Download presentation
1
UNIT -V IC MOSFET Amplifiers
2
Outline IC Amplifiers IC Biasing –current steering circuit
MOSFET current sources Amplifiers with active load CMOS common source and source follower CMOS Differential amplifier
3
Introduction Integrated-circuit fabrication technology imposes constraints large capacitors are not available very small capacitors are easy to fabricate One objective is to realize as many functions as possible using MOS transistors only. Reduction of device size is of great concern.
4
Why current source needed for IC biasing?
Resistors take too much space on the chip. Source degeneration with resistor is not implemented in ICs. The goal of a good bias is to ensure drain current (ID) and Drain source voltageVDS would not change (e.g., due to temperature variation). One can force ID to be constant using a current source.
5
IC Biasing Biasing in IC design is based on the use of constant- current sources. A constant dc current (called a reference I) is generated at one location and is then replicated at various other locations for biasing the various stages through a process known as current steering.
6
Biasing Mechanism for ICs
MOSFET Circuits The basic MOSFET current source MOS current-steering circuits The bias currents of the various stages track each other in case of changes in power-supply voltage or in temperature
7
Current source Two types of basic gain cells exist: Common-source (CS)
Common-emitter (CE) Both are loaded with constant-current source. This is done because of difficulties associated with fabrication of exact resistances. It also facilitates increased gain. These circuits are referred to as current-source loaded / active loaded.
8
current source - contd…
NMOS current source sinks current to ground • PMOS current source sources current from positive supply
9
Basic current mirror Simple current-source loads reduce the gain realized in the basic gain cell because of their finite resistance (usually comparable to the value of ro of the amplifying transistor).
10
nMOSFET current source
Two matching MOSFET transistors connected back-to-back, such that both have the same Gate-to-Source voltage
11
nMOSFET current source - contd…
Need: Using the transistors geometries (W/L)1and (W/L)2as design parameters create a DC current Io, as long as transistor Q2 is in Saturation Mode
12
PMOS Current source
13
PMOS CURRENT SOURCE - contd…
14
Basic current mirror - contd…
15
Basic current mirror - contd…
Assume Q2 to be operating in saturation mode To ensure that Q2 is saturated, the circuit to which the drain of Q2 is to be connected must establish a drain voltage Vo that satisfies the relationship
16
Basic current mirror - contd…
Identical devices Q1 and Q2. The drain current of Q2, IO, will equal the current in Q1, IREF, at the value of V0 that causes the two devices to have the same VDS, that is, at V0 = VGS. As V0 is increased above this value, I0 will increase according to the incremental output resistance ro2 of Q2.
17
Basic current mirror - contd…
VA is proportional to the transistor channel length; thus, to obtain high output-resistance values, current sources are usually designed using transistors with relatively long channels.
18
Output characteristics
19
Current mirror circuits - contd…
Two performance parameters need to be improved: The accuracy of the current transfer ratio of the mirror. The output resistance of the current source.
20
MOS Cascode current source
Q1 is CS configuration and Q2 is CG configuration. Current source biasing.
21
MOS Cascode current source - contd…
22
Small signal of cascode current mirror
23
Performance of MOS Cascode
Open-circuit voltage gain The cascoding increases the magnitude of the open-circuit voltage gain from Ao to Ao2 Output resistance
24
Performance of MOS Cascode
If ro2 is infinite, then Rin2 reduces to 1/gm2. If ro2 cannot be neglected, as is always the case in IC amplifiers, the input resistance depends on the value of RL in an interesting fashion. The load resistance (RL) is divided by the factor (gm2ro2).
25
Cascode MOS current mirror
MOS cascode current mirror requires large load to increase the gain
26
Cascode MOS current mirror - contd…
Q1 and Q3 are always in saturation. Q2 and Q4 both have to be in saturation for current mirror to work. Condition for saturation VDS2 > VGS – Vt VDS4 > VGS – Vt
27
PMOS CASCODE CURRENT MIRROR
Working of PMOS cascode is same as NMOS cascode.
