Information
-
Patent Grant
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6198339
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Patent Number
6,198,339
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Date Filed
Tuesday, September 17, 199628 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, March 6, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
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CPC
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US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 327 538
- 327 540
- 327 541
- 327 543
- 327 545
- 327 546
- 327 534
- 327 535
- 327 536
- 327 537
- 323 312
- 323 314
- 323 315
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International Classifications
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Abstract
A switched capacitor current reference circuit with improved tolerance. Additional optional devices maintain an output in the absence or loss of an input frequency.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Technical Field of the Invention
This invention pertains to a current reference circuit. In particular, this invention relates to an improved current reference circuit design, thereby providing exceptional tolerance and a standby mode which ensures circuit operation in the absence of an input frequency.
2. Background Art
Switched capacitor current reference circuits require an input frequency in order to produce an output current. This can be a problem in applications where the circuit must respond quickly at the moment the input starts switching or where the oscillator that provides the input frequency is itself powered by the current reference circuit.
Current reference circuits are widely used in microprocessors and ASICs to supply constant current for PLLs and other high speed circuits. Switched capacitor current references are recognized as having very good tolerances compared to alternative approaches since their output currents depend only on thin oxide capacitance (C
1
and C
2
), the input frequency, and a voltage reference. However, they suffer the disadvantage that they do not supply current until the input frequency begins switching, and they rise slowly due to the filtering elements required to remove ripple which is present in switched capacitor DC generating circuits. Prior art methods include use of DC reference circuits which nearly always have poorer tolerances, and use of expensive off-chip components. As technology progresses, power supply tolerance is becoming more demanding and the frequency must be very precise in many critical applications.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a current reference with excellent tolerance and no off chip components.
It is another object of the invention to provide an optional standby mode for a current reference circuit wherein the output is maintained in the absence of an input frequency.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A circuit suitable for chip implementation having a pair of switching capacitor current generators controlled by a frequency source and providing an output current to a common node. A high tolerance output circuit conducts the supplied output current from the common node to ground which is mirrored by a current path coupled to the supplied current path. The second current path includes a transistor coupled to the path of the supplied current and to a circuit output through which a reference current is provided in response to the mirror current flowing through the transistor. Another transistor coupled to a supply potential maintains a gate voltage of a transistor controlling the flow of the supplied output current into the output circuit. A filter comprising a series transistor and capacitor is connected between the supplied output current path and ground. A second large capacitor also filters and smooths the supplied output current. The supplied output current is mirrored a second time through a current path coupled to the supplied current path and which includes a transistor for providing a second reference current proportional to the current generated by the second mirror.
A back-up current generator may be included which provides standby current should the supplied output current disappear such as when an input frequency fails, for example. The back-up generator includes a transistor coupled to the common node for delivering the back-up current to the supplied current path when a voltage on the common node falls to about zero. The transistor turns off when the voltage on the common node rises to a normal operating level. The back-up generator may also include a pull-down device coupled to the common node for pulling the voltage on the common node to about zero when the switching capacitor current generators discontinue supplying the output current to the common node.
Other features and advantages of this invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the presently preferred embodiment of the invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
illustrates the invention current reference circuit with (optional) devices for implementing a standby mode.
FIG. 2
illustrates an example frequency input means driven by a single frequency source (clock).
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
FIG. 1
is a schematic diagram of the present current reference circuit. V
dd
is used as a reference voltage due to its good tolerance of about ±5% which is characteristic of recent CMOS technology specifications. The circuit operates in a two phase mode using functionally and structurally equivalent Switch Cap circuits
1
and
2
. During the first phase (first half cycle of the input frequency F
in
comprising ph
1
, ph
2
, ph
1
b
, and ph
2
b
) Switch Cap
1
(capacitor
17
in effect) is discharged into the output circuit
124
while Switch Cap
2
(capacitor
15
in effect) is charged. During the second phase, Switch Cap
2
is discharged into the output circuit
124
while Switch Cap
1
is charged. This charge/discharge cycle repeats for each cycle of the input frequency to transfer charge on each half cycle which, when filtered, amounts to a continuously generated DC current I
1
through node E with a ripple component equal to twice the input frequency.
