The present invention relates generally to reference circuits, and more particularly to reference circuits that provide substantially constant signals.
Many electrical devices have a reference circuit for generating a reference signal based on an external source for internal use. The external source is often a supply voltage. The reference signal may represent either a reference current or a reference voltage. The reference circuit is usually designed such that the reference signal has a constant level over variations in the supply voltage, over a range of temperature, and over manufacturing process variations.
In most devices, the supply voltage is sufficient such that designing the reference circuit faces little problem. However, in devices where a reduced supply voltage is preferable, generating the reference voltage using traditional designs may encounter difficulty.
The present invention provides techniques to generate a reference voltage with a reduced supply voltage. The reference voltage is independent from variations in the supply voltage, from a range of temperatures, and from manufacturing process variations.
One aspect includes a reference circuit having a current generating unit for generating a generated current. The reference circuit also includes an output unit for producing an output current based on the generated current. The output unit also produces a reference voltage based on the output current. The reference circuit further includes a startup unit for allowing the reference voltage to switch between different stable voltage levels when the reference circuit enters different modes.
Another aspect includes a method of generating a bandgap reference voltage. The method includes sourcing a first current using a first transistor connected to a supply node, and passing the first current through a first control transistor connected to a second supply node. The method also includes sourcing a second current using a second transistor connected to the first supply node, and passing the second current through a combination of a second control transistor and a resistive element connected to the second supply node. The method further includes generating an output current based on the first and second currents, and generating the bandgap reference voltage based on the output current.
The following description and the drawings illustrate specific embodiments of the invention sufficiently to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention. Other embodiments may incorporate structural, logical, electrical, process, and other changes. In the drawings, like numerals describe substantially similar components throughout the several views. Examples merely typify possible variations. Portions and features of some embodiments may be included in or substituted for those of others. The scope of the invention encompasses the full ambit of the claims and all available equivalents.
In some embodiments, Vref is a bandgap reference voltage; it is stable over both a temperature range and variations in voltages at supply nodes 151 and 152. As is known in the art, a bandgap voltage of a semiconductor is the energy (voltage or potential) difference between the bottom of the conduction band and the top of the valance band of the semiconductor. In some embodiments, the components of reference circuit 100 are made of silicon such that Vref is a bandgap voltage of silicon. Other embodiments exist where the components of reference circuit 100 are made of other materials besides silicon such that Vref is a bandgap voltage of the other materials.
Supply node 151 receives a supply voltage V1. Supply node 152 receives a supply voltage V2. In some embodiments, V1 represents a first voltage rail and V2 represents a second voltage rail. In other embodiments, V1 is a positive voltage and V2 is ground. In some other embodiments, V1 is a positive voltage and V2 is a negative voltage.
Current generating unit 102 includes control transistors 116 and 118, a control resistive element 120, and a current mirror 110 formed partially by current source transistors 112 and 114. In embodiments represented by
Each transistor in current mirror 110 provides a current in one of two “legs” in the circuit. For example, transistor 112 provides current I1 in one leg of the current mirror, and transistor 114 provides current 12 in another leg of the current mirror.
Transistors 112 and 116 form a current path 161 between supply nodes 151 and 152 in which current I1 flows. Transistors 114 and 118 and resistor 120 form another current path 162 between supply nodes 151 and 152 in which current 12 flows.
I1 and I2 are substantially equal. In some embodiments, transistors 112 and 114 are sized such that currents I1 and I2 are related, but are not equal. For example, I1 and I2 are proportional. Many embodiments of current mirrors 110 exist. In some embodiments, current mirror 110 is implemented with bipolar transistors. In other embodiments, current mirror 110 is implemented with field effect transistors (FET). In embodiments represented by
Transistor 116 connects as a diode between an internal node 117 and supply node 152. Transistor 118 and resistor 120 connect in series between an internal node 119 and supply node 152. Transistor 116 has a size of 1X. Transistor 118 has a size of nX, where X is the size of transistor 116 and n is a multiplier; n is a real number. Thus, in embodiments where n is an integer greater than one, the size of transistor 118 is n times the size of transistor 116. For example, if n equals eight then size of transistor 118 is eight times the size of transistor 116.
In some embodiments, the size X of transistor 116 is measured by the cross-sectional area of the emitter of transistor 116. For example, if n equals eight then the cross-sectional area of the emitter of transistor 118 is eight times the cross-sectional area of the emitter of transistor 116. The cross-sectional area is a plane perpendicular to the current flowing through the cross-sectional area. In some embodiments, the cross-sectional area of the emitter of transistor 116 is between six square microns and ten square microns.
