Accurate Sub-1 V CMOS Bandgap Voltage Reference with PSRR of -118 db

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JOURNAL OF SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE, VOL.16, NO.4, AUGUST, 2016 ISSN(Print) 1598-1657 http://dx.doi.org/10.5573/jsts.2016.16.4.528 ISSN(Online) 2233-4866 Accurate Sub-1 V CMOS Bandgap Voltage Reference with PSRR of -118 db Hamed Abbasizadeh 1, Sung-Hun Cho 1, Sang-Sun Yoo 2, and Kang-Yoon Lee 1,* Abstract A low voltage high PSRR CMOS Bandgap circuit capable of generating a stable voltage of less than 1 V (0.8 V and 0.5 V) robust to Process, Voltage and Temperature (PVT) variations is proposed. The high PSRR of the circuit is guaranteed by a lowvoltage current mode regulator at the central aspect of the bandgap circuitry, which isolates the bandgap voltage from power supply variations and noise. The isolating current mirrors create an internal regulated voltage V reg for the BG core and Op-Amp rather than the V DD. These current mirrors reduce the impact of supply voltage variations. The proposed circuit is implemented in a 0.35 µm CMOS technology. The BGR circuit occupies 0.024 mm 2 of the die area and consumes 200 µw from a 5 V supply voltage at room temperature. Experimental results demonstrate that the PSRR of the voltage reference achieved -118 db at frequencies up to 1 khz and -55 db at 1 MHz without additional circuits for the curvature compensation. A temperature coefficient of 60 ppm/ C is obtained in the range of -40 to 120 C. Index Terms Bandgap reference (BGR), high PSRR, low voltage, line regulation, current-mode regulator and a bandgap voltage reference (BGR) often serves this purpose [1]. The design of robust low-voltage and high power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) reference voltage has become more important especially in system on chip design. Bandgap (BG) reference voltage generators are known to be the most popular solution for the generation of such a precise reference voltage in CMOS integrated circuits [1-5]. In this paper, the general configuration of the reference generator circuit and the utilized bias is similar to that of the voltage reference circuit proposed in [1]. In order to reduce the supply source noise at the reference voltage, a current mode regulator is used to isolate the area between the supply source and the bandgap reference circuit. In fact, a constant voltage is created that is almost independent from the supply source V REG, as shown in Fig. 1, and is used to supply the bandgap reference circuit. However, because the operational amplifier (Op- Amp) is supplied with a voltage of V DD, and due to the inadequacy of Op-Amp PSRR, the supply source ripple is initially transmitted to Op-Amp, and then again to V REG. This results in incomplete independence of the V DD V REG M 6 M 7 I. INTRODUCTION V b M 3 M 1 M 2 M 4 M 8 Most systems require a voltage reference independent of the variation of power supply, process, or temperature, V BG X Y OP M 5 Manuscript received Jan. 17, 2016; accepted Mar. 14, 2016 1 College of Information and Communication Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon 440-746, Korea 2 Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon 34141, Korea E-mail : klee@skku.edu R 2 R 1 R 2 I b R 3 Q 1 Q 2 R 3 V SS Fig. 1. Configuration of voltage reference, introduced at [1].