During phase
1
, ph
1
and ph
2
b
are high while ph
2
and ph
1
b
are low (the lower case “b” indicates a compliment signal). Node A is brought to V
dd
due to transistor
11
being turned on by the low level of ph
1
b
and node B is brought to ground by transistor
14
being turned on by the high level on ph
1
. Capacitor
15
is thus charged to V
dd
. Simultaneously, capacitor
17
, which was similarly charged to V
dd
on the previous half cycle (phase
2
), is discharged into the output circuit
124
through transistor
16
which is turned on by the low level of ph
1
b
and transistor
18
which, owing to the low level of ph
1
b
on its gate, pulls node D up to V
dd
. The output circuit
124
is configured to hold the input node E near V
dd
so capacitor
17
is discharged from V
dd
to zero volts. Transistor
112
is a current mirror which diode couples V
dd
to node E such that when transistor
112
conducts current (equal to transistor
117
) the voltage at the source of transistor
112
equals V
dd
. The total average current through node E then is equal to (C1+C2)·F
in
·V
dd
. One can then envision a simplified comparable, but less desirable, circuit where the two switch cap blocks are replaced by a single resistor of value 1/((C1+C2)·F
in
) connected between a power source of V
dd
·2 to node E. Capacitor
111
is a large filter capacitor which smooths the ripple at node E and averages the switching cap currents flowing through node E. It should be noted that in the preferred embodiment several size ratios among the output circuit
124
transistors are recommended. In particular, transistor
112
should be sized approximately equivalent to transistor
117
; transistors
113
,
116
, and
118
should also be approximately equivalent; and the output node Vpbias should connect to a load transistor proportional to transistor
119
and the output node Vnbias should connect to a load transistor proportional to transistor
113
, to set the load transistor currents.
Transistor
112
of the output circuit
124
conducts the input current I
1
from the switching caps. This current I
1
flows from source to drain of transistor
112
and then into transistor
113
which is essentially a diode connected NFET although the diode connection is through the PFET transistor
114
which acts as the resistor of a second filter formed by transistor
114
and capacitor
115
. The current in transistor
113
is mirrored by transistor
116
and flows in the diode connected PFET transistor
117
(which is the same size as the input transistor
112
) which is used to establish a gate voltage such that when transistor
112
conducts, its source is held at approximately V
dd
. Transistor
118
is another mirror which reflects a copy of the transistor
113
through node H current into transistor
119
which establishes a reference voltage Vpbias that can be used to bias PFET output transistors that provide a current proportional to that of transistor
119
. Vnbias is also an output for biasing NFETs that provide currents proportional to that of transistor
116
. The configuration thus far described provides a precise output current whose tolerance is limited to thin oxide capacitance and process tracking parameters that tend to be very well controlled and do not vary significantly with temperature. The output current is also directly proportional to V
dd
and the input frequency F
in.
If the inputs stop switching, i.e. the input frequency goes to zero, the output current also becomes zero. This may be a problem in some applications. The addition of transistors
120
and
121
solve this problem. When the inputs ph
1
, ph
1
b
, ph
2
and ph
2
b
stop switching, node E receives zero current and node E drops to zero volts causing transistor
120
to conduct. Transistor
121
provides a leakage current (i.e. flowing into the substrate) exceeding the leakage currents flowing in the diffusions of transistors
16
,
122
(usually very low), and
112
, thereby insuring that node E and the gate of transistor
120
will go low. The transistor
120
drain current I
2
flows into node F, replacing the current I
1
that would normally flow into node F from transistor
112
, keeping the output reference current flowing. This standby current might not have the tolerance of the switch cap currents (i.e. in the normal mode) but is sufficient to keep the load circuits energized which can then quickly react when the input frequency is restored.
In some applications that might be sensitive to transients in the output current, it may be necessary to replace transistor
121
with a small valued current source to minimize a decrease in output current, if any, between the time the input frequency stops and the DC bias is restored.
As the input frequency rises to its normal value, the switch cap currents quickly pump up node E to its normal level of about V
dd
, turning off transistor
120
. The output current is then restored to its normally tight tolerance.
