This is a continuation of International Application No. PCT/JP2013/000695 filed on Feb. 8, 2013, which claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-041535 filed on Feb. 28, 2012. The entire disclosures of these applications are incorporated by reference herein.
The present disclosure relates to booster circuits for use in semiconductor memories and the like, and in particular, to booster circuits which reduce overshoots and ripples of boosted voltages.
The semiconductor memories such as flash memories require a voltage higher than a voltage of external power sources to perform writing, erasing, and reading of data. The semiconductor memories include a booster circuit which has an oscillator circuit configured to generate a clock signal, a charge pump circuit configured to boost a supplied voltage by using the clock signal, and a detection circuit configured to detect the boosted voltage and perform control such that the boosted voltage is maintained within a voltage range.
The voltage range within which a boosted voltage is maintained has influence on stable operation of circuits to which the boosted voltage is supplied. In particular, the upper limit of the voltage range of the boosted voltage affects and degrades the characteristics of transistors to which the boosted voltage is supplied. It is therefore necessary to narrow the voltage range of the boosted voltage.
According to a conventional technique, a detection circuit is configured to compare two voltages including a first comparative voltage and a second comparative voltage, and a charge pump circuit performs boosting with its normal voltage-boosting efficiency until a booted voltage reaches the first comparative voltage that is the lower comparative voltage. When the boosted voltage exceeds the first comparative voltage, the voltage-boosting efficiency is reduced by reducing the frequency of a clock signal. The charge pump circuit is switched between the active state and the inactive state in accordance with the results of comparison between the boosted voltage and the second comparative voltage that is the higher comparative voltage, thereby narrowing the voltage range of the boosted voltage (see Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2005-190533).
According to the conventional technique, however, a time lag between a point in time at which the detection circuit determines the comparison results in the vicinity of the second comparative voltage and a point in time at which the charge pump circuit is switched to the active state or the inactive state allows unnecessary clock pulses to be input to the charge pump circuit. Consequently, the boosted voltage is excessively boosted, and an overshoot occurs. In addition, since the voltage-boosting efficiency is reduced when the boosted voltage exceeds the first comparative voltage, the booster circuit according to the conventional technique cannot follow abrupt changes in load, and the boosted voltage may disadvantageously drop.
Moreover, when the upper limit of the boosted voltage is high, the booster circuit needs to include, as the transistors to which the boosted voltage is supplied, high-breakdown voltage transistors having a thick oxide film. This will increase the circuit area and manufacturing costs.
It is therefore an object of the present disclosure to provide a booster circuit of which a voltage range of a boosted voltage is narrowed without reducing voltage-boosting efficiency of the booster circuit.
The booster circuit of the present disclosure includes an output circuit between a charge pump output and a booster circuit output, and is configured to perform switching between connection and disconnection of the output circuit in accordance with the booster circuit output.
Specifically the booster circuit of the present disclosure is configured to boost a supplied voltage and output a boosted voltage to a first terminal, and includes: an oscillator circuit configured to generate a clock signal; a charge pump circuit configured to boost the supplied voltage by using the clock signal and output the boosted voltage to a second terminal; a detection circuit configured to detect the voltage at the first terminal and output a detection signal; and an output circuit configured to disconnect the first terminal from the second terminal, wherein the oscillator circuit controls activation and deactivation of an output of the oscillator circuit in accordance with the detection signal, and the output circuit controls disconnection of the output circuit in accordance with the detection signal.
With this configuration, when the booster circuit output reaches a predetermined voltage, the output circuit disconnects the charge pump output from the booster circuit output. Accordingly, even when deactivation of the oscillator circuit is delayed and the charge pump output continues to be boosted for a short period, boosting of the booster circuit output is immediately stopped. Thus, the voltage range of the boosted voltage is narrowed.
According to the present disclosure, the voltage range of the boosted voltage can be narrowed and the circuits to which the boosted voltage is supplied can stably operate. In addition, since the upper limit of the boosted voltage can be lowered, it is possible to reduce degradation in the characteristics of the transistors to which the boosted voltage is supplied.
Further, after the charge pump output is disconnected from the booster circuit output, the charge pump output continues to be boosted for a short period. Accordingly, when the output circuit connects the charge pump output to the booster circuit output in a state where the booster circuit output is lower than the predetermined voltage, the electric charge of the charge pump output boosts the booster circuit output. Consequently, the lower limit of the boosted voltage can be elevated and the voltage range of the boosted voltage can be narrowed.
An embodiment of the present disclosure will be described below with reference to the drawings.
VOUT cause the voltage of the booster circuit output VOUT to decrease and become lower than the detection voltage, the detection signal EN becomes high, and the booster circuit output VOUT and the charge pump output VCP are connected to each other. Consequently, the electric charge of the charge pump output VCP reduces speed at which the booster circuit output VOUT drops, or boosts the booster circuit output VOUT.
This operation does not allow unnecessary pulses of the clock signal CLK generated during the period from the transition of the detection signal EN to the deactivation of the oscillator circuit 1 to affect the booster circuit output VOUT, and thereby makes it possible to narrow the voltage range of the booster circuit output VOUT. Further, unlike the foregoing conventional technique, the booster circuit 51 of
The oscillator circuit 1, the detection circuit 3, and the output circuit 4 each may include a MOS transistor or a MOS capacitor of which the thickness of an oxide film is equivalent to or smaller than the thickness of an oxide film in the charge pump circuit 2.
Since the charge pump output VCP continues to be boosted for a short period even after the output circuit 4 has been switched to disconnection, when the output circuit 4 connects the charge pump output VCP to the booster circuit output VOUT in a state where the booster circuit output VOUT is lower than a predetermined voltage, the electric charge of the charge pump output VCP boosts the booster circuit output VOUT further as compared to the configuration illustrated in
For example, the second detection signal EN1 can be obtained by delaying the detection signal EN at a desired point being intermediate between the output of the detection circuit 3 and the input to the oscillator circuit 1.
12 includes the booster circuit 51, a regulator circuit 52, a row decoder 53, a column decoder 54, a sense amplifier-data latch circuit 55, and a memory cell array 56. The row decoder 53 and the column decoder 54 are configured to select a memory cell in which writing or reading is performed from the memory cell array 56. The sense amplifier-data latch circuit 55 is a circuit configured to compare and determine data to be written or read. The booster circuit 51 supplies the booster circuit output VOUT serving as a write voltage or a read voltage to the row decoder 53 and the column decoder 54. The regulator circuit 52 generates a stabilized voltage VR from the booster circuit output VOUT, and supply the stabilized voltage VR to the row decoder 53 and the column decoder 54.
The semiconductor memory 50 of
The booster circuit of the present disclosure can narrow the voltage range of the boosted voltage and stabilize the operation of the circuits to which the boosted voltage is supplied. In addition, since the upper limit of the boosted voltage can be lowered, it is possible to reduce degradation in the characteristics of the transistors to which the boosted voltage is supplied. The booster circuit of the present disclosure is thus advantageous in that the booster circuit enables highly accurate control of a rewrite voltage in a semiconductor memory and provides the MOS transistors with high reliability. The booster circuit of the present disclosure is useful for variable resistance type nonvolatile semiconductor memories and the like.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2012-041535 | Feb 2012 | JP | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | PCT/JP2013/000695 | Feb 2013 | US |
Child | 14317420 | US |