation of the gyrator based on current conveyors page 59 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications and where and where rx1 , rx2 , ry1 , and ry2 are the respective parasitic terminal resistances of the current conveyors given by their small-signal representations in (2.27) and (2.18), respectively. The denotation for (3.24) should be obvious from Fig. 2.14. The sensitivities from (3.21) then have to be corrected to From (3.23) optimal gyration resistances for obtaining the highest possible quality of the bandpass filter at low frequency can be found where R0opt =R0lopt =R02opt if rm =rm1 -rm2 and ry =ry1 -ry2. The measured parasitics of the gyrator are collected in Table 3.2. Fig. 3.18a shows the measured frequency dependence of the quality of the bandpass filter using three different gyration resistances. It can be seen that using R0l =-R02 ≈ 80kΩ the best quality at lower frequency can be achieved, what corresponds to the results obtained by calculations using (3.27). The quality of the bandpass filter at low frequency exceeded the mathematical prediction from (3.23), like indicated in Fig. 3.18b, page 60 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications Table 3.2 Figure 3.18 Frequency dependence of the quality of the bandpass filter a) measurements done with three different gyration resistances b) comparison of the measurements with the mathematical prediction because of the jump phenomenon reported in [28J, which was observed in this design too. References page 61 Chapter 3 Current Conveyors, Implementations and Applications 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. G.C. Temes, W.H. Ki, "Fast CMOS Current Amplifier and Buffer Stage," Electronics Letters, vol. 23, 1987, pp. 69697. A. Fabre, M. Alami, "Insensitive Current-Mode Bandpass Implementations- Based Nonideal Gyrators," IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems-I: Fundamental Theory and Applications, vol. CAS-39, 1992, pp. 152-155. B. Wilson, "High-Performance Current Conveyor Implementation," Electronics Letters, vol. 20, 1984, pp. 990-991. W. Surakampontorn, K. Kumwachara, "CMOS-Based Electronically Tunable Current Conveyor," Electronics Letters, vol. 28, 1992, pp. 1316-1317. Th. Laopoulos, S. Siskos, M. Bafleur, Ph. Givelin, "CMOS Current Conveyor," Electronis Letters, vol. 28, 1992, pp. 2261-2262. W. Surakampontorn, V. Riewruja, K. Kumwachara, K. Dejhan, "Accurate CMOSBased Current Conveyors," IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, vol. IM-40, 1991, pp. 699-702. E. Bruun, "CMOS High Speed, High Precision Current Conveyor and Current Feedback Amplifier Structures," International Journal of Electronics, voL 74, 1993, pp. 93-100. D.F. Bowers, "A Precision Dual "Current Feedback" Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of the IEEE Bipolar Circuits and Technology Meeting, 1988, Minneapolis, U.S.A., pp. 68-70. [13] D.F. Bowers, "Applying "Current Feedback" to Voltage Amplifiers," Chapter 16 in Analogue IC Design: The Current Mode Approach, edited by C. Toumazou, F.1. Lidgey, D.G. Haigh, Peter Peregrinus Ltd., London, 1990. E. Bruun, "High Speed, Current Conveyor Based Voltage Mode Operational Amplifier," Electronics Letters, vol. 28, 1992, pp. 742-744. I. Mucha, "Fully Differential, Current Conveyor Based CMOS Operational Amplifier," International Journal of Electronics, vol. 74, 1993, pp. 697-703_ E. Bruun, "Feedback Analysis of Transimpedance Operational Amplifiers," IEEE Transactions on Circuis and Systems-l: Fundamental Theory and Applications, voL CAS-40, 1993, pp. 275-278. P.R Gray, R.G. Meyer, "MOS Operational Amplifier Design - A Tutorial Overview," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-17, 1982, pp. 969-982. E. Bruun, "A Dual Current Feedback CMOS Op Amp," Proceedings of 10th NORCHIP Seminar, 1992, pp. A9-A11. E. Bruun, "CMOS Technology and Current-Feedback Op-Amps," Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Cřrcuřts and Systems, 1993, pp. 1062-1065. E. Bruun, "Non-Slew Rate Limited CMOS Op-Amp Configurations," Proceedings of European Conference on Circuits Theory and Design, 1993, Davos, Switzerland, pp. 907-910. E. Bruun, "A Differential-Input, Differential-Output Current Mode Operational Amplifier," International Journal of Electronics, vol. 71, 1991, pp. 1047-1056. T. Kaulberg, "CMOS Current-Mode Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of the 18th European Solid-State Circuits Conference, 1992, Copenhagen, Denmark, pp. 246249. T. Kaulberg, "A CMOS Current-Mode Operational Amplifier," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-28, 1993, pp. 849-852. [24] E. Bruun, "Constant-Bandwidth Current Mode Operational Amplifier," Electronics Letters, vol. 27, 1991, pp. 1673-1674. I. Mucha, "`Voltage Feedback' Current Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of the Electronic Devices and Systems Seminar, Brno, Czech Republic, 1993, pp. 216-219. I. Mucha, "A CMOS Current Conveyor Based Gyrator," Proceedings of the 11th European Conference on Circuit Theory and Design, 1993, Davos, Switzerland, pp. page 62 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers In the previous chapters the current-mode approach to the design of current processing circuits was given. By the side of different current and voltage processing applications of current- mode circuits also the basic principle of current-mode amplifiers has been shown. A common feature of typical current-mode amplifiers is the inherent wide bandwidth but also the low open- loop gain, typically approaching unity and practically always less then 20dB [1-6]. This property does not allow to use the current-mode amplifiers with gain-controlling, negative feedback, and so they require tuning of the gain, if high accuracy is necessary. The scope of this chapter will be to show high-current-gain amplifiers, which achieve a gain of typically more then 40dB. Of course, the bandwidth of these amplifiers will be limited by a high-impedance node, which has to be included into the circuit to be able to achieve such high gain, but with lowering the gain by a negative-feedback closed loop the bandwidth of the current amplifier will increase, respectively. 1. High Current Gain Stages To be able to understand the principle of high-current-gain amplifiers better, a brief description of the principles of both current-mode amplifiers and high-gain voltage amplifiers will be given in the following paragraphs. A. Gain of Current Mode Amplifiers In Fig. 4.1 the simplest current-mode amplifier based on a Widlar current mirror can be found. Neglecting for the moment the channel length modulation effect as well as the influence of parasitic capacitances, its small-signal transfer function is from (2.12) It is obvious that if a high gain shall be obtained, the transistors Ml and M2 must have very different sizes so that the division of their aspect ratios gives the high gain. So for example, if the final current gain shall be Ai = 100 = 40dB, the respective dimensions of the transistors from Fig. 4.1 a must be WM2= 100 WM1 and LM1 = LM2 , or WM2 = 10 WM1 and LM1 = 10 LM2 if the chip area shall be minimized. However, if high accuracy of the current gain is required, page 63 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers Figure 4.1 Simple current-mode amplifier, the Widlar current mirror a) with scaled dimensions b) with multiple transistor M2 not the channel width of M2 WM2 must be increased, but a respective number of parallel transistors with the same channel dimensions must be used, like illustrated in Fig. 4.1b, where the achieved gain Ai is identical with the number of the used transistors n. The drawback of the low current gain of current-mode amplifiers is tried to be solved by high- current-gain amplifiers based on a different principle of current amplification. This principle will be presented in the next subsections. B. Gain Stages of voltage Amplifiers The basic principle of operation of high-gain voltage amplifiers can be explained by means of the voltage gain stage shown in Fig. 4.2a [7]. The small-signal input voltage connected to the gain transistor M1 is here converted to the drain current of Ml by the gate transconductance of Ml If the drain of M1 is loaded by a high impedance, the load transistor M2, the drain current of M1 is converted back to voltage where rt is the resistive part of the impedance of the high-impedance (transimpedance) node T. The final small-signal voltage gain can then be expressed as page 64 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers A voltage amplifier often needs a low-impedance output to be able to drive lowimpedance or multiple loads without degrading the gain of the amplifier. Therefore in MOS technology unity- gain voltage followers, voltage buffers described in Chapter 2 are needed. In Fig. 4.2a this is accomplished by the buffer transistor M3 connected to the output of the amplifier by the dashed line and the current source M4, giving an output resistance, which can be derived from (2.25). Putting the above described together the block diagram of a one-gain-stage voltage amplifier in Fig. 4.2b can be drawn. The input voltage Vin is converted to current by a transconductance stage Gm and this current is converted back to the output voltage by a transresistance stage R, . The output voltage Vout is buffered to the output by a unity-gain voltage follower (buffer) VB. The resulting gain is then where Gm is the transconductance of the transconductance stage Gm and Rt is the resistance of the transresistance stage Rt of the amplifier. If the input-output voltage transfer of the voltage buffer is not unity, its gain (attenuation) has to be multiplied to the gain of the high-gain stage Gm-Rt to obtain the overall gain of the voltage amplifier where Avb is the input-output transfer function of the voltage buffer VB at the output. page 65 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers C. High-Gain Stages of Current Amplifiers Following a scheme similar to the one described in the last subsection, the principles of the construction of high-gain current amplifiers can be found. The block diagram of a onegain-stage current amplifier is presented in Fig. 4.3a. The input current Iin is first converted to voltage by a transresistance stage Rt . This voltage is then converted to the output current Iout by a transconductance stage Gm giving the current gain If a current buffer is used in order to obtain a low-impedance input, the final current gain is where Acb is the input-output current transfer function of the input current buffer CB. This principle was used by Bruun in his first attempt to design a high-gain current operational amplifier based on current conveyors in 1991 [8]; see also Section 3.3.C. A onegain- stage current amplifier is drawn in Fig. 4.4. The design of Bruun relays on a current-tovoltage conversion across the high, Y-terminal impedance of the current conveyor and a reverse voltage- to-current conversion across the low, X-terminal impedance of the current conveyor. The achieved current gain is then Figure 4.3 Current amplifier a) block diagram b) CMOS implementation page 66 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers Figure 4.4 Current conveyor implementation of a current operational amplifier This technique of current amplification allowing a gain of more than 40dB for standard CMOS processes was generalized in 1992 by Zele et.al. in [9]. They showed a current-gain stage, given in Fig. 4.3b, based on a common-source transistor Ml biased by the constant current source M2. The small-signal input current iin is here converted to voltage across the high output resistance of the current source r0 where r0 is usually the function of the drain-source transconductances of the output transistors of the current source The contribution of the input of M1 to the conversion can be neglected because of the very high gate resistances of MOS transistors. This voltage is then converted back to current via the gate transconductance of the commonsource transistor Ml. By grounding the output terminal the output current flowing into the ground, is obtained. The final small-signal gain of this current amplifier is then page 67 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers where the sum of gdsM4 +gdsM5 represents the drain-source transconductances of the output transistors of the current source mentioned in (4.11), and this is the output conductance of the current buffer connected to the gain stage by the dashed line in Fig. 4.3b. The comparisons of (4.5) to (4.7), (4.6) to (4.8), and (4.4) to (4.13) prove that the gains of both the voltage amplifiers from Fig. 4.2 and current amplifiers from Fig. 4.3 are achieved by equal mechanisms, and thus the absolute values of these gains are comparable, if not completely equal. 