FIG. 2
is shown as an example of a simple logic circuit implementation generating the various phase signals for the switching caps of the present current reference circuit
202
. Other circuits can be substituted for this logic circuit. The switches must operate in a break-before-make mode so that the transferred charges are not corrupted or drained away during the transients. The input
201
may be fed by an available frequency source (such as a system clock) and the logic circuit provides outputs ph
1
, ph
2
, ph
1
b
, and ph
2
b.
Alternative Embodiments
The matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings have been described for purposes of illustration and shall not be interpreted in a limiting sense. It will be appreciated that various modifications may be made in the above structure and method without departing from the scope of the invention described herein. Thus, changes and alternatives will now become apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims. Accordingly, the scope of protection of this invention is limited only by the following claims and their equivalents.
Claims
- 1. A circuit for providing a bias voltage, comprising:a switched capacitor current generator receiving an input frequency for supplying a frequency controlled DC current; an input node through which substantially all the DC current from the current generator flows during normal operation of the current generator, said normal operation maintained by the input frequency; and an output circuit coupled to the input node and including: a first output node providing said bias voltage and a first current mirror connection; a supply node; a first transistor (112) coupled to the input node and the supply node, the DC current flowing through the first transistor into the supply node; a second transistor (113) coupled to the supply node for receiving the DC reference and for providing a current mirror node at its gate; a third transistor (116) coupled to the current mirror node for mirroring the DC current through the second transistor; and a fourth transistor (117) coupled to a voltage supply, the first transistor, and the third transistor wherein a voltage level at a source of the first transistor is maintained at about a voltage level of the voltage supply, the DC current in the third transistor mirroring the DC current through the second transistor flowing from the voltage supply through the fourth transistor.
- 2. The circuit of claim 1 wherein the output circuit further comprises:a fifth transistor (120) coupled to the supply node, the voltage supply, and the input node for providing a stand-by current to the supply node when a voltage on the input node is at about zero, said voltage at about zero on the input node corresponding to an interruption of the input frequency.
- 3. The circuit according to claim 2 wherein the output circuit further comprises capacitor means coupled between the input node and ground for filtering the voltage on the input node.
- 4. The circuit according to claim 2 wherein the output circuit further comprises:a second output node providing a second current mirror connection; a fifth transistor (118) coupled to the current mirror node; and a sixth transistor (119) coupled to the fifth transistor, the voltage supply, and the second output node, the fifth transistor reflecting a copy of the DC current through the second transistor into the sixth transistor for enabling the second current mirror connection at the second output node.
- 5. A circuit for providing a bias voltage comprising:a switched capacitor current generator receiving an input frequency for supplying a frequency controlled DC current; an input node through which substantially all the DC current from the current generator flows during normal operation of the current generator, said normal operation maintained by the input frequency; and an output circuit coupled to the input node and including: a first output node providing a first current mirror connection; a supply node; a first transistor (112) coupled to the input node and the supply node, the DC current flowing through the first transistor into the supply node; a second transistor (113) coupled to the supply node for receiving the DC current and providing a current mirror node at its gate; a third transistor (118) coupled to the current mirror node; a fourth transistor (119) coupled to the third transistor, a voltage supply, and the output node, the third transistor reflecting a copy of the DC current through the second transistor into the fourth transistor; and a fifth transistor (117) coupled to the voltage supply and the first transistor for the maintaining a voltage level at a source of the first transistor at about a voltage level of the voltage supply.
- 6. The circuit of claim 5 wherein the output circuit further comprises:a sixth transistor (120) coupled to the supply node, the voltage supply, and the input node for providing a stand-by current to the supply node when a voltage on the input node is at about zero, said voltage at about zero on the input node corresponding to an interruption of the input frequency.
- 7. The circuit according to claim 6 wherein the output further comprises capacitor means coupled between the input node and the ground for filtering the voltage on the input node.
- 8. The circuit according to claim 5 wherein the output circuit further comprises:a second output node providing a second current mirror connection; and a sixth transistor (116) coupled to t he current mirror node for mirroring the DC current through the second transistor and for enabling the second current mirror connection at the second output node.
US Referenced Citations (26)