Drive method for a cross-connected class AB output stage with shared base current in pre-driver

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6535063
  • Patent Number
    6,535,063
  • Date Filed
    Monday, December 3, 2001
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 18, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
The present invention provides technical advantages as a class AB output driver (400) with minimal cross-over distortion. If the differential input to the driver is I+δI/2 and I−δI/2, then the current gain is the average of βn and βp, more specifically, (βn−βp)*I+((βn+βp)/2)* δI. The offset current (βn−βp)*I is taken out with a feedback loop.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




Generally, this invention relates to amplifiers, and in particular to class AB operational amplifier driver stages.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Many electronic circuits use amplifiers to manipulate various signals within the circuit. The output of the amplifier may be connected to provide an output voltage to a load circuit. The design of the output stage may affect various operating aspects of the amplifier. For example, some amplifiers can deliver a high output current to the load. Other amplifiers can produce an output voltage swing that is approximately equal to the magnitude of the power supply for the amplifier circuit. Some amplifiers must provide an output that has a low crossover distortion. Yet other amplifiers are required to maintain gain and stability at relatively high frequencies. Each of these requirements places constraints upon the design of the output stage.




During operation, an amplifier circuit consumes current from a power supply. A portion of this current, known as the quiescent current, is used to bias the internal circuitry of the amplifier. A low quiescent current is desirable because it reduces the power consumption when the amplifier is operable at a light load, or with no load at all.




Previously developed amplifier output circuits have addressed some of these problems. For example, output circuits commonly referred to as class A circuits provide low output distortion. Unfortunately, class A circuits inherently consume large amounts of quiescent current. A second class of output circuits is referred to as class B circuits. These circuits consume very little quiescent current. However, class B circuits exhibit substantial crossover distortion. A hybrid of the class A and Class B output circuits is commonly referred to as class AB output circuits. Class AB circuits consume more quiescent current than equivalent class B circuits, but less quiescent current than equivalent class A circuits. As a result, they exhibit less crossover distortion than class B circuits but more crossover distortion than class A circuits.




Most amplifiers use class AB output circuits so as to achieve reasonable crossover distortion levels with a quiescent current of perhaps five to ten percent of the maximum allowable output current. These circuits typically have difficulty in achieving significantly lower levels of quiescent current. In addition, many prior amplifier circuits rely upon circuits which reduce the availability frequency response to reduce the quiescent current.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention achieves technical advantages as a six (6) transistor class AB output driver with minimal cross-over distortion. The output stage comprises a core of 4 transistors arranged such that the current gain from input to output is the average of β


n


and β


p


, irrespective of where the stage is biased. Two cascode transistors serve to bootstrap the collector-base capacitances for speed enhancement.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a circuit diagram of a first existing output driver;





FIG. 2

is a circuit diagram of a second existing output driver;





FIG. 3

is a circuit diagram of a third existing output driver;





FIG. 4

is a circuit diagram of a six (6) transistor class AB output driver according to the present invention;





FIG. 5

is a DC transfer analysis of the output driver of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 6

represents the transfer characteristic of the output drivers of

FIGS. 1 through 4

. The characteristics of output drivers in

FIGS. 1 through 3

are superimposed and are shown by the bent line. The straight line is the transfer characteristic of

FIG. 4

;





FIG. 7

represents the derivative of the transfer characteristics of FIG.


6


and is an illustration of linearity for output drivers of

FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


with that of

FIG. 4

;

FIGS. 1 through 3

correlate to FIG.


7


and are represented by the curve which transitions between 260 and 190;





FIG. 8

is a typical output waveform showing frequency response of the output driver of

FIG. 1

for different bias points;





FIG. 9

is a typical output waveform showing frequency response of the output driver of

FIG. 2

for different bias points;





FIG. 10

is a typical output waveform showing frequency response of the output driver of

FIG. 3

for different bias points; and





FIG. 11

is a typical output waveform showing frequency response of the output driver of FIG.


4


.











DESCRIPTION OF CONVENTIONAL DRIVER CIRCUITS





FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


illustrate three (3) existing output driver circuit topologies. Each of these circuits operate in essentially the same manner. The method of input drive is by R differential current. A significant disadvantage of the circuit


100


of

FIG. 1

is that the transistors


101


and


102


share the same collector current. This forces the signal current


112


to flow entirely into the bases of transistors


103


and


104


. This similarly happens in the circuits of

FIGS. 2 and 3

. In the circuit


200


of

FIG. 2

, transistors


121


and


122


share the same collector current. This forces the signal current


128


to flow entirely into the bases of transistors


123


and


124


. In the circuit


300


of

FIG. 3

, transistors


131


and


132


share the same collector current. This forces the signal current


138


to flow entirely into the bases of transistors


133


and


134


.




Referring back to

FIG. 1

, when the signal current


112


is large and positive, it will flow entirely into transistor


103


, where the gain to the load at


105


is β


n103


. β


n103


refers to the current gain of the npn transistor


103


. When the signal current


112


is large and negative, it will flow entirely into transistor


104


, where the gain to the load is β


p104


. β


p104


refers to the current gain of the pnp transistor


104


. As the signal current flows from positive to negative the gain will change from β


n103


to β


p104


giving rise to crossover distortion.

FIG. 5

shows the DC transfer characteristics of the circuit of FIG.


1


.




Referring to

FIG. 1

, input current to the output driver through current source


110


takes the form:









I
+


δ





I

2




1.












Input current to the output driver through current source


111


takes the form:









I
-


δ





I

2




2.












Signal current


112


into the base of transistor


103


takes the form:






α*δ


I


  3.






Signal current


113


into the base of transistor


104


takes the form:






(α−1)*δ


I


  4.