2. Advanced High Current Gain Stages In the last section the basic principle of achieving of high-current-gain amplification was presented. In following paragraphs some proposals of high-current-gain stages offering enhanced performance will be proposed. A. Push-Pull Current Gain Stage The drawback of the current-gain stage in Fig. 4.3a is that the output current flowing in the direction out of the amplifier is limited by the bias current source transistor M2. This limitation can be overcome, if the gates of both M 1 and M2 are connected to the input, like in Fig. 4.5a [7]. This arrangement gives the gain which is approximately as twice as high than the gain from (4.13). Figure 4.5 Push-pull current gain stage a) simple b) with quiescent current control mechanism page 68 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers This arrangement is also very often used in digital electronics to complete the inverter function. In stable state always one of the transistors M 1 or M2 is operated very deeply in the linear region so that the quiescent current and thus the power consumption of this inverter is very small. In analog electronics, where both transistors are operated in the saturation region, the quiescent current of this circuit is not well defined, and more it is very dependent on the supply voltage and technology parameters. Because of this, additional circuitry to control the quiescent current of M1 and M2 has to be used. A mechanism to control the bias current of M1 and M2 was proposed by Babanezhad [10]. This mechanism is implemented for the current gain stage in Fig. 4.5b [11]. Transistors M1 and M2 are the conventional push-pull current gain stage. The devices M6 and M7 split the high- impedance input node T of the gain stage to two high-impedance nodes T 1 and T2, which are the inputs to the gates of M 1 and M2, respectively. In this way transistors M6 and M7 provide a definition for the gate-source voltages of M1 and M2 in the quiescent state VGSM1 and VGSM2, without affecting the definition of the gain of the current-gain stage, which remains the same like in (4.14). B. Differential Current Gain Stages Differential amplifiers play an important role in voltage processing circuits. It can be expected, that a similar importance will be given to differential current amplifiers. A differential-input, differential-output current gain stage was introduced by Arbel and Goldminz [12]; see Fig. 4.6, called floating current source. In fact it can be seen also as a fully differential transconductance amplifier, which has been introduced by Huijsing under the name floating operational amplifier [13, 14]. However, we will use it here as a fully differential current gain stage. The stage consists of two complementary, source-coupled, differential transconductance stages, known and often used as input stages of voltage operational Figure 4.6 Differential-input, differential-output current gain stage of Arbel and Goldminz. page 69 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers amplifiers. Both the inputs and outputs of this current gain stage are connected, respectively. The input currents from the input current sources IIN+ and IIN not drawn in Fig. 4.6, are converted to voltages across the output resistances of the current sources. These voltages are converted back to output currents by the transconductance of this stage with a current gain of if both input current sources are considered to have equal output resistances r0 . The output resistance of the differential current-gain stage is where transistors M11-M13 and M12-M14 are considered to have equal small-signal parameters. This output resistance can be increased by cascoding the current sources M15 and M16 as well as cascoding the transconductance transistors M11-M14. However, the second option is associated with additional complications with the voltage levels at the gates of the cascode transistors and it is not recommended for most applications. The proposed differential-input, differential-output current gain stage can be also used as a single-input, differential-output stage if one of its input terminals is grounded. The resulting current gain is then The bulk effect of transistors Ml1-M14 is neglected in (4.15), (4.16) and (4.17). page 70 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers 3. Input Current Buffers As shown in the block diagram of high-current-gain amplifiers in Fig. 4.3a, input current buffers are needed to obtain a low-impedance input of a current amplifier. Additionally, the input current buffers set a reference voltage for the input terminal of the current amplifier. A. Non-Inverting Input Current Buffer In Fig. 4.7 an input current buffer developed from the voltage follower shown in Fig. 2.14 can be found. Its input resistance is according to (2.27) If the output of the current buffer is not grounded but it is connected to the high-impedance input of a current gain stage, for instance from Fig. 4.3a, Fig. 4.5 or Fig. 4.6, the current to voltage conversion expressed in (4.10) occurs at the output of the current buffer across its output resistance which has been roughly described by (4.11). Figure 4.7 Non-inverting input current buffer page 71 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers Figure 4.8 Inverting input current buffer B. Inverting Input Current Buffer Sometimes the voltage at the output of the input current buffer needs to be inverted. This can occur, if a differential-input current amplifier is required (see the following chapter). An example of a current buffer with an inversion of the input signal to the output can be seen in Fig. 4.8. Both the input and the output resistances of the inverting input current buffer are equal to the parameters of the non-inverting input current buffer described by (4.18) and (4.19). References [1] G.C. Temes, W.H. Ki, “Fast CMOS Current Amplifier and Buffer Stage,” ElectronicsLetters, vol. 25, 1987, pp. 696-697. [2] Z. Wang, W. Guggenbühl, “Adjustable Bidirectional MOS Current Amplifier,” Electronics Letters, vol. 25, 1989, pp. 673-675. [3] E.A.M. Klumperink, E. Seevinck, “MOS Current Gain Cells with Electronically Variable Gain and Constant Bandwidth,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-24, 1989, pp. 14651467. [4] Z. Wang, “Wideband Class AB (Push-Pull) Current Amplifier in CMOS Technology,” Electronics Letters, vol. 26, 1990, pp. 543-545. (5J E.A.M. Klumperink, H.1. Janssen, “Complementary CMOS Current Gain Cell,” Electronics Letters, vol. 27, 1991, pp. 38-40. [6] E.A.M. Klumperink, “Cascadable CMOS Current Gain Cell with Gain Insensitive Phase Shift,” Electronics Letters, vol. 29, 1993, pp. 2027-2028. [7] P.E. Allen, D.R. Holberg, “CMOS Analog Circuit Design,” Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., Orlando, U.S.A., 1987. [8] E. Bruun, “A Differential-Output, Differential-Input Current Mode Operational Amplifier,” International Journal of Electronics, vol. 71, 1991, pp. 1048-1056. [9] RH. Zele, S.S. Lee, D.J. Allstot, “A High Gain Current-Mode Operational Amplifier,” Proceedings of the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, 1992, San Diego, U.S.A., pp. 2852-2855. page 72 Chapter 4 High Current Gain Amplifiers [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] J.N. Babanezhad, "A Low-Output-Impedance Fully Differential Op Amp with Large Output Swing and Continuous-Time Common-Mode Feedback," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC- 26, 1991, pp. 1825-1833. I. Mucha, "Towards a True Curtent Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, 1994, London, U.K., part 5, pp. 389-392. A.F. Arbel, L. Goldminz, "Output Stage for Current-Mode Feedback Amplifiers, Theory and Applications," Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, vol. 4, 1994, 243-255. J.H. Huijsing, "Operational Floating Amplifier," IEE Proceedings, vol. 137, 1990, Pt. G, pp. 131- 136. J.H. Huijsing, "Design and Applications of the Operational Floating Amplifier (OFA): The Most Universal Operational Amplifier," Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, vol. 4, 1994, pp.115-129. page 73 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers In the last chapter high current gain amplifiers were described. Their gain given by a g„, /gds ratio of the used transistors (4.13) is not well defined and very dependent on technology parameters and bias condition of the transistors. Because of this to control the gain of these amplifiers precisely negative feedback has to be used. The mostly used high-gain voltage amplifier in voltage processing circuits is the operational amplifier. It can be expected that a similar high-current-gain device, can be also called operational amplifier, will be an important element of current processing circuits. To differ between the two operational amplifiers, the operational amplifier processing voltage will be called the 'voltage operational amplifier' and its counterpart for current signal processing will be given the name `current operational amplifier throughout this thesis. 1. Configuration of Current Operational Amplifiers The voltage operational amplifier is one of the most versatile and so mostly used building block of analog electronics for voltage signal processing. Their adjoint elements, current operational amplifiers are considered to be an important supplement of their voltage processing counterparts. Because of this the aim of the effort of many analog designers is to find the final configuration of the current operational amplifier being able to act as adjoint element of voltage operational amplifier in current signal processing circuits interreciprocal to the well-known voltage processing circuits. A. voltage Operational Amplifier Similarly to the last chapter on high-current-gain amplifiers, the reviewing of the configuration and exploitation of the voltage operational amplifiers in simple applications will be the starting point for looking for the optimal configuration of the current operational amplifier. The basic idea of operational amplifiers is to have a device providing a high differential gain. This is fully accomplished by voltage operational amplifiers, illustrated in Fig. 5.1a, having a transfer function page 74 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.1 Voltage operational amplifier: a) schematic of the device, b) non-inverting amplifier application, c) inverting amplifier application. where Av is the is the open-loop voltage gain of the voltage operational amplifier, ideally approaching infinity, and Vin+, Vin- and Vout are the voltages at the respective input and output terminals of the voltage operational amplifier. If negative feedback is used with the voltage operational amplifier shown in Fig. 5. lb,c, the voltage gains of the non-inverting and inverting amplifiers are and respectively. B. Differential-Input, Single-Output Current Operational Amplifier There were already some proposals for the configuration of current operational amplifiers (or current-mode operational amplifiers). Toumazou and Lidgey proposed in [1] a four-port, a differential-input, differential-output device and Bruun [2] and Kaulberg [3] showed also current conveyor based implementations of differential-input, differential-output current operational amplifiers. However, the voltage operational amplifier is a three-port only and it can be expected that the current operational amplifier will be a three-port too. page 75 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.2 Current operational amplifier with a differential input and single output: a) schematic of the device, b) non-inverting amplifier application, c) inverting amplifier application. Zele at.al. reported the realization of the first high-gain current operational amplifier in CMOS [4]. It was a differential-input, single-output device; see Fig. 5.2a, with the open-loop transfer function equal to (4.13) where Ai is the open-loop current gain of the current operational amplifier and ideally approaches infinity too, and Iin+, Iin- and Iout are