In embodiments where I1 and I2 are equal and the cross-sectional areas of the emitters of transistors 116 and 118 are unequal, the current densities passing through transistors 116 and 118 are unequal because of equal current passing through unequal cross-sectional areas. For example, when I1 and I2 are equal and n is greater than one, the current density passing through transistor 116 is greater the current density passing through transistor 118. Different current densities allow circuit 100 to generate Vref with a constant value at a certain value of V1 at node 151.
Output unit 104 includes output transistor 130, an output resistive element 132, and an output control transistor 134. Transistor 130 connects to current mirror 110 to produce Iref, the reference current (or output current). In
In embodiments represented by
The structure of reference circuit 100 allows Vref to be independent from variations in V1 or V2, from a temperature range, and from manufacturing process variations. Reference circuit 100 has elements that produce a voltage (potential) with a positive temperature coefficient and elements that produce a voltage with a negative temperature coefficient. The voltage with a positive temperature coefficient increases when the temperature increases. The voltage with a negative temperature coefficient decreases when the temperature increases. When these voltages are (combined) while the temperature changes within a certain temperature range, the increase and decrease in these voltages (due to a change in temperature) cancel each other. Thus, the sum of these voltages is constant over a temperature range. In embodiments represented by
Transistors 116, 118, 134 and resistors 120 and 132 are constructed and arranged such that they produce a voltage with a positive temperature coefficient and a voltage with a negative temperature coefficient. The sum of these two voltages is represented as by Vref. Thus, Vref is independent from V1 or V2 and independent from a temperature range.
In embodiments represented by
Each of the transistors 116 and 118 has a base-to-emitter voltage (VBE). The base-to-emitter voltages of transistors 116 and 118 can be made unequal by constructing transistors 116 and 118 with different sizes such as difference in the cross-sectional areas of the emitters as explained above. When VBE of transistor 116 and VBE of transistor 118 are unequal, there exists a Δ VBE (delta VBE), which is the difference between VBE of transistor 116 and VBE of transistor 118. This Δ VBE has a positive temperature coefficient.
Transistor 134 also has a base-to-emitter voltage VBE, which has a negative temperature coefficient. Resistors 120 and 132 can be sized such that Vref is constant at a certain value based on the combination of the positive temperature coefficient of Δ VBE of transistors 116 and 118 the negative temperature coefficient of VBE of transistor 134.
In embodiments represented by
In some embodiment, Vref is at the first stable voltage level when circuit 100 is in an inactive mode (power-down mode, standby mode, or “off” state) and Vref is at the second stable voltage level when circuit 100 is in an active mode (power-up mode, or “on” state). In some embodiments, the first stable voltage level is ground and the second voltage level is selected to be a fixed value within a range of about 1.1 to about 1.3 volts.
Startup unit 106 includes transistors 172, 174, and 176 and a capacitor 178. Startup circuit 106 allows Vref to switch from a first stable voltage level to a second stable voltage level when circuit 100 switches from the inactive mode to the active mode. In some embodiments, the first stable voltage level is ground when circuit 100 is in the inactive mode and the second stable voltage level can be a selected voltage within a range of 1.1 volts to 1.3 volts. The inactive mode occurs when no power is applied to circuit 100, for example, when V1 is zero volts. The active mode occurs when a power is applied to circuit 100, for example, when V1 is a positive voltage.
Startup circuit 106 has at an initial state when circuit 100 is in the inactive mode. In the initial state, no current flows in circuit 100, i.e., I1 and I2 are zero and capacitor 178 holds node 179 at ground. Capacitor 178 and transistor 176 form a combination to influence currents I1 and I2. When circuit 100 switches from the inactive state to the active state, transistor 176 turns on connecting node 117 to V1. Transistor 116 turns on and causes transistor 118 to turn on. Node 119 is pulled to a low voltage when transistor 118 turns on, causing transistor 114 to turn on. Transistors 112 and 172 also turn on. I1 and I2 start to flow. When transistor 172 turns on, it connects node 179 to V1, causing transistor 176 to turn off. As a result, startup unit 106 is electrically disconnected from current generating unit 102.
As long as circuit 100 is in the active state, I1 and I2 continue to flow and Vref remains at a stable voltage level, for example, at the second stable voltage level. Startup unit 106 has no substantially influence on current generating unit 102 when Vref remains at the second stable voltage level. Vref switches to another stable voltage level (e.g., ground) when circuit 100 switches to the inactive state (when power is disconnected from circuit 100 or when V1 is zero and V2 is zero).
