Claims
- 1. A chopper-stabilized operational amplifier implemented on a single integrated circuit chip comprising:
- an operational amplifier on said chip;
- a chopper-stabilizer circuit on said chip auxiliary to the operational amplifier, wherein the chopper-stabilizer circuit includes a chopper switch that oscillates between a first state and a second state, with an amount of time between each oscillation; and
- a clock signal generator circuit on said chip, wherein the clock signal generator circuit includes a first component that generates white noise voltages, the clock signal generator circuit outputs a first voltage signal derived from the white noise voltages, and the clock signal generator does not create digital noise on a power supply for said clock signal generator;
- wherein the first voltage signal is provided directly or indirectly to the chopper stabilizer circuit, and the amount of time between oscillations of the chopper switch varies randomly within a selected range based at least in part on the first voltage signal;
- wherein said clock signal generator circuit includes a symmetrical noise generator circuit and a symmetrical oscillator circuit; and
- wherein the noise generator circuit includes at least one differential amplifier that amplifies said white noise voltages, a bandpass filter that filters said amplified white noise voltages, and an integrator circuit in a feedback connection with said at least one differential amplifier.
- 2. The chopper-stabilized operational amplifier of claim 1, wherein the clock signal generator circuit draws a constant amount of DC current from the power supply.
- 3. The chopper-stabilized operational amplifier of claim 1, wherein the clock signal generator circuit draws a constant amount of DC current from the power supply.
- 4. A clock circuit implemented on a single integrated circuit chip for generating a randomized clocking signal that is provided to a second circuit on the same chip comprising:
- a component on said chip that generates white noise voltages;
- an amplifier on said chip that amplifies said white noise voltages;
- a bandpass filter on said chip that filters said amplified white noise voltages;
- an oscillator on said chip that receives the amplified and bandpass filtered white noise voltages, or a signal derived therefrom, and outputs said randomized clocking signal;
- wherein said randomized clocking signal oscillates between a first voltage state and a second voltage with a random amount of time between oscillations, said amount of time varying randomly within a selected range; and
- a second circuit on said chip that receives and utilizes said randomized clocking signal; and
- wherein said clock circuit does not create digital noise on a power supply for said clock circuit.
- 5. The clock circuit of claim 4, wherein the second circuit is a control for a chopper switch of a chopper-stabilized operational amplifier.
- 6. The clock circuit of claim 5, wherein said clock circuit further comprises an integrator circuit on said chip, wherein said integrator circuit is in a feedback connection to the amplifier.
- 7. The clock circuit of claim 4, wherein the first amplifier is a differential amplifier, and further comprising a second differential amplifier between said first amplifier and said bandpass filter.
- 8. The clock circuit of claim 7, further comprising a third differential amplifier between said second differential amplifier and said bandpass filter.
- 9. The clock circuit of claim 6, wherein the first amplifier is a differential amplifier, and further comprising a second differential amplifier between said first amplifier and said integrator circuit.
- 10. A clock circuit implemented on a single integrated circuit chip for generating a randomized clocking signal that is provided to a second circuit on the same chip comprising:
- a random signal generator circuit on said chip, wherein said random signal generator circuit includes a component that generates white noise voltages, and said a random signal generator outputs a first voltage signal derived from said white noise voltages having a random voltage value within a selected range of voltage values;
- an oscillator on said chip that receives the first voltage signal, or a signal derived therefrom, and outputs said randomized clocking signal;
- wherein said randomized clocking signal oscillates between a first voltage state and a second voltage with a random amount of time between oscillations, said amount of time varying randomly within a selected range; and
- a second circuit on said chip that receives and utilizes said randomized clocking signal; and
- wherein said clock circuit does not create digital noise on a power supply for said clock circuit.
- 11. The clock circuit of claim 10, wherein the second circuit is a control for a chopper switch of a chopper-stabilized operational amplifier.
- 12. A method of producing and utilizing on a single integrated circuit chip a randomized clocking signal that oscillates between a first voltage state and a second voltage state with a randomly varying amount of time between each oscillation comprising:
- creating white noise voltages on said integrated circuit chip;
- amplifying and bandpass filtering said white noise voltages to produce a first voltage signal, said first voltage signal having a randomly varying voltage value within a selected range of voltage values;
- providing an oscillator on said integrated circuit chip, said oscillator capable of oscillating between a first state and second state;
- inputting the first voltage signal or a signal derived therefrom into said oscillator;
- controlling the oscillations of the oscillator with said first voltage signal or the signal derived therefrom, so that the oscillator oscillates between the first state and the second state with a randomly varying amount of time between each oscillation, wherein said amount of time varies randomly within a selected range;
- generating said randomized clocking signal based on whether the oscillator is in the first state or the second state; and
- providing said randomized clocking signal to a second circuit on the same chip, and utilizing said randomized clocking signal within said second circuit; and
- wherein said randomized clocking signal is produced entirely within circuits on said chip that do not create digital noise on a power supply for said circuits.
- 13. A random voltage signal generator circuit implemented on a single integrated circuit chip for generating a first voltage signal having a random value within a selected range comprising:
- a component on said chip that generates white noise voltages;
- a first differential amplifier on said chip that amplifies said white noise voltages;
- a bandpass filter on said chip that filters said amplified white noise voltages to produce said first voltage signal;
- an integrator circuit in a feedback connection with said amplifier; and wherein said random signal generator circuit draws constant DC supply currents and does not generate digital noise on a power supply for said random signal generator circuit.
- 14. The random signal generator circuit of claim 13, further comprising a second differential amplifier on said chip between said first differential amplifier and said bandpass filter.
- 15. The random signal generator circuit of claim 14, further comprising a third differential amplifier on said chip between said second differential amplifier and said bandpass filter.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/810,095, which was filed on Mar. 3, 1997 and has the same inventor, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,926,066 which issued on July 20, 1999.
This application is related to three commonly invented and owned U.S. patents: U.S. Pat. No. 5,600,283, entitled "DC Isolated Oscillator," which was issued on Feb. 4, 1997; application Ser. No. 08/527,401, entitled "Floating Capacitor Differential Integrator," which was also filed on Sep. 13, 1995 now U.S. Pat. No. 5,793,242 which issued on Aug. 11, 1998; and application Ser. No. 08/811,063, entitled "Chopper-Stabilized Operational Amplifier Including Low Noise Chopper Switch," which was filed on Mar. 3, 1997 now U.S. Pat. No. 5,959,498 which issued on Sep. 28, 1999. Each of the foregoing applications is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (4)
Entry |
Frederiksen, Thomas M., Intuitive IC OP AMPS, National Semiconductor Technology Series, 1984, Santa Clara, CA, pp. 8-12. |
Horowitz, Paul and Hill, Winfield, The Art of Electronics, Cambridge University Press, 1980, New York, pp. 80-86, 286-307. |
Jones, Don and Webb, Robert W., "Chopper-Stabilized Op Amp Combines MOS and Bipolar Elements on One Chip", Electronics, Sep. 27, 1973, pp. 110-114. |
Smith, Ralph J., Electronics: Circuits and Devices, John Wiley and Sons, 1980, New York, pp. 434-457. |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
810095 |
Mar 1997 |
|