A Power Supply On-Chip with Low Power Dissipation for Low Power Digital Integrated Circuit Applications

2014 ◽  
Vol 513-517 ◽  
pp. 3844-3849
Author(s):  
Hai Peng Zhang ◽  
Shao Dan Yang ◽  
Ya Dong Yin ◽  
De Jun Wang

An implementation method of a power supply on-chip (PSOC) was presented for low power digital integrated circuit (IC) applications in this paper. The PSOC consists of a main power supply and a backup low power dissipation power supply, which is featured of micro-standby power consumption and fast switching. The PSOC was designed according to the design rules of SMIC 0.18μm CMOS process and validated both through simulation and silicon verification. The active area is about 0.035mm2 in fact. Post-layout simulation results indicate that output voltage of the PSOC is regulable in the range of 1.52~2.5V as input voltage is in the range of 2.0~3.6V, in which output of the main power supply is regulable in the range of 1.75~ 1.84V. The maximum quiescent current of main power supply is 16.23μA, while the maximum quiescent current of standby power is only 0.552μA. Experimental results indicate that the PSOC is capable of providing energy for the system digital IC implementation. Its power switching time is less than 148μs at the load capacitance of CL =56nF.

1994 ◽  
Vol 05 (02) ◽  
pp. 159-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
THAD GABARA

A simple CMOS circuit technique called PPS (Pulsed Power Supply) CMOS is used to reduce the power dissipation of Conventional 0.9 μm CMOS by 10X when operated at 32 MHz. Combinational and sequential logic can utilize this technique including the I/O (input/output) buffers. Thus, PPS CMOS offers a full chip solution for low power dissipation CMOS. In addition, several advantages occur in this new circuit technique: (1) low power signal propagation through several gates in series can occur during each evaluation cycle; (2) crowbar current does not occur; (3) additional placed devices, i.e. bipolar, diodes, JFETs are not required to generate this low power capability; (4) the Conventional CMOS process is used to fabricate the circuit; (5) the same physical layout can be used either as a PPS CMOS circuit or as a Conventional CMOS circuit; (6) the device count is the same as that of Conventional CMOS; (7) PPS CMOS uses quasistatic logic levels; (8) capacitive coupling is used to store and restore the contents of a memory cell; (9) the parasitic diodes of the MOS devices are used to improve the noise margin of the circuit; (10) PPS CMOS can easily hold a static state and have the same low power dissipation properties of data inactive Conventional CMOS.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 240-248
Author(s):  
Hicham Akhamal ◽  
Mostafa Chakir ◽  
Hatim Ameziane ◽  
Mohammed Akhamal ◽  
Kamal Zared ◽  
...  

This paper presents a nano-power Low Drop-Out (LDO) voltage regulator circuit for Radio-Frequency System-on-Chip (RF SoC) applications, this LDO is designed for a smaller dimension due to CMOS technology and in the weak inversion region, can thus be used to minimize power loss of LDO regulator without transientresponse degradation. The proposed structure its low power dissipation make it ideal for RF system-on-chip applications that require low power dissipation under different loading conditions. In order to optimize performance for LDO, the proposed amplifier helps to minimize power of LDO regulators without using any onchip and off-chip compensation capacitors. The output spot noise at 100Hz and 1 kHz are 200nV/sqrt (Hz) and 6nV/sqrt (Hz), respectively. The active area of the circuit is 850 µm2 . The regulator operates with supply voltages from 1.2V to 2V.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Ling Lin ◽  
Zhong Tang ◽  
Nianxiong Tan ◽  
Xiaohui Xiao

In this paper, we identify and address the problems of designing effective power management schemes in low-power MCU design. Firstly, this paper proposes an application-based multipower domain architecture along with a variety of working modes to effectively realize the hierarchical control of power consumption. Furthermore, devices in energy IoT (eIoT) do not always work under the main power supply. When the main power supply is unavailable, the standby power supply (usually the battery) needs to maintain the operation and save the data. In order to ensure the complete isolation between these two power sources, it is always necessary to insert a diode in both select-conduction paths, respectively. In this paper, we built a stable and smooth power switching circuit into the chip, which can effectively avoid the diode voltage loss and reduce the BoM cost. In addition, in the sleep mode, considering the relaxed output voltage range and a limited driving capability requirement, an ultra-low-power standby power circuit is proposed, which can autonomously replace the internal LDO when in sleep, further reducing the sleep power consumption under the main power supply. Fabricated in a standard 0.11 μm CMOS process, our comparative analysis demonstrates substantial reduction in power consumption from 1 μA to 0.1 μA.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Min Yoon ◽  
Jee-Youl Ryu