28
Cascoding To raise the output resistance of the CS or CE transistor, we stack a CG or CB transistor on top. This is cascoding. The CG or CB transistor in the cascode passes the current gm1vi provided by the CS or CE transistor.
29
Cascoding-contd… A MOS cascode amplifier operating with an ideal current source load achieves a gain of (gmro)2 = A02. To realize the full advantage of cascoding, the load current-source must also be cascoded, in which case a gain as high as 1/2A02 can be obtained.
30
Cascode amplifier with cascode current mirror
31
Cascode amplifier with cascode current mirror - contd…
Advantage Much better high-frequency response (high gain-bandwidth). Simpler biasing.
32
Double Cascoding If still a higher output resistance and correspondingly higher gain are required, it is still possible to add another level of cascoding Observe that Q3 is the second cascode transistor, and it raises the output resistance by (gm3ro3).
33
Double Cascoding - contd…
34
The Folded Cascode To avoid the problem of stacking a large number of transistors across a low-voltage power supply, one may use a PMOS transistor .
35
Folded Cascode-contd…
Double cascoding is possible in the MOS case only. However, the large number of transistors in the stack between the power-supply rails results in the disadvantages of a severely limited output-signal swing. The folded-cascode configuration helps to resolve this issue.
36
WILSON CURRENT Mirror A Wilson current mirror is a three-terminal circuit. It accepts an input current at the input terminal and provides a "mirrored" current source or sink output at the output terminal. The mirrored current is a precise copy of the input current. It may be used as a Wilson current source by applying a constant bias current to the input branch . The circuit is named after George R. Wilson, an integrated circuit design engineer .
37
MOS Wilson Current Source
The drain current of Q2 to equal the input current and the output configuration assures that the output current equals the drain current of Q1.
38
MOS Wilson Current Source - contd…
An improved current source which has higher output resistance than the simple current mirror. The output current is related to the reference current by the equation (assuming the transistors operating in saturation region):
39
MOS Wilson Current Source - contd…
The reference current I1 may be approximated by
40
Small signal-MOS Wilson Current source
The transistor pairs M1-M2 and M3-M4 are exactly matched and the input and output potentials are approximately equal, then in principle there is no static error. The input and output currents are equal because there is no low frequency or DC current into the gate of a MOSFET.
41
MOS Wilson Current Source
The threshold voltage of MOS devices is usually between 0.4 and 1.0 volts with no body effect depending on the manufacturing technology. vgs must exceed the threshold voltage by a few tenths of a volt to have satisfactory input-output current match, the total input to ground potential is comparable to 2.0 volts. This difference is increased when the transistors share a common body terminal and the body effect in M4 raises its threshold voltage.
42
Limitation of Wilson current mirror
The principal limitation on the use of the Wilson current mirror in MOS circuits is the high minimum voltages between the ground connection. The input and output nodes that are required for proper operation of all transistors in saturation. The voltage difference between the input node and ground is vgs1+vgs4 .
43
MOS Widlar current source
44
Summary Biasing in integrated circuits utilizes current sources. As well, current sources are used as load devices. The MOS current mirror has a current transfer ratio of (W/L)2/(W/L)1. For a bipolar mirror, the ratio is IS2/IS1.
45
Mos steering circuits
46
MOS steering circuits - contd…
Once a constant current is generated, it can be replicated to provide DC bias currents for the various amplifier stages in the IC. Current mirrors can obviously be used to implement this current – steering function The use of a negative DC supply –VSSdoes not change the fact that, by-structure, both transistors, in every mirror pair, have the same VGS voltage.
