Ultra low voltage current mirror op amp and its applications

Author(s):  
S.S. Rajput ◽  
S.S. Jamuar
Keyword(s):  
1996 ◽  
Vol 32 (7) ◽  
pp. 605 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Tanno ◽  
O. Ishizuka ◽  
Z. Tang

The folded cascode operational amplifier (FCOA) designed in this paper is the single-pole operational amplifier (op amp). In this design, the conventional current mirror is replaced with wide swing current mirror to overcome the essential drawback of cascode configuration. In this paper, negative feedback is used to improve the small-signal gain and to ensure better stability than multistage amplifiers. This paper also aims at improving the output voltage swing, power dissipation and robustness of the op amp. The designed FCOA is proficient in achieving 67.44dB gain and 1.77V output swingat typical voltage for 180nm CMOS technology. The FCOA is highly stable with phase margin of 62.58º while dissipating 0.5mW power. This amplifier is further verified for variability analysis for Process, Voltage and Temperature (PVT) variations to check robustness. All together testing is done at 45 different PVT combinations and results are tabulated accordingly. At each corner temperature and voltage are varied for all together nine combinations to properly address the effect of PVT variations. The results shows that the op amp exhibits desired response at four corners (FF, TT, SS, and FS) of process, over -40º to 125º C temperature range. Also it is capable of operating at very low voltage up to 0.9V adequately showing reduction in power dissipation. Thus the designed op amp is low power, high swing and robust towards process, voltage and temperature variations.


2002 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-101
Author(s):  
Lyes Bouzerara ◽  
Tahar Belaroussi ◽  
Boualem Amirouche

A low voltage, high dc gain and wideband load compensated cas code operational transconductance amplifier (OTA), using an active positive feedback with feed forward technique and frequency-dependent current mirrors (FDCM), is presented and analyzed. Such techniques stand as a powerful method of gain bandwidth and phase margin enhancements. In this paper, a frequency-dependent current mirror, whose input impedance increases with frequency, is used to form the feed forward path at the input of the current mirror with a feed forward capacitor. By using these techniques, the gain bandwidth product of the amplifier is improved from 115 MHz to 194 MHz, the phase margin is also improved from 85? to 95? and the gain is enhanced from 11 dB to 93 dB. This amplifier operates at 2.5 V power supply voltage drives a capacitive load of 1pF and gives a power dissipation of 7 mW. The predicted performance is verified by simulations using HSPICE tool with 0.8 fim CMOS AMS parameters.


2013 ◽  
Vol 760-762 ◽  
pp. 54-59
Author(s):  
Yang Lin ◽  
Zhi Qun Li ◽  
Chen Jian Wu ◽  
Meng Zhang ◽  
Zeng Qi Wang

A fourth-order low-pass continuous-time filter for a WSN transmitter is presented. The active RC filter was chosen for the high linearity, designed by using the leapfrog topology imitates the passive filter. The operation amplifier (op-amp) adopted by the filter is feed-forward operation amplifier, which could get the GBW as large as possible under the low power consumption. The cut-off frequency deviation due to the process corner, aging and temperature deviation is adjusted by an automatic frequency tuning circuit. The filter in a 0.18μm RF CMOS technology consumes 1mW from a 1V power supply. The measured results of the chip show that the bandwidth is about 1.5MHz. The voltage gain of filter is about-4.5dB with the buffer, the ripple in the pass-band is lower than 0.5 dB, and the channel rejection ratio is larger than 30dB at 4MHz.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document