the respective input and output currents of the current operational amplifier. With the negative feedback, the gains of the non-inverting and the inverting current amplifiers drawn in Fig. 5.2b,c are set to and In the inverting configuration; see Fig. 5.2b, the performance of the differential-input, single- output current operational amplifier is fully identical to the performance of the voltage operational amplifier, whereas in the non-inverting configuration; see Fig. 5.2c, a number of dissimilarities can be found. The different definitions of the closed-loop gains of these two devices have already been shown in (5.2) and (5.5). Further, the impedance of the input terminals of the current operational amplifier has an influence on the accuracy of the current transfer and therefore special, very-low-input-impedance current buffers have to be used in page 76 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers this configuration [4, 5]. Finally, the offset resulting from mismatching of the current transfer from the non-inverting and the inverting input terminal to the current subtraction node is amplified by the factor of the open-loop gain of the current operational amplifier and can not be reduced by the negative feedback loop. From the application point of view, this current operational amplifier configuration does not seem to be the adjoint element of the voltage operational amplifier. C. Single-Input, Differential-Output Current Operational Amplifier Analyzing the latter described knowledge and strictly considering the adjoint network theorem [6, 7] the conclusion must be accepted that the current operational amplifier as the adjoint element of the voltage operational amplifier must be a single-input, differential-output device [8]. Its block schematic can ben found in Fig. 5.3 a and its transfer function is Applying negative feedback the closed-loop current gains of the non-inverting and inverting current amplifiers illustrated in Fig. 5.3b,c are and Figure 5.3 Current operational amplifier with a single input and differential output: a) schematic of the device, b) non-inverting amplifier application, c) inverting amplifier application. page 77 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Although the open-loop transfer function of the single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier given in (5.7) differs from the open-loop transfer function of the voltage operational amplifier from (5.1), both the resistive networks of the accurate current amplifiers in Fig. 5.3b,c and their gain definitions in (5.8) and (5.9) are completely identical with the networks and gain definitions of the respective voltage amplifiers given in Fig. 5.lb,c and (5.1), (5.2). From this point, the single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier will be considered the adjoint element of the voltage operational amplifier and if not else, the term current operational amplifier will denote this configuration of this current operational amplifier configuration. 2. Parameters of Current Operational Amplifiers A. Basic Architecture and Design Following the block diagram of a high-current-gain amplifier shown in Fig. 4.3a and using the cells shown in Fig. 4.6 and Fig. 4.7a the block diagram and the basic CMOS implementation of a one-gain-stage, single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier shown in Fig. 5.4 can be constructed. With neglected bulk effect the lowfrequency, open-loop gain of the current operational amplifier is Like the one-gain-stage voltage operational amplifier this current operational amplifier architecture includes a single high-impedance (transimpedance) node T responsible for the dominant pole of the open-loop transfer function where CT is the capacitance associated with this node and can be used for compensation of the current operational amplifier to maintain a safe phase margin while using it with negative feedback. The gain-bandwidth product of the proposed current operational amplifier is then page 78 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.4 Current opamp a) block diagram b) CMOS implementation If well compensated, the unity gain-bandwidth of the current operational amplifier equals to the gain-bandwidth product The basic strategy of the design of the current operational amplifier becomes now similar to the design of a conventional one-gain-stage voltage operational amplifier described extensively in [9, l0]. In the case of a two-gain-stage current operational amplifier the Miller capacitance, interconnecting the two high-impedance nodes of the two high-gain stages, becomes the parameter to set for the compensation. Fig. 5.5 shows the Bode plot of the current operational amplifier in Fig. 5.4b obtained from simulations on SPICE using LEVEL 2 transistor models with parameters for a typical commercially available 2.4μm CMOS process. The input terminal of the current operational amplifier loaded by the capacitance l0pF was the first nondominant pole limiting the unitygain bandwidth of the current operational amplifier. With the low-frequency, open-loop gain of 60dB and gain-bandwidth page 79 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.5 Bode plot of the current opamp in Fig. 5.4b product of 2.1MHz the same parameters were obtained, as for a similar voltage operational amplifier. The phase margin was set to 75° by the compensation capacitance connected between the high-impedance node T and the negative supply voltage. B. Second Order Parameters A comparison of the most important parameters of the conventional voltage operational amplifier and the proposed current operational amplifier is given in Table 5.1. Table 5.1 page 80 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Fig. 5.6 Transient response of the current opamp in Fig. 5.4b in a unity-gai configuration Slew-Rate In Fig. 5.4b it can be seen, that the current available to charge and discharge the compensation capacitance CT of the current operational amplifier is not limited by any constant current source, like with conventional voltage operational amplifiers exploiting the source (emitter) connected differential transistor pair, but it is obtained from its input terminal. Therefore the current operational amplifier behaves as a current-feedback operational amplifier [11] and is not slew-rate limited. Using a single-pole model of the current operational amplifier, (5.10) and (5.11), the response of the amplifier exploiting the proposed current operational amplifier on a step function at its input can be described as where I(0) and I(t) are the output currents at the time 0 and t, Ai is the gain, ISt the step size at the input, and f-3dB is the -3dB frequency of the current amplifier. The simulated response of a unity-gain current amplifier exploiting the proposed current operational amplifier on an input current step is displayed in Fig. 5.6. The settling time, considering the accuracy of 9S°/a to the final settled value, is less then 180ns, which corresponds to the result obtained from calculations using (5.14). Input and Output Current Range The input current range ICR of the current operational amplifier is limited by the range, where the circuit works properly. This range is set by the available voltage range at the highimpedance node T. In the case of the current operational amplifier in Fig. 5.4b the input current range is limited to page 81 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers The output current range OCR of the proposed current operational amplifier is limited by the current sources M15, M16, Power Supply Rejection Ratio The power supply rejection ratio describes the influence of either the positive or negative power supply onto the output variable, current. For the current operational amplifier it can be defined as and its unit is Ω. Neglecting higher order poles and zeroes the final expressions of the power supply rejection ratios for the proposed basic current operational amplifier architecture are Figure 5.7 Simulated power supply rejection ratio of the current opamp in Fig. 5.4b page 82 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers where CT+ and CT- are the capacitances of the high-impedance node T related to the positive and negative supply voltages, respectively. In Fig. 5.7 the plots of both the positive and the negative power supply rejection ratios are shown. The compensation capacitance CT is connected to the negative supply voltage and so the dominant pole of the PSRR- is placed much lower then the pole of the PSRR+ . Generally, the power supply rejection ratio of current amplifiers will be always related to the output conductances of current sources feeding currents into the high-impedance (transimpedance) nodes of the current operational amplifiers. This inference emphasizes the necessity to design current operational amplifiers with very high transimpedance stages rt = 1/(gdsM7 +gdsM8), instead of trying to increase the gain by high transconductances (5.10). This design technique requires also smaller compensation capacitances (5.11). Common Mode Rejection Ratio The low-frequency common mode gain of the current operational amplifier in Fig. 5.4b is [12, 13] Thus, the common mode rejection ratio is DC Offset The DC current offset of the current operational amplifier consists of two components, the output offset and the input offset. Their definition and meaning are obvious from Fig. 5.8. The output offset is a parameter of the mismatching of the drain currents of the current sources M15 and M16 in Fig. 5.4b and it is comparable to the input voltage offset of the differential-input transconductance stage of a voltage operational amplifier. This offset current can not be reduced by the negative feedback and introduces a large-signal output error in the performance of the current operational amplifier. The input offset is determined by the size of the input current, which is necessary to drive the output transconductance stage, so that the difference of the currents of page 83 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.8 Definition of the offset currents of the current opamp the non-inverting and the inverting outputs is zero. The influence of the input offset is reduced by negative feedback. Considering the two sources of offset the output current of the current operational amplifier becomes Input Reference Voltage The input reference voltage is set by the input current buffer. Usually it is a voltage right in the middle between the supply voltages VDD and VSS . However, for some applications special input reference voltage requirements are possible. During the performance of the current operational amplifier the input reference voltage may differ from the value VREF set by the input current buffer. This difference will occur because of the input-output offset of the reference voltage of the voltage follower of the input current buffer VOFF,ICB and the non-zero input resistance of the input current buffer, its smallsignal value has been calculated in (4.18). The voltage at the input terminal of the current operational amplifier can be expressed as Noise The noise performance of the a current operational amplifier can be modeled by the inputreferred, mean-square current-noise source. The influence of the noise sources placed at the input stage, namely transistors M17, M18, and M1-M4, can be neglected, because the noise resulting from these noise sources appears only as a page 84 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers voltage at the input terminal of the current operational amplifier and drain current of both M3 and M4, which is canceled finally after the current mirror MS-M7. On the contrary, the currentnoise sources defined by (A.11) referred to the current mirror MS-M8 sum to the input-referred noise In terms of equivalent input-mean-square voltage noise (A.12) the equivalent input noise can be expressed as 3. Experimental results To prove the above described theory samples of both the differential-input, single-output and single-input, differential-output current operational amplifiers were implemented in a commercially not available 5μm, p-well, CMOS test technology of the Institute for Telecommunication Technique in Prague. Because the fabricated chips have not been packaged and the measurements were performed by the Department of Microelectronics of the Czech Technical University in Prague, only simulation results will be