The instant Application claims priority of German Patent Application No. 102014115433.9, which was filed on Oct. 23, 2014. The entire contents of the identified German Patent Application No. 102014115433.9 are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Charge pumps are circuits that can pump charge to generate an output voltage higher than an input voltage. The input voltage may for example be a supply voltage. Therefore, charge pumps may be, for example, employed in circuits where a voltage higher than a supply voltage is needed.
Some charge pumps are based on transistors, for example MOS (Metal Oxide Semiconductor) transistors. In some instances, parasitic capacitances of such transistors may adversely affect the performance of the charge pump.
In the following, embodiments will be discussed in detail referring to the attached drawings. It is to be noted that these embodiments serve as illustrative examples only and are not to be construed as limiting. For example, while some embodiments may be described as comprising a plurality of features or elements, in other embodiments some of these features or elements may be omitted and/or may be replaced by alternative features or elements without departing from the scope of the present application. In yet other embodiments, additional features or elements in addition to the ones explicitly shown and described may be provided.
Implementations described herein may provide improved charge pump devices and associated methods where problems caused by parasitic capacitances are at least mitigated.
In the embodiments, any connections or couplings between elements may be provided as a direct connection or coupling, i.e. a connection or coupling without additional intervening elements (for example only a metal connection), or may be provided as an indirect connection or coupling, i.e. a connection or couplings with one or more intervening elements as long as the general purpose of the connection or coupling, for example to transmit a certain kind of signal or information, is not substantially altered.
Some embodiments relate to charge pump devices. Charge-pump devices are devices that may be used to convert an input voltage to an output voltage higher than the input voltage. In some embodiments, charge pumps may comprise two pairs of valve transistors to selectively charge and discharge boost capacitors. A control input of at least one valve transistor of the pairs may be selectively coupled to an input terminal or an output terminal of the charge pump. In some embodiments, by selectively coupling the control terminal of the transistor with the input terminal or the output terminal, problems regarding parasitic capacitances may be mitigated. In some embodiments, the selective coupling is essentially based on a clock signal also used for operating the charge pump.
Some embodiments discussed in the following comprise transistors. While in the embodiments discussed MOS (Metal Oxide Semiconductor) transistors may be used for illustrative purposes, in other embodiments other kinds of transistors, for example other kinds of field effect transistors or also bipolar transistors or mixtures thereof like insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs), may be used. Generically, transistors may be described as comprising a control terminal and first and second load terminals. In case of a field effect transistor, for example the control terminal may correspond to a gate terminal, and the first and second load terminals may correspond to source and drain terminals. In case of a bipolar transistor, the control terminal may correspond to a base terminal, and the first and second load terminals may correspond to collector and emitter terminals.
An off-state of a transistor generally may refer to a state where the transistor is high-ohmic (essentially non-conducting) between its load terminals, and an on-state may refer to a state where the transistor is low-ohmic (essentially conducting) between its load terminals.
In the following explanations, first with reference to
In
The charge pump illustrated in
Furthermore, an output node of the first inverter (i.e. a node between the second load terminal of NMOS transistor 16 and the first load terminal of PMOS transistor 17) is coupled to a first clock input terminal 11 via a boost capacitance 14, which may have a capacitance value C2. An output node of the second inverter, i.e. a node between the second load terminal of NMOS transistor 18 and the first load terminal of PMOS transistor 19, is coupled with a second clock input terminal 12 via a second boost capacitor 15, which may have a capacitance value C1. C1 may be equal to C2. A first clock signal φ1, labeled 114 in
Generally, with a charge pump as illustrated in
In a first phase t1 (where φ1 is high and φ2 is low), boost capacitance 15 is charged by an input voltage at input voltage terminal 10 via NMOS transistor 18, as indicated by an arrow 111. Furthermore, boost capacitance 14 is discharged to output terminal 16 via PMOS transistor 17, as indicated by an arrow 112. In other words, during the time t1 NMOS transistor 18 and PMOS transistor 17 are conducting between their load terminals, while NMOS transistor 16 and PMOS transistor 19 are non-conducting via the load terminal. Conducting between load terminals in this case means that a low resistance is present between the load terminals (also referred to as on-resistance RON of the respective transistor), while non-conducting implies that the respective transistor is high-ohmic between its load terminals.
