1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an amplifier, and more particularly, to an amplifier with increased bandwidth by current injection.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Operational amplifiers are one of the most widely used structures in modern day engineering. They can have many applications ranging from buffers and filters to analog-to-digital converters. Where high performance is required, such as a high speed, high resolution analog-to-digital converter, an operational amplifier having both high gain and high bandwidth is necessary.
Please refer to
The frequency response of an operational amplifier is the response of the circuit in the frequency domain. In other words, if the circuit is given a sinusoidal input the response should be a sinusoidal output of the same frequency, but amplified by the open loop gain, A0. This frequency response can be modeled as a low pass function.
For frequencies much greater than ωp, i.e. ω>>ωp, we can approximate the gain, A, to be:
Therefore, putting this result back into equation (1), we can obtain the unity-gain bandwidth ωu:
ωu=A0ωp Equation (4)
The unity gain bandwidth can also be written in terms of device transconductance, gm, and output resistance, r0. Equation (4) then becomes:
From equation (5) it can be seen that the unity gain bandwidth ωu is a function of device transconductance gm, and total output capacitance C0. The total output capacitance includes parasitic junction capacitance Cop, and capacitive load Cload driven by the operational amplifier 10. Therefore, the way to increase bandwidth is by increasing gm or by decreasing the output capacitance C0. Cload cannot be decreased because it is determined by circuit specification and hence cannot be decreased for a specific application. Furthermore, the parasitic capacitance dominates the capacitive load, so decreasing Cload would only have a minimal effect. To increase gm would require a larger device, which then leads to more parasitic capacitance, as the device size cannot be increased without limits. This gain-bandwidth relation therefore creates an upper level bandwidth limit.
It is therefore one of the objectives of the claimed invention to provide an amplifier with increased bandwidth by current injection and a related method thereof.
It is therefore one of the objectives of the claimed invention to provide an amplifier. The amplifier with current injection has an increased bandwidth while maintaining a high gain.
It is therefore one of the objectives of the claimed invention to provide an amplifier. The amplifier does not require increased power consumption or circuit area.
Briefly described, the present invention discloses an amplifier. The amplifier comprises an input stage for receiving a first input signal; a load stage coupled to the input stage for generating a first output signal; a first current source coupled to the input stage for allowing a predetermined current to flow; and a second current source, coupled to the input stage, for injecting a first current into the input stage for the first output signal.
In addition, a method for increasing the bandwidth of an amplifier is disclosed. The method comprises providing the amplifier with an input stage for receiving a first input signal, a load stage coupled to the input stage for outputting a first output signal, and a predetermined current source coupled to the input stage for allowing a fixed current to flow; and providing a first current and injecting the first current into the input stage for outputting the first output signal.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
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As shown in
In an embodiment, both of the current sources 26, and 28 are p-type current sources. Since the transistor M9 still sinks the reference current IQ, the original currents I1, I2 shown in
Similarly, for transistor M81 as compared to transistor M8 in
The frequency response for the operational amplifier 20 can still be modeled as a low-pass function as shown by equation (1). The dominate pole ωp, however, is now:
This is because the device size has decreased by a factor of k, where 0<k<1, and therefore the parasitic capacitance Cop has also decreased by a factor of k.
Putting this result in the equation for unity-gain bandwidth ωu it can be shown that:
Due to the smaller device parasitic capacitance COP, the unity-gain bandwidth ωu, compared with the prior art unity-gain bandwidth, has been increased by a factor:
(Cop+Cload)/(kCop+Cload). Please note that the circuit size of the operational amplifier 20 is substantially the same as that of the operational amplifier 10 shown in
Please refer to
Please note that, in the above-mentioned embodiments, the current injection is applied to a differential pair. However, both of the current injection configurations shown in
The embodiments of the present invention have an increased bandwidth without sacrificing gain. The circuit area and power consumed are still approximately the same but the parasitic capacitance has been decreased. The current injection technique can also be used in a gain boosted operational amplifier, therefore allowing both the bandwidth and the gain to be increased at the same time.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.