Low voltage integrators for high-frequency CMOS filters using current mode techniques

Author(s):  
S.L. Smith ◽  
E. Sanchez-Sinencio
2006 ◽  
Vol 15 (05) ◽  
pp. 701-717 ◽  
Author(s):  
HSIAO WEI SU ◽  
YICHUANG SUN

A high-frequency highly linear tunable CMOS multiple-output operational transconductance amplifier (MO-OTA) for fully balanced current-mode OTA and capacitor (OTA-C) filters is presented. The MO-OTA is based on the cross-coupled pairs at the input and provides two pairs of differential outputs. A simple common-mode feedback (CMFB) circuit to stabilize the DC output levels of the MO-OTA is also proposed and two such CMFB circuits are used by the MO-OTA. The proposed MO-OTA is suitable for relatively low voltage (2.5 V) applications as its circuit has only two MOS transistors between the supply and ground rails. Simulated in a TSMC 0.25 μm CMOS process using PSpice, the MO-OTA has at least ± 0.3 V linear differential input signal swing with a single 2.5 V power supply and operates up to 1 GHz frequency. The MO-OTA has a THD less than -46 dB for a differential input voltage of 0.9 Vp-p at 10 MHz, dynamic range (DR) at THD = -46 dB is over 50 dB, and power consumption (with the common-mode feedback circuit) is below 8 mW for the whole tuning range. A fully balanced multiple loop feedback current-mode OTA-C filter example using the proposed MO-OTA is presented. This example also shows that the current-mode follow-the-leader-feedback (FLF) structure can achieve good performances for OTA-C filter design.


Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 551
Author(s):  
Zhongjian Bian ◽  
Xiaofeng Hong ◽  
Yanan Guo ◽  
Lirida Naviner ◽  
Wei Ge ◽  
...  

Spintronic based embedded magnetic random access memory (eMRAM) is becoming a foundry validated solution for the next-generation nonvolatile memory applications. The hybrid complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)/magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) integration has been selected as a proper candidate for energy harvesting, area-constraint and energy-efficiency Internet of Things (IoT) systems-on-chips. Multi-VDD (low supply voltage) techniques were adopted to minimize energy dissipation in MRAM, at the cost of reduced writing/sensing speed and margin. Meanwhile, yield can be severely affected due to variations in process parameters. In this work, we conduct a thorough analysis of MRAM sensing margin and yield. We propose a current-mode sensing amplifier (CSA) named 1D high-sensing 1D margin, high 1D speed and 1D stability (HMSS-SA) with reconfigured reference path and pre-charge transistor. Process-voltage-temperature (PVT) aware analysis is performed based on an MTJ compact model and an industrial 28 nm CMOS technology, explicitly considering low-voltage (0.7 V), low tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) (50%) and high temperature (85 °C) scenario as the worst sensing case. A case study takes a brief look at sensing circuits, which is applied to in-memory bit-wise computing. Simulation results indicate that the proposed high-sensing margin, high speed and stability sensing-sensing amplifier (HMSS-SA) achieves remarkable performance up to 2.5 GHz sensing frequency. At 0.65 V supply voltage, it can achieve 1 GHz operation frequency with only 0.3% failure rate.


2004 ◽  
Vol 38 (2/3) ◽  
pp. 137-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos A. De La Cruz-Blas ◽  
Antonio J. López-Martín ◽  
Alfonso Carlosena
Keyword(s):  

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