Low Voltage, Energy Efficient Analog Circuits For Low Power Applications
Date
2023
Authors
C. B., Muhammed Mansoor
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute Of Technology Karnataka Surathkal
Abstract
This thesis presents low voltage, compact and energy efficient linear/non-
linear analog circuits for low power applications. Single branch and log
domain filters, translinear RMS-DC converter and PTAT current reference
have been explored. UMC 65 nm/UMC 180 nm CMOS technologies are
used to design these circuits and simulations are carried out in Cadence
Virtuoso tool.
Initial part of the thesis outlines compact, single branch and log domain
filters. A novel, compact and energy-efficient biquad which is derived
from a folded single branch transistorised gm -C structure is proposed. The
biquad has a small number of active devices stacked between VDD and GND
rails and hence can be used satisfactorily in a low-voltage environment.
The filter also inherits the benefits of folding in the circuit which makes
the tuning of the filter easier and power independent. A fourth-order low
pass filter is used as a vehicle to illustrate the performance of the proposed
biquad. The fully differential version of the filter operates with a supply
voltage of 0.6 V, is biased with a current of 100 nA, has a -3 dB bandwidth
of 15 kHz and shows a dynamic range as high as 61 dB.
A first order low pass filter employing the log-domain technique is also
proposed. The filter design is based on the dynamic translinear principle
which exploits the non-linear current-voltage relationship of MOSFETs
operating in sub-threshold region. The core of the filter is a second order
translinear loop. The filter consumes a power of 55 nW from a 0.9 V supply
voltage. The cut-off frequency of the filter is 1 kHz for a bias current of
5 nA. The filter has a dynamic range of 56 dB and a FoM of 0.069 pJ.
This thesis also presents a novel current-mode true RMS-DC converter
based on the dynamic translinear principle. The converter is designed
using a third-order translinear loop, resulting in a very compact and simple
circuit. The proposed circuit operates with 1 V power supply, has only
14 transistors and performs satisfactorily over a wide input current range
of 300 nA - 950 nA and for a frequency range of 600 Hz - 650 kHz for a
capacitance of 10 nF. The frequency range of operation can be tuned by
varying the external off-chip capacitor and the bias current. The circuit
vconsumes 20 nW static power, 1.6 µW maximum dynamic power and offers
the lowest FoM among the other RMS-DC converter circuits presented in
the literature.
This work also proposes a low voltage, low power, fast settling switched
capacitor based Proportional to Absolute Temperature (PTAT) current
reference circuit. Unlike in a conventional resistor based PTAT current
source, the proposed circuit saves a significant amount of silicon area on
chip and hence the circuit becomes less susceptible to process variations.
It creates a reference current of 1 nA from a 0.5 V power supply at room
temperature (27◦ C). It has PTAT characteristics in the temperatures from
−10◦ C to 80◦ C. The circuit draws a very low power of 1.5 nW and exhibits
a good supply voltage sensitivity of 3.2 %/V. A startup circuit connected to
the PTAT source improves the transient response by reducing the settling
time.
A low power low frequency active-RC filter for ECG detection is also pre-
sented. A folded cascode Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA)
with transistors operating in sub-threshold region at 1.2 V supply voltage
is designed which consumes a power of 30 nW. A second order LPF with a
cut-off frequency of 50 Hz is built with the designed OTA. To achieve this
low bandwidth, current steering technique is used instead of traditional
method of using large resistor and capacitor values and hence the design is
area efficient. The filter consumes a power of 80 nW, has a dynamic range
of 49 dB and shows a FoM of 0.4 pJ.
Description
Keywords
Low voltage, Low power, Single branch, Sub-threshold region