This application claims under 35 U.S.C. ยง119(a) the benefit of Taiwanese Application No. 100118434, filed May 26, 2011, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to differential inductors, and, more particularly, to a differential inductor applicable to asymmetric circuit designs.
2. Description of Related Art
Differential inductors are important passive components in differential amplifiers, and the center-tap kind is a common type of differential inductor.
However, the differential inductor 1 is designed to be nearly symmetric and only suitable to be applied in symmetric circuit designs such as specific differential amplifiers or Gilbert mixers. Therefore, in order to design an asymmetric inductor, wherein the inductance values of two inductors are different from each other, two separate inductors are required, thus increasing the overall circuit area. Further, with regards to manufacturing, a large substrate space is required for the circuit layout of a center-tap differential inductor 1, thereby increasing the manufacturing cost.
As a result, it is imperative to provide an asymmetric differential inductor so as to overcome the above-described drawbacks.
Accordingly, the present invention provides an asymmetric differential inductor for being disposed on a substrate having a first input terminal, a second input terminal, a ground terminal and a central conductive wiring, wherein the first input terminal and the second input terminal are disposed on left and right sides of the central conductive wiring, respectively, and the central conductive wiring has a central contact connected with the ground terminal and a central end disposed away from the ground terminal. The inductor comprises: a first conductive wiring extending across the central conductive wiring so as to be spirally disposed on the substrate and having a first contact connected with the first input terminal and a first end connected with the central end; and a second conductive wiring extending across the central conductive wiring and interlacing with the first conductive wiring so as to be spirally disposed on the substrate and having a second contact connected with the second input terminal and a second end connected with the central end, wherein a portion of wiring sections of the second conductive wiring and a corresponding portion of wiring sections of the first conductive wiring disposed at the opposite sides of the central conductive wiring are asymmetric to one another.
In an embodiment, the first conductive wiring spirally extends from the first contact into the first end in a clockwise manner, and the second conductive wiring spirally extends from the second contact into the second end in a counterclockwise manner.
In another embodiment, the first conductive wiring can comprise a first spanning portion extending across the second conductive wiring and a second spanning portion extending across the second conductive wiring and the central conductive wiring. The first conductive wiring can further comprise a first wiring section and a second wiring section disposed at the left and right sides of the central conductive wiring, respectively, and in parallel to the central conductive wiring. As such, the first conductive wiring can extend sequentially through the first wiring section, the first spanning portion, the second wiring section and the second spanning portion to the first end. Furthermore, the second conductive wiring can comprise a fourth wiring section and a fifth wiring section disposed on the right and left sides of the central conductive wiring, respectively, and in parallel to the central conductive wiring. Therein, the first and fourth wiring sections are asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring, and the second and fifth wiring sections are asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring.
The second conductive wiring can further comprise a third spanning portion and a fourth spanning portion extending across the first conductive wiring at the left side of the central conductive wiring. For example, the third spanning portion and the fourth spanning portion can extend across the first wiring section of the first conductive wiring. As such, the second conductive wiring extends sequentially through the fourth wiring section, the third spanning portion, the fifth wiring section and the fourth spanning portion to the second end.
In addition, the first conductive wiring can comprise a third wiring section disposed at the left side of the central conductive wiring and in parallel to the central conductive wiring, and the second conductive wiring can comprise a sixth wiring section disposed at the right side of the central conductive wiring and in parallel to the central conductive wiring, wherein the third and sixth wiring sections are symmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring.
According to the present invention, the first wiring section of the first conductive wiring and the fourth wiring section of the second conductive wiring are asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring, and the second wiring section of the first conductive wiring and the fifth wiring section of the second conductive wiring are also asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring. Therefore, the present invention provides an asymmetric differential inductor to save substrate space as compared with the conventional center-tap inductor, thereby increasing flexibility in circuit layout.
The following illustrative embodiments are provided to illustrate the disclosure of the present invention and its advantages, these and other advantages and effects being apparent to those in the art after reading this specification.
The first conductive wiring 22 extends across the central conductive wiring 21 so as to be spirally disposed on the substrate 20. The first conductive wiring 22 has a first contact 220 connected with the first input terminal S1 and a first end 221 connected with the central end 211. Further, the first conductive wiring 22 extends from the first contact 220 to the first end 221 in a clockwise spiral, spanning back and forth across the central conductive wiring 21. In particular, starting from the first contact 220, the first conductive wiring 22 has a first wiring section 222, a second wiring section 223 and a third wiring section 224 sequentially formed and in parallel to the central conductive wiring 21.
The second conductive wiring 23 extends across the central conductive wiring 21 and interlaces with the first conductive wiring 22 so as to be spirally disposed on the substrate 20. The second conductive wiring 23 has a second contact 230 connected with the second input terminal S2 and a second end 231 connected with the central end 211. Further, the second conductive wiring 23 extends from the second contact 230 to the second end 231 in a counterclockwise spiral, spanning back and forth across the central conductive wiring 21. In particular, starting from the second contact 230, the second conductive wiring 23 has a fourth wiring section 232, a fifth wiring section 233 and a sixth wiring section 234 sequentially formed and in parallel to the central conductive wiring 21.
Therein, a portion of the wiring sections of the second conductive wiring 23 and a corresponding portion of the wiring sections of the first conductive wiring 22 disposed on the opposite sides of the central conductive wiring 21 are asymmetric to one another. Whereas the third wiring section 224 of the first conductive wiring 22 and the sixth wiring section 234 of the second conductive wiring 23 can be symmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring 21, the first wiring section 222 of the first conductive wiring 22 can be located between the third wiring section 224 of the first conductive wiring 22 and the fifth wiring section 233 of the second conductive wiring 23 such that the distance between the first and fifth wiring sections 222, 233 can be greater than the distance between the first and third wiring sections 222, 224, and the second wiring section 223 of the first conductive wiring 22 can be located between the fourth wiring section 232 and the sixth wiring section 234 of the second conductive wiring 23 such that the distance between the second and fourth wiring sections 223, 232 can be greater than the distance between the second and sixth wiring sections 223, 234. In other words, the first and fourth wiring sections 222, 232 can be asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring 21, and the second and fifth wiring sections 223, 233 can be asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring 21.
The first conductive wiring 22 can further have a first spanning portion 225 disposed between the first and second wiring sections 222, 223 and extending across the second conductive wiring 23, and a second spanning portion 226 disposed between the second and third wiring sections 223, 224 and extending across the second conductive wiring 23 and the central conductive wiring 21. Further, the second spanning portion 226 is located between the first spanning portion 225 and the first contact 220.
The second conductive wiring 23 can further have a third spanning portion 235 disposed between the fourth and fifth wiring sections 232, 233 and extending across the first conductive wiring 22, and a fourth spanning portion 236 disposed between the fifth and sixth wiring sections 233, 234 and extending across the first conductive wiring 22. The fourth spanning portion 236 is located between the third spanning portion 235 and the second contact 230.
As described above, the first conductive wiring 22 extends sequentially through the first wiring section 222, the first spanning portion 225, the second wiring section 223 and the second spanning portion 226 to the first end 221; and the second conductive wiring 23 extends sequentially through the fourth wiring section 232, the third spanning portion 235, the fifth wiring section 233 and the fourth spanning portion 236 to the second end 231.
In implementation, signals are input through the first input terminal S1 and the second input terminal S2, respectively. Therein, the signals input through the first input terminal S1 are transmitted on the first conductive wiring 22, passing through the first wiring section 222, the first spanning portion 225, the second wiring section 223, the second spanning portion 226 and the third wiring section 224 and output to the ground terminal G via the central conductive wiring 21. On the other hand, the signals input through the second input terminal S2 are transmitted on the second conductive wiring 23, passing through the fourth wiring section 232, the third spanning portion 235, the fifth wiring section 233, the fourth spanning portion 236 and the sixth wiring section 234 and output to the ground terminal G via the central conductive wiring 21. Since the inductance value is proportional to the area of a wiring loop, the second conductive wiring 23 has an inductance value greater than that of the first conductive wiring 22.
According to the present invention, since the first wiring section of the first conductive wiring and the fourth wiring section of the second conductive wiring are asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring, and the second wiring section of the first conductive wiring and the fifth wiring section of the second conductive wiring are asymmetric to one another along the central conductive wiring, the second conductive wiring can be designed to have an inductance value greater than that of the first conductive wiring. Therefore, the present invention provides an asymmetric differential inductor so as to avoid various limitations as could otherwise occur in circuit layout of a conventional center-tap differential inductor, thereby saving substrate space and better facilitating circuit layout.
The above-described descriptions of the detailed embodiments are intended to illustrate the preferred implementation according to the present invention but are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, many modifications and variations completed by those with ordinary skill in the art will fall within the scope of present invention as defined by the appended claims.
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