In this case, an output voltage VOUT is equal to an input voltage VIN at input terminal 10 plus a voltage VCLK based on the clock signal (see
In
In real implementations, clock signals may be non-ideal, as illustrated in
The effect of non-ideal clock signals as illustrated in
Furthermore, parasitic capacitance 22 together with boost capacitance 14 may form a parasitic capacitive divider, and likewise capacitance 23 together with boost capacitance 15 may form a parasitic divider. These dividers may reduce the output voltage of the voltage pump e.g. to VOUT=[VIN+VCLK][C1/(C1+Cp)], assuming that C1=C2 and Cp being the value of parasitic capacitances 22, 23. Furthermore, in some cases it may happen that due to parasitic capacitances 22, 23 one or more of transistors 16 to 19 is/are not switched on correctly or fully, which effectively may lead to a higher resistance and therefore to a higher voltage drop across transistors 16 to 19.
The charge pump device illustrated in
For example, to illustrate this, after a phase where boost transistor 14 has been charged to VIN as illustrated by arrow 110 and as explained previously and boost capacitor 15 has been discharged as illustrated by 113, before transitioning to the next discharging/charging phase, for example φ1 and φ2 are both low (during the time Tnon-over).
During this phase Tnon-over voltages at capacitors 30, are close to the input voltage VIN, causing transistors 16, 18 to be off (non-conducting). Furthermore, capacitors 32, 33 in this case are close to the output voltage VOUT, such that PMOS transistors 17, 19 are also off, such that no short circuit current may flow.
After this phase, in the example φ2 remains low while φ1 goes high (time t1 in
At the end of the phase t1, another time period Tnon-over follows similar to what was described above, and then during a time period t2 the above situation of t1 is reversed. The output voltage for the charge pump circuit of
In the charge pump device of
In
In the embodiment of
Transistor 41, which in the example of
Transistor 42, which is a PMOS transistor in the embodiment of
In a similar manner, transistor 43, which is a PMOS transistor, has a first load terminal coupled to output voltage terminal 13 and a second load terminal coupled to a gate terminal of transistor 19. A gate terminal of transistor 43 is coupled with the node between transistors 18 and 19, i.e. with second boost capacitor 15 as shown.
A load terminal of transistor 44, which is a PMOS transistor in the embodiment of
In a similar manner, a first load terminal of transistor 45, which is a PMOS transistor in the example of
A first load terminal of transistor 46, which is an NMOS transistor in the example of
As explained previously, during the non-overlapping periods Tnon-over (time periods t0) all transistors 16 to 19 should be turned off, but in the case of
To illustrate the operation further, during the phase t1 φ1 in the example of
During time period t2, transistors 44 and 47 assist in ensuring that transistors 16 and 19 are on in essentially the same manner as explained for transistors 17 and 18 during time period t1. In other words, transistor 44 provides charge compensation to the gate of transistor 16, ensuring that transistor 16 is fully on, and NMOS transistor 47 ensures that transistor 19 is fully on.
The following table illustrates the conditions of various transistors during stages t0, t1 and t2.
It is to be emphasized again that in other embodiments only some or only one of transistors 40 to 47 may be present. Apart from the modifications described above, the embodiment of
In some embodiments, providing one or more of transistors 40 to 47 may decrease a voltage drop over transistors 16 to 19 due to parasitic capacitances, thus increasing efficiency and output voltage, and/or may avoid a risk of a short circuit current. In some embodiments, providing one or more of transistors 40 to 47 may save chip area compared to solutions where capacitors like capacitors 14, 15 or 30 to 32 are designed to be significantly larger than the respective parasitic capacitances, and/or the parasitic capacitances are designed to be small by designing the corresponding transistors accordingly. In other embodiments, other techniques may be employed.
The above described embodiments serve only as examples, and techniques disclosed herein may also be applied to other kinds of charge pump devices.
At 50, valve transistors are provided, valve transistors being e.g. transistors like transistors 16 to 19 described previously which selectively couple a boost capacitor like capacitors 14 or 15 described previously with one of a voltage input or a voltage output. At 51, the method comprises coupling a control input of at least one of the valve transistors with one of the voltage input or voltage output in a selective manner, e.g. depending on a phase of operations. Such a coupling may for example be realised by transistors like transistors 40 to 47 of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2014 115 433 | Oct 2014 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7208996 | Suzuki | Apr 2007 | B2 |
7843446 | Park | Nov 2010 | B2 |
9396115 | Blainey | Jul 2016 | B2 |
20130093503 | Kok | Apr 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2003284325 | Oct 2003 | JP |
Entry |
---|
Cho et al., “Two-Phase Boosted Voltage Generator for Low-Voltage DRAMs,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 38, No. 10, Oct. 2003, pp. 1726-1729. |
Gregori, “Voltage doubler with improved driving capability and no-short circuit losses,” Electronics Letters, vol. 46, No. 17, Aug. 19, 2010, pp. 1193-1194. |
Su et al., “High Efficiency Cross-Coupled Doubler with No Reversion Loss,” Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems, vol. 6, May 21-24, 2006, pp. 2761-2764. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20160118879 A1 | Apr 2016 | US |