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Lecture 20 Current Source Biasing and MOS Amplifier Design. Michael L. Bushnell CAIP Center and WINLAB ECE Dept., Rutgers U., Piscataway, NJ. Temperature and supply-independent biasing OPAMP design Summary. Temperature and Supply-Independent Biasing.
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Lecture 20Current Source Biasing and MOS Amplifier Design Michael L. Bushnell CAIP Center and WINLAB ECE Dept., Rutgers U., Piscataway, NJ • Temperature and supply-independent biasing • OPAMP design • Summary Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Temperature and Supply-Independent Biasing • Biasing must also be independent of process variations • Critical for MOS circuits • Bias I fluctuations with T, VDD, and process cause wasted energy • Supply-independent biasing is important • Avoid injecting high-f noise on power lines into circuit signal path Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Supply-Independent Biasing • Refer bias circuit to potential other than VDD: • Vt – threshold voltage of MOSFET • Vbg – band-gap voltage • DVt of dissimilar devices • VBE of parasitic bipolar transistor in CMOS • VT – thermal voltage (k T / q) • Zener diode breakdown V – too high breakdown V • Self-biasing requires a start-up circuit • Must force circuit into equilibrium in desired stable state Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Vt Referenced Self-Biased Circuit • Fig 12.25a (old book) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Analysis • Feedback from M2, M3 & M4 forces same current I to flow in M1and R • Operating point must satisfy: • I R = VGS1 = V t1 + 2 I mn Cox (W / L)1 • Neglect channel length modulation & body effect • Make 2nd term small compared to Vt • Use low bias current • Use large W/L • I Vt / R Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Analysis (continued) • If 2nd term included, O/P current is slightly reduced but T and VDD dependence is the same • Must ensure stability – need to verify that feedback loop gain is < 1 at operating point • Do by breaking the loop, injecting a signal, & checking the gain • Must determine degree of supply independence • Channel length modulation in M2 & M1 causes bias current variation • Reduce variation with cascode current source Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Problem • In typical MOS process, Vt not well controlled • 0.5 V Vt 0.8 V • Vtnhas TC (temperature coefficient) of –2 mV / oC, but diffused R’s have a large positive TC • Results in O/P current with large negative TC Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Delta Vt Temperature Independence • Use differences in Vt of two devices of same polarity but with different channel implants • Advantage: TC’s of two devices cancel to first order • Can get O/P Voltage TC as low as 20 ppm / oC Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
DVT Referenced Biasing • Fig 12.25b (old book) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Disadvantages • Large initial tolerance in O/P voltage value • Threshold voltages have large tolerance • Extensively used for precision voltage references in nMOS and CMOS • Need to trim a resistor to adjust absolute O/P voltage Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
VBE Referenced Biasing • Fig 12.26 (old book) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Analysis • pnp is a parasitic bipolar device in p-substrate CMOS • Can also use a parasitic npn transistor • Feedback involving M1, M2, M3, M4 forces emitter current in Q1 to match R current I R = VT ln I or I = VBE1 IS R • Advantage: VBE is well-controlled, with 5% variation • Disadvantage: VBE has a negative TC of –2 mV / oC • R has a strong positive TC • Leads to a strong negative TC in bias current • Can reduce reference current variation with a cascode or Wilson current source Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
VT-Referenced Biasing (Thermal Voltage) • Fig 12.27 (old book) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Analysis • Q1 & Q2 transistor areas differ by n factor • Feedback circuit makes them operate at same bias current • Difference between two VBE’s appears across resistor R • VBE = VT ln I • IS I = IS e • Get: I R = VBE1 – VBE2 = VT ln I - VT ln I IS n IS = VT ln I n IS IS I Or I = VT ln (n) R ( ) [ ] VBE / VT ( ) ( ) ( ) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Discussion • Advantage: VT has positive temperature coefficient (VT = kT / q) • R has a positive TC, so current output is relatively T independent Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
VT Referenced Self-Biased Reference Circuit • With cascoded devices: • Improves power-supply rejection and initial accuracy • DV across R is ~ 100 mV • Small differences in VGS for M1 & M2 cause large O/P current (IOUT) changes • Result from device mismatches or from channel length modulation in M1 & M2 (with different drain voltages) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Self-Biased Reference Circuit • Fig 12.28 (old book) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Band-Gap Referenced Biasing • Fig 12.29 (old book) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Analysis • IM8drain = VT ln (n) R • V0 = VBE + VT ln (n) x R R = VBE + x VT ln (n) • OPAMP maintains V0 at both + and – terminals due to feedback IOUT = V0 / R2 • Advantage: By weighting VBE and VT components, one gets a voltage of any desired TC • Can exactly cancel an R TC ( ) Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Weighting • Parameter x determines weighting of VT-dependent portion: • Can use only common collector transistors • OPAMP has MOS transistors, so their input offset voltage and input offset voltage temperature drift influence O/P voltage of the reference • Must remove offset with analog storage and cancellation Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003
Summary • Temperature and supply-independent biasing • OPAMP design Analog and Low-Power Design Lecture 20 (c) 2003