University of Michigan, EECS413 Final project. A High Speed Operational Amplifier. 1. A High Speed Operational Amplifier

Similar documents
A PSEUDO-CLASS-AB TELESCOPIC-CASCODE OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER

DESIGN OF A FULLY DIFFERENTIAL HIGH-SPEED HIGH-PRECISION AMPLIFIER

Gain Boosted Telescopic OTA with 110db Gain and 1.8GHz. UGF

Design of High-Speed Op-Amps for Signal Processing

Operational Amplifiers

d. Can you find intrinsic gain more easily by examining the equation for current? Explain.

DAT175: Topics in Electronic System Design

Solid State Devices & Circuits. 18. Advanced Techniques

High Voltage Operational Amplifiers in SOI Technology

Op-Amp Design Project EE 5333 Analog Integrated Circuits Prof. Ramesh Harjani Department of ECE University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Report prepared

A Unity Gain Fully-Differential 10bit and 40MSps Sample-And-Hold Amplifier in 0.18μm CMOS

What is the typical voltage gain of the basic two stage CMOS opamp we studied? (i) 20dB (ii) 40dB (iii) 80dB (iv) 100dB

Revision History. Contents

Sensors & Transducers Published by IFSA Publishing, S. L.,

Analog CMOS Interface Circuits for UMSI Chip of Environmental Monitoring Microsystem

An Improved Recycling Folded Cascode OTA with positive feedback

Performance Evaluation of Different Types of CMOS Operational Transconductance Amplifier

Design of a Sample and Hold Circuit using Rail to Rail Low Voltage Compact Operational Amplifier and bootstrap Switching

Comparative Analysis of Compensation Techniques for improving PSRR of an OPAMP

A Novel Design of Low Voltage,Wilson Current Mirror based Wideband Operational Transconductance Amplifier

IJSRD - International Journal for Scientific Research & Development Vol. 4, Issue 02, 2016 ISSN (online):

Design of a low voltage,low drop-out (LDO) voltage cmos regulator

Microelectronic Circuits II. Ch 10 : Operational-Amplifier Circuits

EECE488: Analog CMOS Integrated Circuit Design Set 7 Opamp Design

ECE 415/515 ANALOG INTEGRATED CIRCUIT DESIGN

Topology Selection: Input

Analog Integrated Circuits Fundamental Building Blocks

Performance Analysis of Low Power, High Gain Operational Amplifier Using CMOS VLSI Design

Basic OpAmp Design and Compensation. Chapter 6

A Low Power Gain Boosted Fully Differential OTA for a 10bit pipelined ADC

Analysis and Design of Analog Integrated Circuits Lecture 20. Advanced Opamp Topologies (Part II)

Radivoje Đurić, 2015, Analogna Integrisana Kola 1

Chapter 12 Opertational Amplifier Circuits

CSE 577 Spring Insoo Kim, Kyusun Choi Mixed Signal CHIP Design Lab. Department of Computer Science & Engineering The Penn State University

Chapter 5. Operational Amplifiers and Source Followers. 5.1 Operational Amplifier

Optimizing the Stage Resolution of a 10-Bit, 50 Ms/Sec Pipelined A/D Converter & Its Impact on Speed, Power, Area, and Linearity

You will be asked to make the following statement and provide your signature on the top of your solutions.

DESIGN OF A PROGRAMMABLE LOW POWER LOW DROP-OUT REGULATOR

Advanced Operational Amplifiers

Design of Rail-to-Rail Op-Amp in 90nm Technology

You will be asked to make the following statement and provide your signature on the top of your solutions.

A 16Ω Audio Amplifier with 93.8 mw Peak loadpower and 1.43 quiscent power consumption

ISSN Page 32. Figure 1.1: Black box representation of the basic current conveyor.

Operational Amplifier with Two-Stage Gain-Boost

Preamplifier shaper: The preamplifier. The shaper. The Output.

CMOS Operational-Amplifier

Design of High Gain Two stage Op-Amp using 90nm Technology

Design and Implementation of High Gain, High Bandwidth CMOS Folded cascode Operational Transconductance Amplifier

Design and Analysis of Two-Stage Op-Amp in 0.25µm CMOS Technology

Low power high-gain class-ab OTA with dynamic output current scaling

Rail to Rail Input Amplifier with constant G M and High Unity Gain Frequency. Arun Ramamurthy, Amit M. Jain, Anuj Gupta

Design Analysis and Performance Comparison of Low Power High Gain 2nd Stage Differential Amplifier Along with 1st Stage

NOWADAYS, multistage amplifiers are growing in demand

G m /I D based Three stage Operational Amplifier Design

Homework Assignment EE 435 Homework 4 Spring 2014 Due Wednesday Feb 26

Performance Enhanced Op- Amp for 65nm CMOS Technologies and Below

DESIGN OF LOW POWER AND HIGH GAIN BOOSTED OTA FOR HIGH FREQUENCY RADIO MODULATIONS AND TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS

Design of Low Voltage Low Power CMOS OP-AMP

Atypical op amp consists of a differential input stage,

A Low-Voltage, Low-Power, Two-Stage Amplifier for Switched-Capacitor Applications in 90 nm CMOS Process

Design of a Folded Cascode Operational Amplifier in a 1.2 Micron Silicon-Carbide CMOS Process

CMOS Operational-Amplifier

Chapter 10 Feedback ECE 3120 Microelectronics II Dr. Suketu Naik

REVIEW OF FOLDED CASCODE & TELESCOPIC OP-AMP

Index terms: Analog to Digital conversion, capacitor sharing, high speed OPAMP-sharing pipelined analog to digital convertor, Low power.

NOVEMBER 29, 2017 COURSE PROJECT: CMOS TRANSIMPEDANCE AMPLIFIER ECG 720 ADVANCED ANALOG IC DESIGN ERIC MONAHAN

A Low Power Low Voltage High Performance CMOS Current Mirror

Index. Small-Signal Models, 14 saturation current, 3, 5 Transistor Cutoff Frequency, 18 transconductance, 16, 22 transit time, 10

Design and Simulation of Low Dropout Regulator

Basic Circuits. Current Mirror, Gain stage, Source Follower, Cascode, Differential Pair,

Design and Analysis of Low Power Two Stage CMOS Op- Amp with 50nm Technology

A CMOS Low-Voltage, High-Gain Op-Amp

A new class AB folded-cascode operational amplifier

Analog Integrated Circuit Configurations

EE Analog and Non-linear Integrated Circuit Design

AN increasing number of video and communication applications

A New Design Technique of CMOS Current Feed Back Operational Amplifier (CFOA)

EE 501 Lab 4 Design of two stage op amp with miller compensation

Analog Integrated Circuits. Lecture 7: OpampDesign

Design and Analysis of High Gain CMOS Telescopic OTA in 180nm Technology for Biomedical and RF Applications

Design of Low Voltage High Speed Operational Amplifier for Pipelined ADC in 90 nm Standard CMOS Process

ISSN:

Design and Simulation of an Operational Amplifier with High Gain and Bandwidth for Switched Capacitor Filters

EE 501 Lab 11 Common mode feedback (CMFB) circuit

ISSN:

Rail-To-Rail Output Op-Amp Design with Negative Miller Capacitance Compensation

Operational Transconductance Amplifier Design for A 16-bit Pipelined ADC

ANALYSIS AND DESIGN OF ANALOG INTEGRATED CIRCUITS

Design and Analysis of High Gain Differential Amplifier Using Various Topologies

CHAPTER 3 DESIGN OF PIPELINED ADC USING SCS-CDS AND OP-AMP SHARING TECHNIQUE

ECEN 474/704 Lab 6: Differential Pairs

Low Power and Fast Transient High Swing CMOS Telescopic Operational Amplifier

Design of Low Voltage, Low Power Rail to Rail Operational Transconductance Amplifier with enhanced Gain and Gain Bandwidth Product

A Compact Folded-cascode Operational Amplifier with Class-AB Output Stage

Pankaj Naik Electronic and Instrumentation Deptt. SGSITS, Indore, India. Priyanka Sharma Electronic and. SGSITS, Indore, India

IN RECENT years, low-dropout linear regulators (LDOs) are

EE 140 HW7 SOLUTION 1. OPA334. a. From the data sheet, we see that. Vss 0.1V Vcm Vdd 1.5V

A 100MHz CMOS wideband IF amplifier

A 90 db, 85 MHz operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) using gain boosting technique

Design and implementation of two stage operational amplifier

Transcription:

University of Michigan, EECS413 Final project. A High Speed Operational Amplifier. 1 A High Speed Operational Amplifier A. Halim El-Saadi, Mohammed El-Tanani, University of Michigan Abstract This paper presents a design of a single stage operational amplifier with a high dc gain and a large unity gain bandwidth. The design was implemented using a folding cascode topology with the addition of gain boosting amplifiers for increased gain. The results show that a gain greater then 75 db was achieved with unity gain frequency above 1 GHz and a phase margin greater then 65 degrees. Index Terms Phase Margin, Unity gain, Bandwidth, Gain boosting, Cascode, Operational Amplifier I. INTRODUCTION HIGH speed high gain amplifiers have many uses in analog circuits which include Sample and Hold circuits, photo-detector amplifiers, fast settling digital to analog converters and buffered amplifiers[1]. The such circuits is becoming more difficult with the trend being toward lower supply voltages and shorter channel lengths. These trends result in trade offs between, gain, speed and output swing. A two stage design is capable of achieving a high gain and large output swing in [2], however, the second stage introduces a pole at a low frequency that affects the frequency response by lowering the unity gain frequency and phase margin.in [3] a single stage telescopic cascode design is described that achieves a higher frequency response and consumes less power than other topologies. The drawback of this architecture is that it severely limits the output swing, hence with a low voltage supply of two volts it is not feasible to pursue this design approach. A folded cascode topology improves on the latter design in that the output swing is increased by one Vdsat [2], while maintaining the same gain at approximately (gmro) 2 which is the square of the intrinsic MOS transistor gain. The gain of a folded cascode is maximized at around 50 db and falling short of the predefined design objectives. An approach to circumvent this problem is presented in [4], where the principle of gain boosting is utilized to increase the dc gain while maintaining a large output swing. This report will show an implementation of the technique described in [4] and present results of the dc, ac and output swing measurements. II. THEORY OF OPERATION A. Folded Cascode The folded cascode topology provides high output swings and is ideally suited to operate in low voltage supply circuits. Figure 1 shows a standard folded cascode single stage amplifier. The maximum output swing that is allowed by this architecture is given by (1). Vos = Vdd Vod3 Vod 5- Vod7 - Vod9 (1) Vos refers to the output swing and Vod is the overdrive voltage. The small signal gain of the folded cascode architecture is given by (2). Av = Gm*Rout = gm1* gm3(ro3(ro1 ro5) )gm7(ro7ro9) (2) Figure 1. Folded cascode architecture B. Gain Boosting In order to achieve a high voltage gain from the folded cascode amplifier the out impedance needs to be maximized. Increasing output impedance requires long channel lengths which add capacitance and slow down the design. One way to circumvent this problem is shown in Figure 2, this particular circuit is called a regulated cascode and the main goal behind it is to further increase the output impedance without increasing the channel lengths. The relationship between the increased impedance and the gain of the gain boosting amplifier is approximately given by (3). Rout Aadd*gm1*ro1*ro2 (3)

University of Michigan, EECS413 Final project. A High Speed Operational Amplifier. 2 Figure 2. Cascoded gain stage with gain enhancement [4] In order to ensure that the overall system is stable, unity gain frequency of the gain boosting amplifier needs to be less than the second pole but greater than first pole of the folding cascode amplifier. Figure 3 shows the benefit of implementing the gain boosting technique. Original gain here has bee greatly increased at DC and at no cost of the over all Figure 3. Gain Bode plots of the original cascaded gain stage (Aorig), the additional gain stage (Aadd), and the improved cascaded gain stage (Atot) [4] unity gain frequency. Figure 4. Input stage of folded cascode amplifier. The inputs were selected to be PMOS so as to keep the pole at the folding point farther away Gm1 = CL*fu/(2*pi) (4) B. Gain and Output stage The gain stage amplifies the input signal and provides the maximum output swing while maintaining all transistors operating in the saturation region. The folded cascode gain stage with PMOS input transistors is shown in Figure 5. Vb1 and Vb2 were chosen such that the lower part of the swing is equal to Vod3+Vod5, where Vod = Vgs Vth (overdrive voltage of the transistors). Similarly, the upper part of the swing is given by Vdd - Vod7 - Vod9. Since M5 carries a large current Vod5 was set to 0.4 and all other transistors were set to 0.3. The total calculated output swing is 0.7V. The small signal gain of the folded cascode amplifier is Av 50dB before gain boosting amplifiers were used. III. DESIGN IMPLEMENTATION A. Input stage The purpose of the input stage of the amplifier is to receive a differential signal that would then be amplified by a folded cascode topology. The input stage transistors as shown in Figure 4 were designed so as to achieve the desired unity gain frequency (fu) of 1 Ghz. The relationship between the unity gain frequency and the gm (tranconductance) of the input transistors is described by (4), where CL is the load capacitance. The gm of the input transistors is 6.28 ms for a load capacitance of 1pF. The input stage can be implemented using either NMOS or PMOS transistors. The greater mobility of the NMOS devices provides a higher gain, however, this lowers the pole at the folding point [2 p. 304], thereby reducing the phase margin. For this reason PMOS transistors were used for the input stage keeping in mind that the reduction in gain can be compensated by the gain boosting technique. With a tail current of 3.5mA for high gain the W/L ratio was 14. Figure 5. Folded cascode amplifier