presented in this thesis. A. Differential-_Input, Single-Output Current Operational Amplifier Although this configuration of the current operational amplifier was not recognized as the adjoint element of the voltage operational amplifier, we decided to consider this configuration for fabrication too, to be able to compare its basic parameters to the parameters of a voltage operational amplifier and the single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier. The final schematic of the proposed differential-input, single-output current operational amplifier is shown in Fig. 5.9 [8]. Transistors M1-M10 ensure the bias conditions for the whole circuit. M11-16 build the inputs of both the non-inverting and the inverting input current buffer. They define the reference voltage VREF for the input terminals as well as their low input impedances. The folded cascode current mirrors M17-M20 establish the current transfer from the inverting input, and cascoded current mirrors M21-M26 transfer the current from the non- inverting input, both into summing high-impedance nodes. Devices M27, M28 are the node splitting mechanism shown in Fig. 4.5b and together with the voltage level shifters M29-M32 they set the conditions of the quiescent current of the current-gain stage M33-M36 at the output of the differential-input, single-output current operational amplifier. page 85 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.9 Schematic of the differential-input, single-output current operational amplifier considered for fabrication page 86 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.10 Schematic of the single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier considered for fabrication page 87 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers B. Single-Input, Differential-Output Current Operational Amplifier The schematic of the fabricated single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier is shown in Fig. 5.10. Similarly to the previously described version of the current operational amplifier the devices M 1-M8 set the bias conditions of the whole circuit and M9M 12 define both the reference voltage VREF and the impedance at the input terminal of the current operational amplifier. Transistors M13-M18 mirror the input current into the highimpedance node, the input of the differential current-gain stage consisting of M23-M30 shown already in Fig. 4.6 and voltage level shifters M23, M24 and M35, M36 which increase the voltage range available at the outputs of the current operational amplifier. C. Simulation Results Both current operational amplifiers were designed to operate with l0V supply voltage and a quiescent supply current of 1mA and 2mA., respectively. The phase margins of both operational amplifiers were set to 60°. The expected parameters of the two proposed current operational amplifiers obtained by simulations on PSPICE using LEVEL 3 transistor model parameters supplied by the manufacturer are collected in Table 5.2. With the gain of approximately 70dB and the unitygain bandwidth more than 4MHz the basic parameters are the same as the parameters of a similar voltage operational amplifier. The transient response of neither of the current operational amplifiers was slew-rate limited, if a ±l0μA step function was applied at the input of a current amplifier in a unity-gain configuration using the two designed current operational amplifiers. Table 5 2 page 88 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers D. Advantages and Drawbacks of the Proposed Current Operational Amplifiers From both the open-loop gain and the unity-gain bandwidth of the current operational amplifiers it is obvious that the basic parameters of voltage and current operational amplifiers do not differ at all. Therefore it can be expected that current signal processing applications and voltage processing applications interreciprocal to each other will have the same or similar accuracy and frequency properties too. A general advantage of the current operational amplifiers is their transient response, which is not slew-rate limited. Because of thisproperty, current operational amplifiers are perfectly suited for fast noncontinuous time signal processing circuits, similar to switched capacitor circuits with voltage operational amplifiers. A relative drawback of the proposed current operational amplifiers is their high supply voltage requirement. However, these operational amplifiers were not designed for lowvoltage applications. The power consumption of the proposed current operational amplifiers is also quite high. More the power consumption of the adjoint element to the voltage operational amplifier, the single-input, differential-output current operational amplifier is directly dependent on the output current range, since the output current can not be higher than the current of the constant current sources biasing the differential current-gain stage. A further drawback of the differential-input, single-output current operational amplifier is the input offset defined as the difference of the input currents which is necessary to ensure a zero output current. In the non-inverting current amplifier shown in Fig. 5.2b this input offset is not lowered by the negative feedback but it is amplified by the open-loop gain of the current operational amplifier to the output of the amplifier and causes that the output current often clamps to one end of the output current range. The input offset of the fabricated differential- input, single-output current operational amplifier was approximately 2-3μA and it was not possible to measure this current operational amplifier in the non-inverting configuration. In a similar manner also the input impedance of the differential-input, single-output current operational amplifier is not lowered by the negative feedback, and it has to be added to the feedback resistance R2 and the gain definition in (5.5) becomes inaccurate in this way. A solution of these two problems of differential-input current amplifiers could bring a common-mode balancing mechanism of the differential inputs, similar to the mechanism used to balance the outputs of differential-output voltage operational amplifiers [10, 14]. 4. Exploitation of Current Operational Amplifiers As mentioned earlier, current operational amplifiers are considered to be used in current signal processing circuits interreciprocal to voltage processing circuits with voltage operational amplifiers. They can be also used in some circuit components page 89 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers which substitute passive components, which are usually not available in standard MOS technologies, for instance a gyrator is commonly used to substitute an inductance. A. Accurate Current Amplifiers Since the accurate current amplifiers using current operational amplifiers have been already used as means for finding the adjoint element to the voltage operational amplifiers and so described earlier in this chapter, their performance will be only briefly repeated here. In Fig. 5.3 accurate current amplifiers based on single-input, differential-output current operational amplifiers are shown. In Fig. 5.11 the same amplifiers are compared to voltage amplifiers based on voltage operational amplifiers. To emphasis the interreciprocity of these circuits the current amplifiers are mirrored horizontally, their inputs are at the right side and their outputs at the left hand side. It can be clearly seen now that the same resistive network is used in both the voltage and current amplifiers and all conditions of the adjoint network theorem [6, 7] are fulfilled. In addition, the gain definitions of the amplifiers given by (5.2), (5.3) and (5.8), (5.9) equal too. Figure 5.11 Accurate amplifiers based on voltage and current operational amplifiers a) non-inverting b) inverting page 90 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers B. Current Filters The network applied around the current operational amplifiers can generally include any kind of impedance. So active current filters, derived originally as voltage filters using voltage operational amplifiers, can be built using the single-input, differential-output current operational amplifiers. Fig. 5.12a showes continuous-time lowpass filters for both voltage and current signal processing. Their transfer functions of the two filters are and respectively. The adjointnetwork theorem is not valid for continuous-time signal processing circuits only, and the current operational amplifier can be used in switched circuits too. This is proven by the switched-capacitor lowpass filter illustrated in Fig. 5.12b. Although the term `switched capacitor' is usually not used with current signal Figure 5.12 Low pass filters a) continuous time b) switched capacitor page 91 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers processing, it will be used here to indicate current signal processing circuits interreciprocal to the voltage processing switched capacitor circuits. The output voltage of the voltage filter in Fig. 5.12b is [15] giving the transfer function after taking the z-transform. In the same way the output current of the switched capacitor current filter is and after taking the z-transform the transfer function is page 92 Chapter S Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.13 Instrumentation amplifier for a) voltage signal processing b) current signal processing C. Instrumentation Amplifier In instrumentation applications often floating electrical variables have to be handled. This is done using fully differential amplifiers like the voltage instrumentation amplifier, that can be found in Fig. 5.13a. The output voltages of the amplifier are The same definition of the output currents, exhibits the instrumentation amplifier for current signal processing in Fig. 5.13b. page 93 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 5.14 Gyrator built of a) voltage operational amplifiers b) current operational amplifiers D. Gyrator The last example of exploitation of current operational amplifiers is a gyrator built of three operational amplifiers, like illustrated in Fig. 5.14. Either voltage or current operational amplifiers can be used to build this gyrator and its parameters will remain equal if the parameters of both the voltage operational amplifiers and the current operational amplifiers are equal too. Of course, both gyrators based on voltage operational amplifiers; drawn in Fig. 5.14a, as well as current operational amplifiers; drawn in Fig. 5.14b, can be used in filtering in both voltage and current signal processing. 1. 2. C. Toumazou, F.J. Lidgey, "Universal Current-Mode Analogue Amplifiers," Chapter 4 in Analogue IC Design: The Current-Mode Approach, edited by C. Toumazou, F.J. Lidgey, D.G. Haigh, Peter Peregrinus Ltd., London, 1990. E. Bruun, "A Differential-Output, Differential-Input Current Mode Operational Amplifier," International Journal of Electronics, vol. 71, 1991, pp. 1048-1056. page 94 Chapter 5 Current Operational Amplifiers 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. T. Kaulberg, "A CMOS Current-Mode Operational Amplifier," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-28, 1993, pp. 849-852. R.H. Zele, S.S. Lee, D.J. Allstot, "A High Gain Current-Mode Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, 1992, San Diego, U.S.A., pp. 2852-2855. I. Mucha, "Thousand and One Improvements on Current Operational Amplifiers," Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, 1994, London, U.K., part 5, pp. 533-536. S.W. Director, R.A. Rohrer, "The Generalized Adjoint Network and Network Sensitivities," IEEE Transactions on Circuit Theory, vol. CT. 16, 1969, pp. 318-323. G.W. Roberts, A.S. Sedra, "All Current-Mode Frequency Selective Circuits," Electronics Letters, vol. 25, 1989, pp. 759-761. I. Mucha, "Towards a True Current Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, 1994, London, U.K., part 5, pp. 389-392. P.E. Allen, D.R. Holberg, "CMOS Analog Circuit Design," Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., Orlando, U.S.A., 1987. P.R. Gray, R.G. Meyer, "MOS Operational Amplifier Design - A Tutorial Overview," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-17, 1982, pp. 969-982. D.F. Bowers, "A Precision Dual "Current Feedback" Operational Amplifier," Proceedings of the IEEEBipolar Circuits and TechnologyMeeting, 1988, Minneapolis, U.S.A., pp. 68-70. E. Bruun, "Design Considerations For a High Speed CMOS Current Operational Amplifier,"Proceedings of the NORCHIP Seminar, 1993, Trontheim, Norway, pp. 24-31. E. Bruun, "A High-Speed CMOS Current operational amplifier for Very Low Supply Voltage Operation," Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, 1994, London, U.K., part 5, pp. 509-512. M. Banu, J.M. Khoury, Y. Tsividis, "Fully Differential Operational Amplifiers with Accurate Output Balancing," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-23, 1988, pp. 1410 1414. F. Maloberti, "Switched Capacitor Filters," notes from the EUROCHIP course on Advanced Analog Digital Design, Leuven, 1992. page 95 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers In the last chapter the design and the first and second order parameters of current operational amplifiers have been described. Here the single-input, differential-output device has been recognized the adjoint element of the differential-input, single-output voltage operational amplifier. Nevertheless, in voltage processing circuits also fully differential voltage operational amplifiers are used to obtain a better power-supply rejection and increase the dynamic range of the circuits [1]. In this chapter both single-input, differential-output and fully-differential current operational amplifiers will be considered. At first the attention will be given to the input stage and some possibilities of lowering their input impedances will be shown. Similarly, improvements made to the differentialoutput current- gain stage will be presented to achieve both multiple-outputs and high voltage swings available at the output terminals of the current operational amplifier. In the second section of this chapter some design techniques for current operational amplifiers towards high frequency, low supply voltage, and low power consumption will be illustrated. The chapter will conclude with an example of the design of a multiple-output, low-power current operational amplifier, which has been designed for fabrication. 1. Low Impedance Input Current Buffers In some applications of current operational amplifiers, usually if no negative feedback is applied to one of its input terminals, very-low-input-impedance input current buffers are required. In this case the impedance of the order of magnitude of some hundreds ohms through kiloohms obtained using transistors in a common-base configuration at the input is not sufficiently low. In the following subsections some possibilities of lowering the input impedance of input current buffers will be shown. The improvements will be based on the improvements of voltage followers presented in Section 2.3. A. General Remarks on Low-Impedance Input Current Buffers In Section 3.2 it has been shown how to lower the X-terminal impedance of current conveyors. Well, the X-terminal of the current conveyor performs both the output of the voltage follower as well as the input of the current follower of the current conveyor. Here the idea of using very-low-output-impedance voltage followers from Chapter 2 was presented. page 96 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Certainly, this idea can be used to the input stages of current operational amplifiers too. The proposals presented in the next paragraphs will refer to the previously in this thesis shown very-low-output-impedance voltage followers. B. Very-Low-Input-Impedance Current Followers Utilizing Voltage Operational Amplifiers A current follower exhibiting a very low input impedance (2.31) where routOL and Av are the open-loop output resistance and gain of the voltage operational amplifier, respectively, has been shown in Fig. 3.3. Utilizing the voltage follower from Fig. 2.16 the input current buffer drawn in Fig. 6.1 can be designed. Its input impedance is (2.32) where Av1 and Av2 are the open-loop gains of the respective operational amplifiers. Although the latter mentioned low-input-impedance current buffers will probably not find applications in real current processing circuits they give a good theoretical basis for the design of useful low-input-impedance current buffers. Figure 6.1 Input current buffer utilizing voltage operational amplifiers derived from the voltage buffer from Fig. 2.16. page 97 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.2 Input current buffer based on a unity-gain `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier C. ' Voltage Feedback' Current Operational Amplifier in a Unity-Gain Arrangement The idea of using and operational amplifier in a unity-gain arrangement the obtain a verylow- input-impedance current buffer can be draught also to the current processing counterparts of voltage operational amplifiers. As an example a `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier [3] can serve. Using it in a unity-gain arrangement like illustrated in Fig. 6.2 [2] results in a current buffer with a very low input impedance of the size of Similarly, arbitrary current operational amplifier can be used at the place of the `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier. D. Input Current Buffer Exploiting Current Gain That the current amplifier utilized to obtain a very-low-input-impedance current buffer does not need to be an operational amplifier proves the input current buffer page 98 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.3 Input current buffer exploiting current gain drawn in Fig. 6.3, which corresponds to the voltage follower from Fig. 2.18 [2]. The very low input resistance of this current buffer is achieved by amplifying the input current flowing through the channels of M3 and M4 and feeding the amplified current back to the input terminal by M11 and M12. Since the major portion of the input current of the current buffer flows through M11 and M12, by adding M13 and M14 the input current can be copied to the output of the current buffer. The resulting input impedance of this current buffer is according to (2.33) and (2.34) where CT1 and CT2 are capacitances associated with the high-impedance nodes T 1 and T2, respectively. E. Compensated Low-Input-Impedance Current Buffer Similarly to the very-low-output-impedance voltage follower from Fig. 2.19 the current follower in Fig. 6.4 exploits a compensation technique to obtain the very-low-input-impedance page 99 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.4 Compensated low input impedance current buffer expressed by (2.35) and (2.36), where M is the gain of the current mirror M13-M16. The input current sensed by M13, M14 is mirrored to the output of the current follower by M I 7, M 18. 2. Improvements on the Differential-Output Current Gain Stage The basic fully differential current-gain stage from Fig. 4.1 suffers of two significant drawbacks; the limited voltage range available at the output terminals and the lack of cascoding possibilities of the output transistors to increase the output resistance of the stage. Due to this very high resistances can not be driven by this stage. In addition, to be able to supply more input terminals by the same output current multiple output terminals should be available [4, 5]. These drawbacks will be tried to solve in the following lines. A. Simple, Multiple-Output Current Gain Stage To be able to supply multiple current-input terminals the basic current-gain stage can be simply multiplied to as many branches as necessary, like indicated in Fig. 6.5 [6]. The accuracy of the output currents from the unique output terminals depends on the matching properties of the transistors in the branches Mla,b,c,...-M3a,b,c,... and M2a,b,c,...M4a,b,c... . The advantage of this circuit is its simplicity. page 100 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.5 Simple multiple output current gain stage B. Multiple Output Current Gain Stage with a Rail-to-Rail Voltage Swing The voltage range available at the output terminals of the basic fully differential currentgain stage can be improved by inserting of voltage shifting stages between the gates of the transconductance transistors; like done in the design in Fig. 5.10 [7]. Although this solution increases the available voltage ranges it does not extend them to a rail-to-rail performance. This can be achieved by disconnecting the drains of transistors M1-M4 and connecting them cross coupled to current mirrors M7-M10 mirroring the drain currents of the transconductance transistors to the output terminals, like shown in Fig. 6.6. In such a way both multiple outputs and any kind of cascoding of the output transistors are possible. The mismatching of the current mirrors M7-M7a,b,c... through M10-M10a,b,c,... determines the mismatching of the output currents. page 101 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.6 Multiple output current gain stage with a rail-to-rail voltage swing 3. Design of High-Performance Current Operational Amplifiers For different applications of the current operational amplifier miscellaneous design techniques are necessary. Large VLSI systems delimit usually only a small area for analog functions and so low area designs are often needed to fit into the given area. The scaling down of device sizes followed by a respective scaling of the supply voltage requires low-voltage building blocks. The rising need for portable, battery driven equipment sets again the limitation on power consumption. The using of low-power analog circuits is here the condition for long time operation of the battery driven equipment. Finally, also the highfrequency behavior is very important for modulated audio applications and video applications requiring high bandwidth capabilities. All these considerations will be followed in the next paragraphs. A. Low Area Designs The main area of application of current operational amplifiers will be certainly in VLSI systems, where especially because of their high transient-response capability as well as unconventionally defined power supply rejection ratio they will be preferable in use together with digital functions on a single chip. In the case of VLSI systems often only a strictly determined performance is required, where some parts of the basic architecture of the current operational amplifiers may be omitted to save area on chip. Examples of such up-to-the-necessity page 102 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.7 Low area current operational amplifiers with a) large voltage swing at the non-inverting output b) large voltage swing at the inverting output restricted cascoded current operational amplifiers are shown in Fig. 6.7 [8]. Both amplifiers provide only a unidirectional input-output current transfer. The input device of the current operational amplifier from Fig. 6.7a, transistor M1a defines by its gate-source voltage VGSM1a the reference voltage VREF at the input terminal of the current operational amplifier, where is the input resistance of this terminal. The current operational amplifier in Fig. 6.7b uses M3b as the input device and the respective input resistance is Neglecting higher order poles and zeroes and the bulk effect the open-loop gain of both presented current operational amplifiers is The dashed lined in Fig. 6.7 indicate the unity-gain feedback loops of the current operational amplifiers. page 103 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.8 Current operational amplifier used by Bruun for studying the optimization towards high frequency [9] B. Design Towards High-Frequency Considerations for the design of high-speed current operational amplifiers in the CMOS technology were extensively presented by Bruun in (9]. For any high-frequency amplifier a single dominant pole design has to be implemented. In order to be able to calculate the highest possible frequency to be transferred by the amplifier the first higher order pole needs to be identifiable. Here the design of the layout plays an important rule, were the junction capacitances of diffusion areas belonging to nodes associated with the first higher order poles must be as low as possible. This requires also special design considerations for these diffusion areas. For purpose of studying the laws of high-frequency designs the current operational amplifier in Fig. 6.8 [9] was used. The circuit designed for operation at a supply voltage of 3V and a supply current of 25μA was simulated in a commercially available 2μm CMOS process. The resulting open-loop, differential gain of the current operational amplifier was 