47
Mos steering circuits - contd…
Here Q1 together with R determine the reference current IREF. Transistors Q1, Q2, and Q3 form a two-output current mirror,
48
Mos steering circuits - contd…
To ensure operation in the saturation region, the voltages at the drains of Q2 and Q3 are constrained as follows: VD2,VD3≥ -VSS +VGS1-Vtn VD2,VD3≥ -VSS +Vov1
49
Summary Accurate and stable reference current is generated and then replicated to provide bias current for the various amplifier stages on the chip. The heart of the current-steering circuitry utilized to perform this function is the current mirror.
50
CS Amplifier with active load
Current source acts as an active load. Source lead is signal grounded. Active load replaces the passive load.
51
CS Amplifier with active load - contd…
Small-signal analysis of the amplifier performed both directly on the circuit diagram and using the small-signal model explicitly. The intrinsic gain
52
CS Amplifier with active load - contd…
53
CG AMPLIFIER AND CD AMPLIFIER
54
CS Amplifier with source degeneration
A CS amplifier with a source-degeneration resistance Rs
55
CS Amplifier with source degeneration
A source-degeneration resistance is called so because of its action is reducing the effective transconductance of the CS stage to gm/(1+gmRs). The output resistance expression of the cascode can be used to find the output resistance of a source-degenerated common-source amplifier. A useful interpretation of the result is that Rs increases the output resistance by the factor (1 + gmRs).
56
CS Amplifier with source degeneration - contd…
Circuit for small-signal analysis. Circuit with the output open to determine Avo.
57
CS Amplifier with source degeneration - contd…
Input resistance Output resistance Intrinsic voltage gain The resistance Rs has no effect on Avo Short-circuit transconductance
58
Summary A CS amplifier with a resistance Rs in its source lead has an output resistance Ro = (1+gmRS)ro. The corresponding formula for the BJT case is Ro = [1+gm(Re||rp)]ro.
59
NMOS amplifier with enhancement load device
Driver transistor characteristics and enhancement load curve with transition point
60
NMOS amplifier with enhancement load device
Dissipation is high since current flows when Vin = 1. Vout can never reach Vdd (effect of channel). Vgg can be derived from a switching source (i.e. one phase of a clock, so that dissipation can be significantly reduced . If Vgg is higher than Vdd, an extra supply rail is required.
61
Voltage transfer characteristics of NMOS amplifier with enhancement load device
62
NMOS with Depletion load
63
NMOS with Depletion load - contd…
Pull-Up is always on – Vgs = 0; depletion Pull-Down turns on when Vin > Vt With no current drawn from outputs, Ids for both transistors is equal
64
NMOS with Depletion load - contd…
Dissipation is high since rail to rail current flows when Vin = Logical 1 Switching of Output from 1 to 0 begins when Vin exceeds Vt of pull down device When switching the output from 1 to 0, the pull up device is non-saturated initially and this presents a lower resistance through which to charge capacitors (Vds < Vgs – Vt)
65
Voltage Transfer Characteristics
66
NMOS Inverter ID VGS = 3 V X Linear ID vs VDS given
by surrounding circuit X VGS = 1 V VDS
67
CMOS Inverter
68
CMOS Inverter VOUT vs. VIN
both sat. curve very steep here; only in “C” for small interval of VIN VDD NMOS: cutoff PMOS: triode NMOS: triode PMOS: cutoff NMOS: triode PMOS: saturation NMOS: saturation PMOS: triode VIN D A B C E VDD
69
CMOS Inverter ID ID VIN D A B C E VDD
70
Important Points No ID current flow in Regions A and E if nothing attached to output; current flows only during logic transition If another inverter (or other CMOS logic) attached to output, transistor gate terminals of attached stage do not permit current: current still flows only during logic transition D S VDD VOUT1 D S VDD VOUT2 VIN
71
CMOS Inverter Transfer characteristics
Drain current of NMOS Drain current of PMOS
72
CMOS Inverter Transfer characteristics
At logic threshold, In = Ip
73