In some embodiments, transistor 174 has a channel length greater (longer) than a channel length of any one of the transistors 172 and 176. Greater channel length allows transistor 174 to quickly and effectively transfer the charge at node 179 and at capacitor 178 to ground when the power is disconnected from circuit 100. When node 179 is at ground, startup unit 106 is reset to the initial state to enable transistor 176 to quickly turn on when power is again connected (applied) to circuit 100. In some embodiments, the channel length of transistor 174 is about eight hundred times the channel length of transistor 172 or 176. In one example, the channel length of transistor 172 or 176 is between about 0.12 micron and about 0.25 micron.
The long channel of transistor 174 also keeps the current flowing through transistor 174 relatively smaller than the current flowing through transistor 172. Thus, transistor 172 can keep the voltage at node 179 close to V1 to turn off transistor 176. When transistor 176 turns off, it effectively disconnects startup unit 106 from current generating unit 102 after I1 and I2 start to flow and Vref reaches the second stable voltage level.
As described above in
Labels “P” and “N” indicate different conductivity types of regions within semiconductor die 300. For example, regions 304, 306, 308, and 310 are N-type conductivity regions; regions 302 and 312 are P-type conductivity regions. A certain combination of these N-type and P-type conductivity regions forms a transistor. For example, regions 310, 312, and 304 form a bipolar NPN transistor, which is shown symbolically as transistor 318 in which “e”, “b”, and “c” represent the emitter, base, and collector, respectively. As another example, regions 312, 304, and 302 form a bipolar PNP transistor, which is shown symbolically as transistor 333. Since transistors 318 and 333 are formed by regions arranged vertically (from a substrate to a surface), they are vertical bipolar transistors. Thus, transistor 318 is a vertical bipolar NPN transistor and transistor 334 is a vertical bipolar PNP transistor. Further, since transistor 318 is formed by a triple-well structure of N-type conductivity regions, transistor 318 is a NPN bi-polar transistor having a triple-well structure.
Referring back to
Reference circuit 700 simultaneously generates two reference voltages: one referenced to one supply voltage (or voltage rail) and one referenced to another supply voltage (or another voltage rail). For example, when V1 is a positive supply voltage and V2 is a negative supply voltage (or ground), Vref is generated relative to V2 because Iref flows through resistor 132 connected to V2; Vref7 is generated relative to V1 because resistor 760 connects to V1.
Many variations of circuits in
Reference circuit 810 receives supply voltages VEXT and V8. VEXT is similar to V1 and V8 is similar to V2 (FIG. 1). In some embodiments, VEXT is an external voltage provided to circuit 800 by an external source and V8 is ground. Reference circuit 810 generates a reference voltage Vref8 based on VEXT and V8. In some embodiments, Vref8 is a bandgap reference voltage similar to Vref (FIG. 1). Each of the amplifying units 831 and 832 receives Vref8 and generates an internal voltage. For example, amplifying unit 831 generates VINT1; amplifying unit 832 generates VINT2. VINT1, and VINT2 are amplified versions of Vref8. In some embodiments, VINT1, and VINT2 are smaller than VEXT. In embodiments represented by
Memory device 900 further includes a voltage regulator 905 for generating at least one internal voltage VINT based on supply voltages VEXT9 and V9 supplied to memory device 900 at nodes 911 and 913. Voltage regulator 905 can be voltage regulator 800 (
In
Memory device 900 can be a dynamic random access memory (DRAM) device. Examples of DRAM devices include synchronous DRAM commonly referred to as SDRAM, SDRAM II, SGRAM (Synchronous Graphics Random Access Memory), DDR SDRAM (Double Data Rate SDRAM), DDR II SDRAM, DDR III SDRAM, GDDR III SDRAM (Graphic Double Data Rate), and Rambus DRAMs. Memory device 900 can also be a static random access memory (SRAM) device, or can be a flash memory. Memory device 900 includes other elements, which are not shown for clarity.
Memory device 1004 can be memory device 900 of FIG. 9. Thus, memory device 1004 can include a reference circuit such as any one of the reference circuits shown in
System 1000 represented by
Various embodiments of the invention provide techniques to generate a reference voltage from a supply voltage. The reference voltage is independent from variations in the supply voltage, from a range of temperature, and from manufacturing process variations.
Although specific embodiments are described herein, those skilled in the art recognize that other embodiments may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown to achieve the same purpose. This application covers any adaptations or variations of the present invention. Therefore, the present invention is limited only by the claims and all available equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050046466 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |