Design of an Inverter-Based High Gain OTA, and its Application in Delta Sigma Modulators and Class-D Amplifiers for Audio Applications
Date
2020
Authors
Kaliyath, Yajunath.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The Semiconductor IC industry is largely driven by the demands of digital IC design. One of the largely adopted practices is to scale down the
technology node and operate on lower supply voltages. This led to faster
devices with lower dynamic power consumption. The digital design has
hugely benefitted from this. However, there are a large family of analog circuits which suffer performance degradation when operated on low
supply voltages. Therefore, for such applications, it is common to operate analog designs on higher supply voltages i.e. in excess of 1 V. In
addition, portable, battery powered electronic applications such as digital microphones, image sensors, data acquisition systems, hearing aids,
etc., demand low power consumption to save on battery energy. Almost
all analog designs have Operational Tranconductance Amplifier (OTA) as
one of the integral blocks for realizing various functionalities. OTAs offering sufficiently high dc gain (as per the requirements of application) with
lower power consumption will help in realizing the objective of low-power
design.
This research is an outcome of the efforts towards proposing an architecture for realizing an inverter-based OTA for switched capacitor based
applications and prove its candidature in a couple of applications. The
proposed OTA can achieve dc gain in excess of 100 dB and it can be made
stable without the need for any explicit compensation scheme. A complete
analysis of the OTA along with the design procedure has been presented.
The proposed OTA has been designed in 1P6M UMC 180 nm standard
CMOS process technology from UMC Technologies. The power supply for
operation has been chosen to be 1.8 V. Two OTAs have been presented,
one for biomedical applications and the other for audio applications. The
OTA designed for biomedical applications offers a dc gain of 109.3 dB and
a unity gain bandwidth (UGB) of 5.29 MHz at 81◦ phase margin with a
capacitive load of 2.5 pF for a typical process corner at room temperature (27◦C). The quiescent current consumption of the OTA is 4.79 µA,
resulting in a power consumption of 8.62 µW. The second OTA for audio
applications offers a dc gain of 96.8 dB and a UGB of 19.4 MHz at 86◦phase margin with a capacitive load of 5 pF for a typical process corner at
room temperature. This design draws a quiescent current (IQ) of 38.4 µA.
The proposed OTA has been proved to be robust though Monte-Carlo
simulations. It is also proved to be one among the best designs found
in the literature, from the Figure-of-Merit commonly used for evaluating
OTAs.
To validate the worthiness of the proposed OTA, a 1-bit third order discrete time Delta Sigma Modulator has been designed for audio applications using the proposed inverter-based OTA. The three integrators of
the feed-forward modulator use the proposed OTA as their main block.
The classical modulator, without the use of any dedicated improvement
scheme, achieves a peak SNR of 91.2 dB and peak SNDR of 87.7 dB with
a dynamic range of 89.9 dB. The modulator consumes 570.6 µW operating on 1.8 V supply. The Figure-of-Merit proves that the modulator is a
fitting candidate among similar modulators found in the literature.
Extending further, a Class D audio amplifier has been designed. The
class-D amplifier is targeted for 8 Ω speaker load. The on-chip amplifier adopts the delta-sigma-modulation scheme for achieving audio-grade
performance. The power-stage has been designed to have 97.5% efficiency. The class-D amplifier, without any additional scheme for improving the performance, offered a dynamic range of 89.7 dB along with a best
THD+N of -85.8,dB for 8 Ω speaker load delivering a maximum power of
100 mW while operating on 1.8 V supply. The efficiency of the amplifier
is 92.3% at the peak output power. The amplifier is found to be one of
the best in its class.
Description
Keywords
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, Inverter-based OTA, high gain, cascoding, gain-boosting, switched capacitor integrator, delta sigma modulator, feed-forward topology, audio applications, class D amplifier