We present a low-noise small-area 24 GHz CMOS radar sensor for automotive collision avoidance. This sensor is based on direct-conversion pulsed-radar architecture. The proposed circuit is implemented using TSMC 0.13 μm RF (radio frequency) CMOS (fT/fmax=120/140 GHz) technology, and it is powered by a 1.5 V supply. This circuit uses transmission lines to reduce total chip size instead of real bulky inductors for input and output impedance matching. The layout techniques for RF are used to reduce parasitic capacitance at the band of 24 GHz. The proposed sensor has low cost and low power dissipation since it is realized using CMOS process. The proposed sensor showed the lowest noise figure of 2.9 dB and the highest conversion gain of 40.2 dB as compared to recently reported research results. It also showed small chip size of 0.56 mm2, low power dissipation of 39.5 mW, and wide operating temperature range of −40 to +125°C.


Author(s):  
Navabharath Reddy G ◽  
Sruti Setlam ◽  
V. Prakasam ◽  
D. Kiran Kumar

Low power consumption is the necessity for the integrated circuit design in CMOS technology of nanometerscale. Recent research proves that to achieve low power dissipation, implementation of approximate designs is the best design when compared to accurate designs. In most of the multimedia ap- plications, DSP blocks has been used as the core blocks. Most of the video and image processing algorithms implemented by these DSP blocks, where result will be in the form of image or video for human observing. As human sense of observation isless, the output of the DSP blocks allows being numerically approx- imate instead of being accurate. The concession on numerical exactness allows proposing approximate analysis. In this project approximate adders, approximate compressors and multipliers are proposed. Two approximate adders namely PA1 and PA2 are proposed which are of type TGA which provides better results like PA1 comprises of 14 transistors and 2 error distance, achieves reduction in delay by 64.9 % and reduction in power by 74.33% whereas the TGA1 had 16 transistors and more power dissipation.PA2 comprises of 20 transistors and 2 error distance. Similarly PA2 achieves delay reduction by 51.43%, power gets reduced by 67.2%. PDP is reduced by 61.97 % whereas TGA2 had 22 transistors. Approximate 4-2 compressor was proposed in this project to reduce number of partial produt. The compressor design in circuit level took 30 transistors with 4 errors out of 16 combinations whereas existing compressor design 1took 38 and design 2 took 36 transistors. By using the proposed adder and compressors, approximate 4x4 multiplier is proposed. The proposed multiplier achieves delay 124.56 (ns) and power 29.332 (uW)which is reduced by 68.01% in terms of delay and 95.97 % in terms of power when compared to accurate multiplier.


Circuit World ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-41
Author(s):  
Deepak Balodi ◽  
Arunima Verma ◽  
Ananta Govindacharyulu Paravastu

