Settling Time Enhancement of Output Capacitor-Less Low-Dropout Regulator

Author(s):  
Po-Yu Kuo ◽  
Ting-Yao Gao
2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (01) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHENCHANG ZHAN ◽  
WING-HUNG KI

A CMOS low quiescent current low dropout regulator (LDR) with high power supply rejection (PSR) and without large output capacitor is proposed for system-on-chip (SoC) power management applications. By cascoding a power NMOS with the PMOS pass transistor, high PSR over a wide frequency range is achieved. The gate-drive of the cascode NMOS is controlled by an auxiliary LDR that draws only 1 μA from a small charge pump, thus helping in reducing the quiescent current. Adaptive biasing is employed for the multi-stage error amplifier of the core LDR to achieve high loop gain hence high PSR at low frequency, low quiescent current at light load and high bandwidth at heavy load. A prototype of the proposed high-PSR LDR is fabricated using a standard 0.35 μm CMOS process, occupying an active area of 0.066 mm2. The lowest supply voltage is 1.6 V and the preset output voltage is 1.2 V. The maximum load current is 10 mA. The measured worst-case PSR at full load without using large output capacitor is -22.7 dB up to 60 MHz. The line and load regulations are 0.25 mV/V and 0.32 mV/mA, respectively.


2013 ◽  
Vol 284-287 ◽  
pp. 2526-2530
Author(s):  
Wei Ben Yang ◽  
Chi Hsiung Wang ◽  
Hsiang Hsiung Chang ◽  
Ming Hao Hong ◽  
Jsung Mo Shen

This paper presents a low-power fast-settling low-dropout regulator (LDO) using a digitally assisted voltage accelerator. Using the selectable-voltage control technique and digitally assisted voltage accelerator significantly improves the transition response time within output voltage switched. The proposed LDO regulator uses the selectable-voltage control technique to provide two selectable-voltage outputs of 2.5 V and 1.8 V. Using the digitally assisted voltage accelerator when the output voltage is switched reduces the settling time. The simulation results show that the settling time of the proposed LDO regulator is significantly reduced from 4.2 ms to 15.5 μs. Moreover, the selectable-voltage control unit and the digitally assisted voltage accelerator of the proposed LDO regulator consume only 0.54 mW under a load current of 100 mA. Therefore, the proposed LDO regulator is suitable for low-power dynamic voltage and frequency-scaling applications.


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