JOURNAL OF SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE, VOL.16, NO.4, AUGUST, 2016 529 Fig. 2. Proposed voltage circuit configuration. reference voltage generator circuit from the supply voltage variations. However, in this paper, in order to provide complete independence of the BGR circuit from the V DD variations, we used an internal regulated voltage V reg for the BG core and Op-Amp was used instead of V DD. In this article, accurate sub-1v BGR circuit is presented to achieve high PSRR, fast settling with low power dissipation for a low-dropout (LDO) regulator and current reference generator in an RF Transceiver system. Improvement in PSRR is due to a low voltage current mode circuit which works with the specified voltage headroom. This paper is organized as follows. In Section II the proposed circuit design in 0.35 µm CMOS is presented. Section III reports the performance results, followed by the conclusion in Section IV. II. PROPOSED VOLTAGE REFERENCE Fig. 2 depicts the general configuration of proposed voltage reference circuit. This voltage reference must be able to completely remove the supply voltage noise at lower frequencies and maintain this ability at higher frequencies. In this structure, the adjusted V reg voltage, in addition to supplying a BG reference circuit, also addresses the supply of the supplying error amplifier, which contributes to complete independence of the circuit from the supply source. In addition, modifications have been made to the BG reference circuit configuration which, in comparison to the previous configuration, results in ease of determining the reference voltage value, and achieving zero temperature coefficient at a desirable voltage. Performing KVL at the Op-Amp inlet circuit will result in: I V -V V ln( N) EBQ1 EBQ2 T d 2 = = (1) R1 R1 Considering I d2 = I d3, we will also have: R + R V = [ R ( R + R )] I + ( ) V 3 4 ref 2 3 4 d 3 EBQ3 R3 + R4 + R2 Additionally, at the Bias node we will have: R V V V 4 Bias = ( ) ref = a ref R3 + R4 which demonstrates that variation of this voltage is similar to that of the reference voltage. Fig. 3 illustrates the deployment of the proposed structure. In this configuration, in order to guarantee activity of M 8 and M 11 transistors, the V Bias value is adjusted very closely to (2) (3) V DD Isolating Current Mirrors M S2 M S1 reg M 13 M 14 C S R 4 Bias ref 2 M 3 M 2 M 1 M C M 8 M 11 R 3 ref M 4 M 5 M 10 R 4b R 2 R 1 M 12 R 4a Q 3 Q 2 Q 1 A na A M C1 M 6 M 7 M 9 M C2 Start-Up Bandgap Core Op-Amp High PSRR Section Fig. 3. Complete schematic of the proposed low-voltage bandgap reference circuit.

530 HAMED ABBASIZADEH et al : ACCURATE SUB-1 V CMOS BANDGAP VOLTAGE REFERENCE WITH PSRR OF -118 DB V ref (α 1). To deploy the Op-Amp, a two-stage amplifier is used which, in addition to supplying sufficient loop gain, has an acceptable phase margin and bandwidth. In this design, V ref = 800 mv, and if a reference voltage of less than 0.8 V is required, we can split up the R 4 resistance into two smaller resistances and, without imposing any other modifications, we can create this voltage. For example, V ref2 =500 mv with maximum variation of 5 mv in this design. The M s1 and M s2 transistors and the C S capacitor work together as the start-up circuit. Initially, the M s1 transistor is on and the reg node voltage (V reg ) is placed at an acceptable range; the adequate current is then generated at the M 1, M 2 transistors, is then transmitted to the M 14, and M s2. The C S capacitor is recharged, and the M s1 transistor will then turn off. The Op-Amp achieves the fast settling time of the reference voltage with a positive current feedback. These two circuits, start-up and Op-Amp, provide a fast settling time for the BGR. Fig. 4. Chip microphotograph. Fig. 5. Bandgap reference simulations given different process corners, in response to temperature variation. III. POST-LAYOUT SIMULATION AND EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS The Bandgap reference voltage has been fabricated as part of 4 mm 4 mm chip in the 0.35 μm 5 V CMOS process. The microphotograph of the device is shown in Fig. 4. It occupies an area of 0.024 mm 2. Fig. 5 depicts the simulated result of the proposed voltage reference circuit thermal behavior. As seen in the figure, the maximum deviation from reference voltage is around 8 mv, at the temperature range of -40 to 120 C. Fig. 6 shows the reference voltage and V reg variations, in response to supply voltage variation from 0 to 5 V. As can be seen, starting from a voltage of almost 2.3 V, the reference voltage values together are an acceptable amount. The thermal variation of the V ref2 voltage is shown at Fig. 7, which is based on the maximum variation of V ref2 being around 5 mv. In order to examine feedback loop stability, AC analysis is conducted, which is assisted by opening the feedback loop at the voltage reference circuit. Results from this analysis are shown in Fig. 8, showing that PM=62 (Phase Margin), UGB=12.5 MHz (Unity Gain Bandwidth), and ALG=88 db (Loop Gain Magnitude). Also, Fig. 9 shows the Monte Carlo Fig. 6. Reference voltage, and V reg variations, in response to supply voltage variation at corner cases (Line regulation). Fig. 7. Proposed voltage reference circuit thermal behavior at ref, and ref 2 node. simulations of this operational amplifier. In order to address PSRR at the proposed voltage reference, AC analysis is conducted as shown in Fig. 10. The figure shows that, for V ref at frequencies up to 1 khz, the PSRR magnitude is equal to -120 db from the simulation result. Also, AC analysis for different circuit nodes is conducted as shown in Fig. 11, which shows that for V reg at frequencies up to 1 khz, the PSRR

JOURNAL OF SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE, VOL.16, NO.4, AUGUST, 2016 Fig. 8. Feedback loop AC analysis at voltage reference circuit. 531 Fig. 11. Proposed voltage reference PSRR diagram at different circuit nodes. Fig. 12. VBG during start-up. µ = 0.80335 V σ = 25.6168 mv N = 200 50 Occurrences 40 30 20 Fig. 9. Monte Carlo Analysis of Op-Amp. 10 0.0 0.725 0.75 0.775 0.8 0.825 0.85 0.875 VREF (V) Fig. 13. Distribution of output voltage (Vref), as obtained from Monte Carlo simulation of 200 runs. Fig. 10. PSRR of the proposed BGR at different process corners. magnitude is equal to -118 db, and for Vref2 is -123 db. In order to analyze the startup circuit, imposing the step input on the supply voltage, the transient response is simulated, as shown in Fig. 12, demonstrating that the reference voltage would attain its final value in less than 4 μs. The distribution of the BGR output voltage VREF, as obtained from Monte Carlo simulation of 200 runs, is shown at Fig. 13. The average of VREF was 803.35 mv, and the standard deviation was 25.61 mv. The coefficient of variation σ/μ was 3.2%. The measured reference voltage Vref as a function of temperature, with various VDDs is presented in Fig. 14. The average output voltage was 798.6 mv, with a temperature variation of 8.25 mv in a temperature range from -40 to 120 C. Fig. 15 illustrates the output voltage Vref at room temperature as a function of VDD. The circuit operated correctly when the power supply was greater than 2.35 V. The measured line regulation was 7.2 µv/v when the supply voltage was swept from 2.35 V to 5 V. The measured power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) at room

532 HAMED ABBASIZADEH et al : ACCURATE SUB-1 V CMOS BANDGAP VOLTAGE REFERENCE WITH PSRR OF -118 DB Table 1. Measurement and simulation results summary and comparison. Fig. 14. Measured output voltage V ref as a function of temperature, with various supply voltages. Technology (CMOS) [1] [4] [5] This work 0.18 µm 65 nm 0.35 µm 0.35 µm V DD (min) 1.2 V 1.6 V 1.4 V 2.3 V/2.35 V (1) V ref (mv) 698 950 745 800/798.6 (1) I supply (µa) 112-0.215 40 (1) TC (ppm/ C) 20 2.87 7 54/60 (1) Temperature ( C) -40 to 140-40 to 125-20 to 80-40 to 120 Line regulation PSRR@ DC (db) PSRR@ 1 MHz (db) PSRR@ 10 MHz (db) - - 20 ppm/v 6.6(µV/V) @ worst case/ 7.2(µV/V) (1) -95-72 -45-120/-118 (1) -60 - - -58/-56 (1) - - - -38/-36.2 (1) Area (mm 2 ) 0.027 0.02 0.055 0.024 (1) Measured results IV. CONCLUSIONS Fig. 15. Measured output voltage V ref at room temperature as a function of power supply. Fig. 16. Measured PSRR at room temperature with a 3.3 V supply voltage. temperature with 3.3 V supply voltage is presented in Fig. 16. It can be seen that the PSRR is close to -118 db at frequencies below 1 KHz, and remains greater than - 55 db up to 1 MHz. Thus, we were able to achieve the reference voltage circuit that was almost independent of temperature and V DD. In order to draw a comparison between the proposed configuration and other voltage references, the results are summarized in Table 1. In this paper, a high PSRR low-voltage circuit used to generate a 798.6 mv BG reference voltage with a maximum variation of 8.25 mv was presented. The high PSRR of the circuit is achieved by using the current mode regulator and adjusted voltage V reg, which isolates the Op-Amp and the bandgap voltage from power supply variations and noise. This, in comparison with similar previous works improves the reference voltage PSRR significantly, especially at lower frequencies. In addition, the line regulation of the proposed circuit is 7.2 µv/v at the worst case. The transient response of the BGR is less than 4 μsec, and its PSRR is -118 db at DC frequencies. The current consumption of the BGR was set to 40 µa from a 5 V V DD at room temperature, and the current consumption can be reduced with a larger R 2. The topology of the circuit allows it to be portable to several different CMOS processes with minimal redesign effort. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean government (MSIP) (2014R1A5A1011478). This work was also supported by IDEC (IPC, EDA Tool, MPW).