Purpose The paper aims to present the novel design approach for a low power LC-voltage-controlled oscillators (VCO) design with low phase noise that too targeted at the most sought band of Bluetooth applications. Owing to their crucial role in a wide variety of modern applications, VCO and phase-locked loop (PLL) frequency synthesizers have been the subject of extensive research in recent years. In fact, VCO is one of the key components being used in a modern PLL to provide local frequency signal since a few decades. The complicated synthesizer requirements imposed by cellular phone applications have been a key driver for PLL research. Design/methodology/approach This paper first opted to present the recent developments on implemented techniques of LC-VCO designs in popular RF bands. An LC-VCO with a differential (cross-coupled) MOS structure is then presented which has aimed to compensate the losses of an on-chip inductor implemented in UMC’s 130 nm RF-CMOS process. The LC-VCO is finally targeted to embed onto the synthesizer chip, to address the narrowband (S-Band) applications where Bluetooth has been the most sought one. The stacked inductor topology has been adopted to get the benefit of its on-chip compatibility and low noise. The active differential architecture, which basically is a cross-coupled NMOS structure, has been then envisaged for the gain which counters the losses completely. Three major areas of LC-VCO design are considered and worked upon for the optimum design parameters, which includes Bluetooth coverage range of 2.410 GHz to 2.490 GHz, better linearity and high sensitivity and finally the most sought phase noise performance for an LC-VCO. Findings The work provides the complete design aspect of a novel LC-VCO design for low phase noise narrowband applications such as Bluetooth. Using tuned MOS varactor, in 130 nm-RF CMOS process, a high gain sensitivity of 194 MHz/Volt was obtained. Thus, the entire frequency range of 2415-2500 MHz for Bluetooth applications, supporting multiple standards from 3G to 5G, was covered by voltage tuning of 0.7-1.0 V. To achieve the low power dissipation, low bias (1.2 V) cross-coupled differential structure was adopted, which completely paid for the losses occurred in the LC resonator. The power dissipation comes out to be 8.56 mW which is a remarkably small value for such a high gain and low noise VCO. For the VCO frequencies in the presented LO-plan, the tank inductor was allowed to have a moderate value of inductance (8 nH), while maintaining a very high Q factor. The LC-VCO of the proposed LO-generator achieved extremely low phase noise of −140 dBc/Hz @ 1 MHz, as compared to the contemporary designs. Research limitations/implications Though a professional tool for inductor and circuit design (ADS-by Keysight Technologies) has been chosen, actual inductor and circuit implementation on silicon may still lead to various parasitic evolutions; therefore, one must have that margin pre-considered while finalizing the design and testing it. Practical implications The proposed LC-VCO architecture presented in this work shows low phase noise and wide tuning range with high gain sensitivity in S-Band, low power dissipation and narrowband nature of wireless applications. Originality/value The on-chip stacked inductor has uniquely been designed with the provided dimensions and other parameters. Though active design is in a conventional manner, its sizing and bias current selection are unique. The pool of results obtained completely preserves the originally to the full extent.


2011 ◽  
Vol 121-126 ◽  
pp. 755-759
Author(s):  
Hao Lin Gu ◽  
Wei Wei Shan ◽  
Yun Fan Yu ◽  
Yin Chao Lu

A low power 32-bit microcontroller using different kinds of low-power techniques to adapt to the dynamically changing performance demands and power consumption constraints of battery powered applications is designed and tested. Four power domains and six power modes are designed to fulfill low-power targets and meet different functional requirements. Varieties of low power methods such as dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS), multiple supply voltages (MSV), power gating (PG) and so on are applied. A novel zero steady-state current POR circuit which makes excellent performance in the chip’s OFF mode is also integrated. The SoC occupies 20 mm2 in a 0.18 um, 1.8 V nominal-supply, CMOS process. Test results show that the microcontroller works normally at the frequency of 70MHz and performs well in different power modes. Yet it only consumes 1.67μA leakage current in the OFF mode.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 311-319
Author(s):  
Hicham Akhamal ◽  
Mostafa Chakir ◽  
Hatim Ameziane ◽  
Mohammed, Akhamal ◽  
Kamal Zared ◽  
...  

This paper presents a nano-power Low Drop-Out (LDO) voltage regulator circuit for RadioFrequency System-on-Chip (RF SoC) applications, this LDO is designed for a smaller dimension due to CMOS technology and in the weak inversion region, can thus be used to minimize power loss of LDO regulator without transient-response degradation. The proposed structure its low power dissipation make it ideal for RF system-on-chip applications that require low power dissipation under different loading conditions. In order to optimize performance for LDO, the proposed amplifier helps to minimize power of LDO regulators without using any on-chip and off-chip compensation capacitors. The power is 916 nW. The output spot noise at 100Hz and 1 kHz are 200nV/sqrt (Hz) and 6nV/sqrt (Hz), respectively. The active area of the circuit is 850 μm2. The regulator operates with supply voltages from 1.2V to 2V


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