94dB and the gain- bandwidth product 128MHz. The extremely wide bandwidth was achieved by the optimization of the design described below. In the design the channel widths of p-channel transistors were made three times wider then the channel widths of n-channel devices to approach the parameters of the two counterparts. Taking this consideration into account the most significant capacitances influencing the position of the dominant pole associated with the transimpedance node T page 104 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers afe (CGDM21 + CGSM22) / 2, CBDM15 , CGDM15 , CGDM21 and CBDM19 . While the gate-source capacitances can not be reduced by a careful layout design, the diffusion- substrate/well junction capacitances can. For instance, using a finger structure for the gates of respective transistors reduces these capacitances by the factor of 2 approximately [10]. Bruun proved that the dominant pole of the current operational amplifier responsible for the bandwidth can be increased by the factor of 1.5 with a careful layout design. If the current operational amplifier is an on-chip device without connection to the input/output pins and thus without parasitic bonding capacitances the first nondominant pole is assumed to be caused by the p-channel current mirror M13-M16 positioned at the input node I of the current mirror Here the layout dependent capacitances are CBDM13 and CBDM1 , where CBDM13 is usually the dominant one. Using the finger structure for the respective transistors increases the bandwidth of the current mirror by the factor of circa 1.25. The above described optimization using a finger-structure geometry for transistors results in a first nondominant pole at a lower frequency than the gain-bandwidth product of the current operational amplifier. This leads to an unacceptable phase margin and even instability if the operational amplifier is connected in a low-gain configuration. The logical improvement here is to lower the dominant pole of the current operational amplifier by adding a compensation capacitor to the high-impedance node T. A more sophisticated method is to reduce the gain of the current mirrors M13-M20 resulting in increasing of the resistive part of the impedance at node T and thus lowering the position of the dominant pole. In addition by reducing CGSM16 the first nondominant pole is moved slightly upwards. Bruun showed that the optimal gain of the current mirror for achieving the highest possible speed parameters is approximately 0.3 for a typical CMOS process [9]. Further optimization of the frequency properties of the current operational amplifier can be made by optimizing the quiescent current densities in transistors in paths critical for the speed. C. Low-voltage Current Operational Amplifier With their range of the processed signal not directly dependent on the size of the supply voltage current operational amplifiers are well suited for circuits where the supply voltage is considered to be scaled down. However, the minimal supply voltage that can be applied to the previously described current operational amplifiers is limited by the threshold voltages VT of MOS transistors in the used technology, which are for page105 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.9 Example of a low voltage current operational amplifier design most CMOS technologies in the range of 0.8-1.2V. Although in the previously described design Bruun used the supply voltage of 3 V [9] it can be expected that the nature limit for the supply voltage will be 1.5V for the given VTs . That corresponds also to the requirements of singlebattery driven electronic equipment. The basic architecture of the current operational amplifier from Fig. 5.4b sets the limit for low-voltage performance at two places. Transistors M3-M6 establish a chain of two threshold and two saturation voltages included in Another limitation are transistors M11-M16 setting the minimal value for the supply voltage to If VGSM13 = VGSM11 and VGSM14 = VGSM12 what allows to reduce the supply voltage to 3V only. An improvement of both (6.11) and (6.12) can be achieved by omitting M4, M11 and M13 from Fig. 5.4b and using a folded cascode current mirror leaving the circuit of the current operational amplifier illustrated in Fig. 6.9. The minimal supply voltage is here limited to or page106 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.10 Low voltage current operational amplifier of Bruun [ 11 ] A similar low-voltage current operational amplifier, shown in Fig. 6.10, has been designed by Bruun [11]. Although the minimal supply voltage given by (6.13) is increased by VDSM7 (sat.) the fabricated circuit has been and proven to operate under the estimated supply voltage of 1.5V. D. Approaching Low-Power In the last section low-voltage current operational amplifier architectures suitable for battery driven electronic circuits were shown. However, to ensure a long-term operation of battery driven circuits their quiescent power consumption must be as low as possible. In the above shown current operational amplifiers this requirement stands in conflict with the need for a certain, relatively large signal range. This is mainly due to the differential current-gain stage, which limits the output current range of the current operational amplifier to the size of bias current of the current-gain stage. A similar problem has already occurred with the voltage operational amplifiers, where a constant current source biasing the source-coupled, differential-input transistor pair caused the slew-rate limitation of these devices [ 1 ]. The slew-rate problems of the voltage operational amplifiers have been solved by using either adaptive biasing [13] or a class AB differential-input stage like in `current feedback' voltage operational amplifiers [14] or voltage operational amplifiers based on current conveyors [ 15, 16] also having class AB differential-input stages. We will follow the second option to obtain current operational amplifiers suitable for low-power designs. page107 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.11 `Voltage feedback' current operational amplifier for low-power applications As the first design suitable for low-power applications the `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier will be considered [3, 12]. A detailed description of the basics of this circuit has been given in Section 3.3. For low-power applications the non-inverting output from Fig. 3.14 has to be changed to avoid the quiescent current sources M15, M16 limiting the output current range of this circuit. A CMOS schematic of a `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier for low-power applications is illustrated in Fig. 6.11. Neglecting the bulk effect the small-signal, open-loop current gain of this circuit is The output current range of this `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier in an open-loop configuration with grounded inverting output terminal is where VDD and VSS are the positive and negative supply voltages, respectively, and vTM13 and vTM14 are the threshold voltages of the respective devices with the bulk effects included. The exact values for the threshold voltages can be calculated from (A.3) considering the source voltages of both devices being grounded and thus vSBM13 = |VSS| and VSBM14 = - |VDD| page 108 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.12 Current operational amplifier with a class AB current gain stage a) current conveyor representation b) CMOS implementation Another option for achieving a current operational amplifier with an output current range independent of a constant current source offers a true current operational amplifier configuration adjoint to the current conveyor based voltage operational amplifier from Fig. 3.8. The current conveyor representation of such a current operational amplifier is drawn in Fig. 6.12a and its basic CMOS implementation can be found in Fig. 6.12b. The open-loop gain of this circuit can be calculated as page 109 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers while the output current range is what is approximately two times lower than the output current range of the `voltage feedback' current operational amplifier. In addition the current operational amplifier from Fig. 6.12b allows both multiple output terminals as well as a rail-to-rail voltage swing at the output. E. Considerations for Low-Noise Designs A general condition for low-noise amplifier designs is that the first stage shall introduce as less noise as possible, since the contribution of this stage is amplified mostly and it is the major part of the noise appearing at the output of the amplifier. In (5.23) and (5.24) the inputreferred noise contribution of the basic current operational amplifier in Fig. 5.4b has been calculated. Here the devices MS-M8 are the most important noise contributors and from (5.24) it is obvious that both the equivalent input-mean-square voltage noise and the smallsignal gate transconductance of these devices must be as small as possible, where the later one is not so important as the first one since the noise of MOS transistors is modeled as a current flowing through the drain. This conditions express the preference of p-channel devices with small aspect ratios W/L and small drain currents. An open question stays here the complete omitting of the input stage, the input current buffer resulting in a single-input, differential-output transimpedance amplifier. Here the input-referred noise should be theoretically zero, but this statement should be first proved experimentally. F. Operational Transimpedance Amplifiers for Current Signal Processing As mentioned above, certain considerations lead to a complete omission of the input current buffer from the basic current operational amplifier configuration. This transimpedance amplifier can be used as a true current operational amplifier if its input is loaded by a high resistance or only a capacitive load. The closed loop operation of such a device corresponds to the closed-loop operation of current operational amplifiers shown in Fig. 5.11-14. The fully differential version of this circuit, the differential-input, differential-output transimpedance amplifier exhibits completely identical inside configuration as well as to outside exhibiting performance as the fully differential transconductance amplifier for voltage page 110 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.13 Fully differential amplifiers based on the operational floating amplifier a) voltage amplifier b) current amplifier Figure 6.14 Current conveyor representation of a fully differential transconductance amplifier signal processing. In fact, the so-called operational floating amplifier introduced by Huijsing [17, 18] is actually suitable for both voltage and current processing circuits. This statement can easily be proven by the closed-loop configurations of fully differential voltage and current amplifier based on this device illustrated in Fig. 6.13. A current conveyor representation of the fully differential transimpedance amplifier is drawn in Fig. 6.14. The input-output transfer function of this circuit is where RX is the resistance of the X-terminal of the current conveyors. A possible CMOS implementation of the introduced transimpedance amplifier was proposed by Arbel and Goldminz [19] and has been used in Fig. 4.6 as a differential page 111 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers current amplifier. Applying a differential voltage at its inputs the differential output currents can be calculated from where Gm is the input-output transconductance of the circuit. 