CMOS Inverter Transfer characteristics
If n = p and Vtp = –Vtn
74
Common source Amplifier
PMOS active load I-V Characteristics CMOS common source Amplifier Voltage Transfer Characteristics Driver Transfer Characteristics
75
Pseudo NMOS Inverter
76
Pseudo NMOS Inverter
77
The CMOS common-source amplifier
FIG :Common gate CMOS
78
I-V characteristics
79
Transfer characteristics
80
CMOS Common source Amplifier small signal model
81
CMOS Differential Amplifier
A simple version of a CMOS differential amplifier is shown at the left The load devices Q3 and Q4 are built with PMOS transistors Q3 and Q4 operate as a form of current mirror, in that the small signal current in Q4 will be identical to the current in Q3 Q3 has an effective impedance looking into its drain of 1/gm || ro3 since its current will be a function of the voltage on node vd1
82
CMOS Differential Amplifier - contd…
Q4 has an effective impedance looking into its drain of ro4 only, since its current will be constant and not a function of vout The gain of the right hand (inverting) leg will be higher than the gain of the left side Since all transistors have grounded source operation, there is no body effect to worry about with this CMOS diff amp circuit
83
CMOS Diff Amp Equivalent Circuit Model
84
CMOS Diff Amp with Current Mirror Sources
85
CMOS Diff Amp with Current Mirror Sources
86
CMOS Diff Amp with Current Mirror Sources
87
CMOS Diff Amp with Current Mirror Sources - contd…
The advantage of this configuration is that the differential output signal is converted to a single ended output signal with no extra components required. In this circuit, the output voltage or current is taken from the drains of M2 and M4.
88
CMOS Diff Amp with Current Mirror Sources - contd…
The operation of this circuit is as follows. If a differential voltage, VID=VG1-VG2, is applied between the gates, then half is applied to the gate-source of M1 and half to the gate-source of M2. The result is to increase ID1 and decrease ID2 by equal increment, ∆I.
89
CMOS Diff Amp with Current Mirror Sources - contd…
The ∆I increase ID1 is mirrored through M3-M4 as an increase in ID4 of ∆I. As a consequence of the ∆I increase in ID4 and the ∆I decrease in ID2 , the output must sink a current of 2∆I. The sum of the changes in ID1 and ID2 at the common node VC is zero.
90
Differential mode
91
Equivalent Circuit Differential gain is given by
92
Differential Amplifier
The differential amplifier topology shown at the left contains two inputs, two active devices, and two loads, along with a dc current source We will define the differential mode of the input vi,dm = v1 – v2 common mode of the input as vi,cm= ½ (v1+v2) Using these definitions, the inputs v1 and v2 can be written as linear combinations of the differential and common modes v1 = vi,cm + ½ vi,dm v2 = vi,cm – ½ vi,dm
93
Differential Amplifier - contd…
These definitions can also be applied to the output voltages Differential mode vo,dm = vo1 – vo2 Common mode vo,cm = ½ (vo1 + vo2) Alternately, these can be written as vo1 = vo,cm + ½ vo,dm vo2 = vo,cm – ½ vo,dm
94
Summary-contd.. Integrated-circuit fabrication technology offers the circuit designer many exciting opportunities, the most important of which is the large number of inexpensive small-area MOS transistors. An overriding concern for IC designers, however, is the minimization of chip area or “silicon real estate.” As a result, large-valued resistors and capacitors are virtually absent.
95
Summary-contd.. The basic gain cell of IC amplifier is the CS (CE) amplifier with a current-source load. For an ideal current-source load (i.e. one with infinite output resistance), the transistor operates in an open-circuit fashion and thus provides the maximum gain possible: Avo = -gmro = -A0.
96
Summary-contd.. The intrinsic gain A0 is given by A0 = VA / VT for a BJT and A0 = VA/(VOV/2) for a MOSFET. For a BJT, A0 is constant independent of bias current and device dimensions. For a MOSFET, A0 is inversely proportional to ID1/2.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.