University of Michigan, EECS413 Final project. A High Speed Operational Amplifier. 3 C. Common Mode Feedback (CMFB) The purpose of the CMFB is to regulate the common mode output voltage (Vcmo) and maintain at an optimal level. The common mode output voltage level was determined to keep the upper NMOS and PMOS transistor in saturation, which is given by (5). Vod3 +Vod5 <Vcmo <Vdd Vod7 - Vod9 (5) To allow for maximum output swing, we take a value of 1 volts for Vcmo Without CMFB the output common mode voltage would fluctuate which in turn causes either the upper or lower transistors to leave the saturation region. The CMFB circuit is shown in Figure 6, it uses NMOS transistors as input devices because Vcmo 1V which is high to be used with PMOS inputs. This circuit basically senses the output voltages and compares the common mode voltage with Vcmo and any difference is then fed back as a bias voltage to the upper transistors which in turn adjust the current in a direction that achieves the desired common mode output voltage. Figure 6. Folded cascode amplifier with common mode feedback. Figure 7. Bottom gain boosting amplifier. This is a single ended folding cascode design with active current mirror. E. Compensation The amplifier was originally designed with a unity gain frequency greater than 1Ghz so as to leave a margin or error when adding the gain boosting stage and the tempreture variation. The phase of the amplifier w/o gain boosting was designed to be less than 115 degrees at 1 GHz. In order to achieve the desired phase margin of 65 degrees and a unity gain frequency greater than 1 GHz, capacitors were placed at the output of the gain boosting amplifiers. This will make the 3dB frequency of the gain boosting stage greater than the 3dB frequency of the original gain stage and less than the second pole of the original stage.this is illustrated in Figure 8. To reduce the overall unity gain of the amplifier to where the phase margin is greater than 65 degrees a capacitor was placed between the differential outputs as shown in Figure (8). D. Gain boosting stage The gain boosting stage increases the effective output resistance by the gain of the boosting amplifier, therefore increasing the overall gain of the folded cascode design. Since the gain of the folding cascode architecture is approximately 50 db then the gain of the gain boosting amplifier is required to be greater than 25dB in order to achieve an overall gain of 75 db. A differential input single ended output folding cascode topology was used to implement the gain boosting amplifier as shown in Figure 7. The NMOS inputs were used for the upper transistors and PMOS for the lower transistors to get a maximum voltage swing. The gain boosting amplifier utilizes an active current mirror, therefore it does not require the use of common mode feedback. This design achieved a gain of 30 db for each amplifier. Figure 8. Schematic of the complete design of the amplifier including the compensation capacitor between the differential output voltages.

University of Michigan, EECS413 Final project. A High Speed Operational Amplifier. 4 IV. MEASUREMENT AND RESULTS Table 1 summarizes the overall performance of the amplifier with Vdd and temperature variation. The simulation shows that we have excess in gain and phase margin specification. The amplifier consumes power around 28 mw, which needs further reduction. Figure 11 and Fig. 12 show the magnitude and the phase of the gain with temperature and Vdd respectively. Fig. 12 shows that Vdd variation has no great effect on the overall performance. The variation of the input common mode by +/-.3 v has been tested. It has almost no effect on the overall performance.. Temp 27 Vdd (volts) TABLE I SUMMARY OF FINAL RESULTS Gain (db) Phase Margine (degrees) Power (mw) Unity Gain (Ghz) 2.2 88.2 66 30 1.1 2 86.6 66 27.1 1.076 1.8 83.4 66 24.2 1.06 85 2.2 86 65 32.975 2 83.9 65 27.2.971 1.8 79.7 65 24.3.97 Figure 12. Transient and phase response with input common mode variation +-.3 volts. Figure 12 shows the output in time domain and the phase of the output at the same time. Figure 13 shows the voltage swing of the amplifier. The amplifier can give a voltage swing of.8 volts without Figure 10. Gain and phase plots with temperature variation. Figure 13. Output voltage swing is fom -0.4V to +0.4V. distorting the output. APPENDIX Our simulation file is stored in the following folder. afs/engin.umich.edu/class/f03/eecs413/group15/amp34 ACKNOWLEDGMENT WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK PROFESSOR MICHAEL FLYNN FOR HIS SUPPORT AND DIRECTION. REFERENCES [1] National Semiconductor, LH0024 and LH0032 High Speed Op Amp Applications," Application Note 253, Jan 1982. [2] Razavi, B. Design of Analog CMOS Integrated Circuits. McGraw-Hill, Boston, 2000. [3] K. Gulati and H.S. Lee. A High Swing CMOS Telescopic Operational Amplifier, Solid-State Circuits Conference, 1998. Digest of Technical Papers. 45 th ISSCC 1998 IEEE International, p. 324-325. [4] Gray, Hurst LEWIS and Mayer, Analysis and Design of analog Integrated Circuits. Jhon Wiley & Sons, 2000. Figure 11. Gain and phase plots with Vdd variation.

University of Michigan, EECS413 Final project. A High Speed Operational Amplifier. 5 Figure 14. Final layout of the Op-Amp design