4. A Multiple-Output, Low-Power Operational Amplifier Current Summing the in this chapter described knowledge about high-performance current operational amplifiers, the device in Fig. 6.15 has been designed for fabrication in the commercially available 2.4μm CMOS technology. The circuit offers a single, low-impedance input terminal and four parallel noninverting as well as four parallel inverting, high-impedance output terminals. A. Design Strategy and Operation Because the circuit is symmetrical along the horizontal axis, the strategy of approximately equal small-signal parameters of n- and p-channel devices was chosen for the design. This is accomplished by setting the channel dimensions of p-channel devices to WP = 2 WN and LP = 3/4LN for the respective groups of transistors. Since a high-frequency operational amplifier was also aimed, the shortest possible channel length for the p-channel transistors 2.4μm was used, leading to 3.2μm for the channel length of all n-channel devices. The remaining calculations of the channel dimensions concerned further only the channel widths. The bias current of the circuit was supposed to be only IBIAS = 1 μA, what keeps the MOS transistors close to the edge between strong and week inversion. With the gate-source voltages close to the threshold voltages the devices remain in saturation also if large voltage swings occur, or the rail-to-rail supply voltage is screwed down to 3 V. The very low bias current IBIAS is transferred to all branches of the circuit, with one exception only, thus the mismatching between the currents flowing in the unique branches may occur very high due to the large contribution of mismatching of threshold voltages [20, 21, 22]. The influence of this mismatching onto the input-output transfer function of the current operational amplifier can be neglected in the high-gain stage and it will be lowered significantly with higher output currents in the output branches. The single input terminal of the proposed low-power current operational amplifier is built of an input current buffer exploiting the single stage complementary source follower M7-M10, giving the output impedance according to (2.27) page 112 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Figure 6.15 Multiple-output, low-power current operational amplifier page 113 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers The input current is mirrored by the current mirrors M13-M18 to the transimpedance node of the amplifier, where the conversion to voltage takes place. In accordance with the considerations on the design of high-speed current operational amplifiers in Section 3 of this chapter the mirroring ratio of the current mirror was chosen 0.5. The input transistors of the class AB voltage follower M19, M20 have also aspect ratios scaled by the factor 0.5 in comparison to M21, M22 to ensure quiescent drain currents of them of the same size as the quiescent drain currents of M7- M12. Crosscoupling the output transistors of this voltage follower M21, M22 with the output of a similar grounded voltage follower M7, M8, M11, M12 results in a transconductance action giving the low-frequency, open-loop gain The dominant pole associated with the transimpedance node can be found at the frequency where for the value of CT the sum of the most important parasitic capacitancesCBDM17 + CBDM18 + CGDM18 + CSBM19 + CSBM20 + CDBM19 + CDBM20 + CGSM19 + CGSM20+ + 12 (CGSM21 + CGSM22 + CGDM21 + CGDM22 can be considered. The size of the additional capacitance necessary to be added to the transimpedance node to compensate the current operational amplifier was calculated only 0.1pF under the given biasing conditions. The phase margin considered for these calculations was 60°. The amplified differential currents are then mirrored to the output terminals by regulated cascode current mirrors M23-M72 and M73-M122. This type of current mirror was chosen because of its high output impedance (2.18), approaching the limitation given by the dynamic resistance of PN junctions biased into backward conduction, and offering a relatively large voltage swing at the output terminals (2.19). Since the quiescent drain currents of these current mirrors are also supposed to be 1μA, the cascode transistors in the input branches of the current mirrors M25, M26, M75, M76 will not remain in the saturated region, because their drain voltages will approach the threshold voltages of the mirroring transistors M23, M24, M73, M74, while their source voltages will be given by the threshold voltages of M27, M28, M77, M78. These settings do not allow sufficient high drain-source voltages for the cascode transistors. Nevertheless, the high gate voltage of these cascode transistors, resulting from the latter described conditions they will be operating under, will have no influence onto the input impedance of the current mirrors, and the input-output current transfer neither. The size of the mirroring transistors and the page 114 Chapter 6 Nigh Performance Current Operational Amplifiers number of the output branches is limited by the position of the first nondominant pole of the current operational amplifier. The poles associated with the input nodes of these current mirrors must not be placed lower than the first nondominant pole of the circuit. The first nondominant pole of the current operational amplifier will be associated with the input node, because a relatively large parasitic capacitance of approximately CIN-l0pF will appear under the bonding pad and between the pin wire and package of the integrated circuit. This pole placed at the frequency will set the limitation for the unity-gain bandwidth of the current operational amplifier. A important parameter of the proposed low-power current operational amplifier is also the output current range derived from (6.18) The calculated power consumption at the quiescent state is 35μW, using l0V , rail-to-rail supply voltage. B. Simulation and Test Results Before fabrication the proposed circuit has been simulated on PSPICE using LEVEL 2 model parameters for the technology being considered for the fabrication of the proposed circuit. The simulated key parameters are compared to the measured results in Table 6.1. The significantly lower output range of the current operational amplifier obtained by measurements would from (6.25) normally indicate smaller transconductance parameters K of the transistors and/or higher threshold voltages VT and bulk threshold parameters γ than the process parameters used in the simulations. However, these considerations do not agree with the parameters measured on wafers the chips were fabricated on submitted by the manufacturer. The measurements of the open-loop gain of the circuit were severely degraded by the relatively high noise level, introduced by the measurement equipment, thus the precision of the measured open-loop gain is not sure. With the open-loop gain of 77dB the proposed current operational amplifier approaches only the expectations. In a unity-gain feedback arrangement the operational amplifier became unstable, leading to two possible explanations. First, the first nondominant pole associated with the input terminal of the current operational amplifier is lower than expected due to a higher capacitance associated with this node. The possibility of too low gate page 115 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers Table 6.1 transconductances of the input transistors M9, M10 was negated by the measurements of the input resistances. Second, the first nondominant pole is associated with the input nodes of the p- channel output current mirrors, drains of M26, M76. The first explanation seems to be more reasonable, while the second is not solid enough, since the parasitic capacitances at the inputs of the output current mirrors are more then one order of magnitude below CIN. Using the gain settings for 20 and 40dB the current amplifier operated properly and exhibited classical constant gain bandwidth characteristics like expected. Finally, the proposed current operational amplifier introduces at high frequency also much nonlinearity, especially in the crossover region, where the total turning off the input devices M9, M10 seems to require a longer recovery. Although the fabricated current operational amplifier did not fulfill all expectations obtained by simulations, the basic functionality of this low-power design has been proven. References page 116 Chapter 6 High Performance Current Operational Amplifiers page 117 Conclusions Current signal processing undoubtedly has many interesting features. Probably, the most important one is that the signal in form of current, obtained from sensors or D/A converters, can be processed directly, without converting it to voltage at the input stage of the analog signal processing system. The relative independence of the signal range on the size of the supply voltage, together with the unconventionally defined power supply rejection ratio, makes the current signal processing primarily interesting for analog applications, which have to be integrated together with digital functions on a single chip. Such large systems, often being forced disconnected from the power net, and supplied only by a single battery, require supply voltages, which lie very close to the limit set by threshold voltages of MOS transistors. Typical voltage processing circuits, however, require a supply voltage of the size of at least two threshold voltages for proper operation, while current processing circuits need only one. The doctoral thesis you just have read concerns two approaches to the design of function blocks for analog current processing circuits, the current-mode approach and the design of high- current-gain amplifier, current operational amplifiers. The current-mode approach was until now the only possibility to design continuous-time, current processing circuits. Current conveyors, as typical current-mode building blocks, have over years proven their versatility in both voltage and current processing circuits. In this thesis some applications based on current conveyors were shown and two of the applications, a voltage operational amplifier and a gyrator, were chosen for a more detailed analysis. The layouts of both circuits were designed and the circuits were fabricated in a standard industry CMOS technology. The key improvement of the proposed voltage operational amplifier is its response on a step-function excitation, which is in accordance with the theoretical considerations and calculations clearly not slew-rate limited. The other properties and parameters of this voltage operational amplifier are similar to those of conventional voltage operational amplifiers. The gyrator built of two complementary second generation current conveyors appears a very simple design, and although with 1 mm2 it seems to be quite large, an on-chip second order filter will surely require much less space than the gyrator considered for outside-chip bandpass measurements. The measured parameters of both circuits were in a good agreement with the theoretical predictions. Another current conveyor based amplifier, the ′voltage feedback' current operational amplifier was proposed and identified as the adjoint element of the `current feedback' voltage operational amplifier. Simulations proved that the proposed circuit exhibits constant bandwidth characteristics, a behavior typical for transimpedance amplifiers. This property allows to use the `voltage feedback' current operational amplifiers in high-frequency, high-gain applications. Although the current-mode approach has gained much attention of analog designers, finding a `current-mode' or current operational amplifier was the declared aim of many of them. This is because it is the merit of voltage operational amplifiers page 118 that voltage processing systems are nowadays so dominating the analog signal processing world. It can be expected that having a current processing building block having properties similar or even identical to those of the voltage operational amplifiers would make it very easy to design current processing systems with similar or even identical properties to those of already well known and well-established voltage processing systems. Studying the fundamentals of high voltage amplification and the configuration of voltage operational amplifiers, and strictly considering the adjoint network theorem, leads clearly to the current operational amplifier offering a single input, and differential output terminals and a high open-loop gain, ideally approaching infinity. The basic architecture as well as the first and second order parameters of the current operational amplifiers were defined in this thesis. To prove these considerations two current operational amplifiers were designed and fabricated. One of them was a differential-input, single-output current operational amplifier, the second a differential-output, single-input current operational amplifier. Unfortunately, neither of these circuits was packaged and delivered. Because the measurements were performed by another institution, the simulations remained the only experimental results mentioned in this thesis. An