JOURNAL OF SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE, VOL.16, NO.4, AUGUST, 2016 533 REFERENCES [1] M. Chahardori, M. Atarodi, and M. Sharifkhani, A sub 1V high PSRR CMOS bandgap voltage reference, Microelectronics Journal, pp. 1057-1065, July, 2011. [2] K. N. Leung, and P. K. T. Mok, A Sub-1-V 15- ppm/ C CMOS Bandgap Voltage Reference Without Requiring Low Threshold Voltage Device, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, pp. 526-530, Apr., 2002. [3] C. C. Wang, R. C. Kuo, and T. H. Tsai, A high precision low dropout regulator with nested feedback loops, Microelectronics Journal, pp. 966-971, May, 2011. [4] T. Xingyuan, Z. Zhangming, and Y. Yintang, A 2.87 ppm/ C 65 nm CMOS bandgap reference with nonlinearity compensation, International Journal of Electronics, pp. 1269-1279, Aug., 2011. [5] K. Ueno, T. Hirose, T. Asai, and Y. Amemiya, A 300 nw, 15 ppm/ C, 20 ppm/v CMOS Voltage Reference Circuit Consisting of Subthreshold MOSFETs, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, pp. 2047-2054, July, 2009. [6] M. Maymandi-Nejad and M. Sachdev, A monotonic digitally controlled delay element, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, pp.2212-2219, Nov., 2005. Hamed Abbasizadeh received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Azad University of Bushehr, Bushehr, Iran, in 2008, and the M.S. degree in electrical engineering from Azad University of Qazvin, Qazvin, Iran, in 2012. He is currently working toward the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering at the IC Lab, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Korea. His research interests include CMOS RF transceiver, analog/all-digital PLL, and wireless power transfer system. Sung-Hun Cho received the B.S. degree from the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering at Hongik University, Seoul, Korea, in 2013, and the M.S. degree from the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering at Sungkyun- kwan University, Suwon, Korea, in 2015. He is currently working toward the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering at the Sungkyunkwan University. His research interests include Pressure Sensor, AFE IC, and CMOS RF IC. Sang-Sun Yoo received his B.S. degree from Dong-guk University, Seoul, Korea, in 2004, and his M.S/Ph.D. degree received from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, in 2012. He worked for System LSI division in Samsung Electronics from 2012 to 2015 where he focused on ADPLL for 3/4G SAW-less mobile applications as a senior design engineer in RFIC development. Since 2015, he has been a Research Assistant Professor in KAIST. His research interests include RF systems for mobile communications, reconfigurable RFICs, ADPLL, RFID, and sensor communications. He received the best paper award for the IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS (TIE) in 2011. Kang-Yoon Lee received his B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the School of Electrical Engineering at Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, in 1996, 1998, and 2003, respectively. From 2003 to 2005, he was with GCT Semiconductor Inc., San Jose, CA, where he was a Manager of the Analog Division and worked on the design of the CMOS frequency synthesizer for CDMA/PCS/PDC and singlechip CMOS RF chip sets for W-CDMA, WLAN, and PHS. From 2005 to 2011, he was an Associate Professor at the Department of Electronics Engineering, Konkuk University. Since 2012, he has been an Associate Professor at the College of Information and Communication Engineering, Sungkyunkwan University. His research interests include implementation of power integrated circuits, CMOS RF transceivers, analog integrated circuits, and analog/digital mixed-mode VLSI system design.