attention was also paid to improvements of the performance of current operational amplifiers. The design strategies towards low area, high frequency, low voltage, low power and low noise were described and a high-frequency, multiple-output current operational amplifier suitable for low-power applications was designed, fabricated and measured. Analyzing the obtained results the conclusion must be accepted that all parameters achieved by voltage processing circuits can be obtained by interreciprocal current processing circuits too, and vice versa. This is mainly because the transfer functions, their zeroes and poles, are always dependent on conductances and parasitic capacitances, independent of the processing variable. Thus, considering the remarkable frequency parameters of current-mode circuits results in the assumption that voltage-mode circuits exhibiting the frequency properties of current-mode circuits must be obtainable if no internal high-impedance node is included in these circuits. For the most effective design of analog processing circuits remains finally one important notion. All signal processing performed by analog electronics uses always both voltages and currents as variables for signal processing, independently of the fact, which of these two variables is included into the considerations and calculations of the designers as the processing variable, and which is considered only as a parasitic. Therefore only taking both variables, voltages and currents into account allows to build very high quality analog systems. page 119 Acknowledgments The work presented in this thesis could only be realized with the aid and support of many people. It is therefore a great honor to me to express my gratitude to them. First I would like to thank Peter Lobotka and Ivo Vávra from the Institute of Electrical Engineering of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava, who provided guides beside my first steps into the world of scientific research. Four years ago I started the research on current-mode and current signal processing circuits contained in this thesis at the Electronics Institute of the Technical University of Denmark in Lyngby. It is therefore a special honor to me to express my deepest gratitude to Prof. Erik Bruun, the head of the institute, for supervising me during my stay at the Electronics institute. During the following years he also supported my research with valuable ideas and comments. A part of my research work during my doctoral studies was carried out at the Department of Electrical Engineering of the Catholics University Leuven, Belgium. I would like to express my thanks to Prof. Willy M. C. Sansen, the head of the MICAS group at the department, and Prof. Michael S. J. Steyaert, who extended my view in the design of analog circuits significantly. The major part of the work presented in this thesis was performed at the Department of Microelectronics at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science of the Technical University of Brno, Czech Republic. I would like to express my gratitude to my supervisor Prof. Jaromír Brzobohatý, who has provided the guide lines for my work, supported me with valuable advices and helped me to overcome all bureaucratic hindrances at the University. Further I would also like express my sincere appreciation for the valuable contribution of Prof. Jiří Pospíšil, from the Department of Radioelectronics, to this work. Finally I would like to thank for the financial support from the Danish Research Academy, Grant No. 5910181; Grant Agency of Czech Republic, Project No. 102/1993/1266; Fund of Science of the Technical University of Brno, Project No. A 14/1994 and A 31/1994. page 120 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors All models will be described for n-channel MOS devices with the respective voltage and current polarities shown in Fig. A.1. 1. Model for Hand Calculations Hand calculations are used in the design process to set bias conditions of the circuit and estimate small-signal transfer functions like gain, cut-off frequency, etc. For that reason a simple large-signal and small-signal model for active devices are necessary. A. Simple Large-Signal Model The complete large-signal model for the MOS transistor is shown in Fig. A.2. For approximate hand calculations an MOS transistor model based on the simple Sah equation [ 1 ] is mostly used. If the transistor is operated in the linear region fulfilling the conditions vGS ≥ VT and vDS ≤ (vGS - VT) its drain current can be calculated as where (1 + λvDS) is the factor used to model the channel-length modulation behaviour. However, the MOS transistor is mostly used in the saturated region with 0 < (vGS - VT) = vDS (sat.) ≤ vDS . Here ignoring for the moment the channel-length modulation effect the output current iD becomes independent of vDS. The Sah equation then transforms to Usually the large-signal transconductance parameter (β = μ0 C0X W/L is defined, where K= μ0 COX is the technology parameter independent of the aspect ratio W/L. The threshold voltage VT can be calculated from page121 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors Figure A.1. Figure A.2 Positive sign convention for a) n-channel and b) p-channel MOS transistor Complete large-signal model for MOS transistor where: page 122 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors B. Other MOS Large-Signal Model Parameters The large-signal model also includes several other characteristics like diffusion-bulk junctions, various parasitic capacitances, and diffusion resitances. The diodes of Fig. A.2 represent the source-bulk, drain-bulk pn junctions, reverse biased for proper transistor operation. They are used to model the leakage currents expressed as an The junction capacitances CBD and CBS represented in the next lines as CBX are a function of the voltage across the pn junction vBX. The expression for this capacitance is divided into two regions [2]: and where page 123 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors CJ= zero-bias, bulk-source/drain capacitance CJSW = zero-bias, bulk-source/drain sidewall capacitance MJ= bulk junction grading coefficient (1/2 for step functions and 1/3 for graded junctions) MJSW = bulk-junction sidewall grading coefficient PB = bulk junction potential FC = forward-bias nonideal junction-capacitance coefficient ( 0.5 ) Typical values for CJ, CJSW, MJ, and MJSW for an MOS transistor are given in Table A.1. From (A.6) and (A.7) it is obvious that the bulk-source/drain pn junction capacitors can not be accurately calculated without knowing the geometry of the devices; the area and perimeter of the source and the drain. Table The oxide capacitors of MOS transistors consist of the gate-source capacitance gate-drain capacitance CGD, and gate-bulk capacitance CGB . Further, CGS and CGD can be divided into extrinsic overlap capacitances and intrinsic voltagedependent capacitances. The resulting oxide capacitances have to be defined separately for three different regions of operation of MOS transistors [2]: The off region: The saturated region: page 124 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors The nonsaturated region: These equations provide a smooth transition between the three regions. W and L represent the effective channel dimensions taking the lateral diffusion LD into account. CGXO , where X = S, D for source and drain respectively, are the overlap capacitances, CGBO is the gate-bulk capacitance, and COX is the oxide capacitance of the MOS transistor. Their typical values are also given in Table A.1. Other parasitic capacitors have their origin in the thick oxide sandwiches between conductive layers (metal, polysilicon) and the substrate. Their high values can be avoided by a carefully performed layout design, if necessary. However, their values can be calculated only if the dimensions of the layout structures are known. The values of the diffusion resistances rD and rS may be between 50 and 100 Ω. They do not have any significant influence on the performance of the MOS transistor. C. Noise Model of MOS Transistors The fact that the electrical charge is not continuous but is carried in discrete amounts, electrons and holes, results in noise, that represents a lower limit below which electrical signals can not be processed without a significant deterioration in the quality of the signal. Noise can be modeled by a current source connected in parallel with ID of Fig. A.lb representing the thermal noise and flicker noise. The mean-square current-noise source is defined as where page 125 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors This noise can be reflected to the gate of the MOS transistor and expressed as the equivalent input-mean-square voltage noise Very often the input-voltage-noise spectral density is used to express the noise performance of analog circuits. Equation (A.12) can be rewritten to Typical mean-square voltage-noise density of a 100μm/5μm NMOS device is 680 nV/√Hz at 100 Hz. A corresponding PMOS device has 120 nV/√Hz at the same frequency. Generally, the equivalent input-reffered voltage-noise of a PMOS device is about 5 times less then the equivalent input-reffered voltage-noise of an NMOS device and the equivalent input-reffered voltage-noise of a given device will decrease as the device area increases [2]. D. Small-Signal Model For the calculations of the transfer functions of electronic circuits based on MOS devices their small-signal model shown in Fig. A.3 is needed [3]. The gate transconductance gm, bulk transconductance gmbs and output conductance of MOS transistors are related to the large-signal model by the following equations page126 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors Figure A.3 Small-signal model of MOS transistor The dependence of the small-signal parameters upon the large-signal model parameters and the chosen operational point in the linear and saturation regions can be obtained by differentiation of (A. l ) and (A.2) respectively. The resulting dependencies are illustrated in Table A.2 and Table A.3. Table A.2 page127 Appendix A Models for MOS Transistors Table 2. Models for Computer-Aided Analog Circuit Design The simple Sah MOS transistor model expressed by (A.1) and (A.2) [1] has been also taken as a basis for models used for computer simulations [4, S]. Of course, these models are much more complex and include higher order effects associated with narrow or short channel dimensions and the effects of temperature on MOS transistor parameters. These effects result in the degradation of the surface mobility due to increasing electric field studied extensively in [6], and in a similar manner the threshold voltage has to be corrected for small size devices [7]. All these effects are included in the models for circuit simulations on SPICE. These models are too complex to be described in these theses and therefore they will not be given here. However, they can be found in [8]. References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. C.T. Sah, "Characteristics of the Metal-0xide-Semiconductor Transistor," IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, vol. ED-11, 1964, pp. 324-345. P.E. Allen, D.R. Holberg, "CMOS Analog Circuit Modeling," Chapter 3 in CMOS Analog Circuit Design, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., Orlando, 1987. S. Liu and L.W. Nagel, "Small-Signal MOSFET Models for Analog Circuit Design," Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-17, 1982, pp. 983-998. H. Shichman and D. Hodges, "Modeling and Simulation of Insulated-Gate FieldEffect Transistor Switching Circuits," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-3, 1968, pp. 285-289. G. Merckel, J. Borel, N.Z. Cupcea, "An Accurate Large-Signal MOS Transistor Model for Use in Computer-Aided Design," IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, vol. ED-19, 1972, pp. 681-690. page128 Appendix A Models jor MOS Transistors 6. 7. 8. S.C. Sun, J.D. Plummer, "Electron Mobility in Inversion and Accumulation Layers on Thermally Oxidized Silicon Surfaces," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-15, 1980, pp. 562-573. K.N. Ratnakumar, J.D. Meindl, "Short-Channel MOST Threshold Voltage Model," IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-17, 1982, pp. 937-948. P. Antognetti, G. Massobrio, "Semiconductor Device Modeling with SPICE," McGraw - Hill Book Company, New York. page129