In the case of large δI and transistor


103


, α=1






gain≈β


n103








In the case of large −δI, and transistor


104


, α=0






gain≈β


p104








In the case of small δI, where conduction, α≈0.5






gain




β
n103

+

β
p104


2







 Overall gain≈α*β


n103


−(α−1)β


p104


.




DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION




The present invention shown at


400


in

FIG. 4

is an output driver advantageously comprising a core of four (4) transistors


141


,


142


,


143


, and


144


arranged in a cross-connected manner such that the current gain from input of the driver


400


to the output of the driver


400


is the average of the β


n


and β


p


irrespective of where the driver is biased, as illustrated below.




This output driver


400


allows an escape path for the current flowing through the collectors of the transistors


141


and


142


, such that the collectors thereof do not share the same collector current. This new path overcomes the disadvantages of the circuits illustrated in

FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


, as previously described.




Transistors


142


and


141


share the same base current i


b


through branch


170


. Their emitter currents are respectively β


p


*i


b


through branch


153


and β


n


*i


b


through branch


152


, where i


b


is the small signal current.




The input current drive at the high-side through branch


151


is







(

I
+


δ





I

2


)

,










and thus the current in the base of transistor


143


is:






I
+


δ





I

2

-


β
p

*


i
b

.












Thus the emitter current of transistor


143


is








β
n

*
I

+


β
n

*


δ





I

2


-


β
n

*

β
p

*


i
b

.












The input current drive at the low-side through branch


150


is:







(

I
-


δ





I

2


)

,










and thus the current in the base of transistor


144


is:






I
-


δ





I

2

-


β
n

*


i
b

.












Thus the emitter current of transistor


144


is:








β
p

*
I

-


β
p

*


δ





I

2


-


β
n

*

β
p

*


i
b

.












Current approximately equal to β


n


*i


b


flows through branch


157


through the collector of transistor


145


and current approximately equal to β


p


*i


b


flows through branch


156


into the collector of transistor


146


. Approximately β


p


*i


b


flows through branch


154


into the emitter of transistor


146


and approximately β


n


*i


b


flows through branch


155


into the collector of transistor


142


.




The current through branch


159


is:








β
n

*
I

+


β
n

*


δ





I

2


-


β
n

*

β
p

*

i
b












The current through branch


158


is:








β
p

*
I

-


β
p

*


δ





I

2


-


β
n

*

β
p

*

i
b












Thus, the two emitter currents from transistor


143


and transistor


144


sum in branch


171


giving rise to the load current which is (β


n


−β


p


)*I+((β


n





p


)/2)*δI. Hence the current gain is the average of the pnp beta and the npn beta. The offset term β


n


−β


p


*i


b


is removed in a feedback loop.




Advantageously, transistors


145


and


146


serve to bootstrap the collector-base capacitance of transistors


141


and


142


respectively. This gives AC performance comparable to that of the existing output drivers


100


,


200


and


300


of

FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


.




The present invention results in a reduction in open-loop crossover distortion by a factor of between 10 and 20.

FIG. 7

shows the significant improvement in DC transfer characteristic of the present invention over the existing output drivers.

FIGS. 8

,


9


and


10


show the AC response for the output drivers


100


,


200


, and


300


of

FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


, respectively.

FIG. 11

shows the AC response of the present invention. Each of the output drivers


100


,


200


,


300


, and


400


shown in

FIGS. 1

,


2


,


3


and


4


, respectively, have comparable pole frequencies, but the output driver of

FIG. 4

has a tighter spread of AC gain.




The innovative teachings of the present application are described with particular reference to the disclosed embodiment. However, it should be understood that this embodiment provides only one example of the many advantageous uses and innovative teachings herein. Various alterations, modifications and substitutions can be made to the disclosed invention without departing in any way from the spirit and scope of the present invention, as defined in the claims that follow. For example, although the embodiment has been presented with reference to particular transistor types, voltage and current polarities, and methods of coupling, the present inventive structures and characteristics are not necessarily limited to such particular transistor types, polarities, or methods of coupling as used herein. It should be understood the embodiment used hereinabove can easily be implemented using many diverse transistor types, polarities and methods of coupling so long as the combinations achieve an output of (β


n


−β


p


)*I+((β


n





p


)/2)*δI with minimal cross-over distortion, with the term β


n


−β


p


)*I removed in a feedback circuit.



Claims
  • 1. An output stage driver, comprising:a plurality of transistors biased class AB operable to provide current gain from input to output of (βn−βp)*I+((βn+βp)/2)*δI regardless of where the output stage is biased, where δI is the time varying signal current.
  • 2. The output stage driver recited in claim 1 further comprising a feedback circuit operable to remove the term (βn−βp*I) from the output.
  • 3. The output stage driver recited in claim 1 being configured in an integrated circuit.
  • 4. The output stage driver recited in claim 1 being configured in a DSL line driver.
  • 5. The output stage driver recited in claim 1 being adapted to provide minimal cross-over distortion.
  • 6. An output stage driver, comprising:a first circuit including a first transistor, a second transistor, a third transistor and a fourth transistor operable in a class AB biasing arrangement; a second circuit including a sixth transistor cross-coupled with the first transistor and a fifth transistor cross-coupled with the second transistor operable to allow different amounts of collector circuit to flow through the first transistor and second transistor; the first transistor, fourth transistor and sixth transistor comprising pnp transistors; the second transistor, third transistors and fifth transistor comprising npn transistors; and the first circuit and second circuit being adapted to provide gain from input to output of the average of βn and βp.
  • 7. The output stage driver recited in claim 6 being configured in an integrated circuit.
  • 8. The output stage driver recited in claim 6 being configured in a DSL line driver.
  • 9. An output stage driver, comprising:a circuit including a first transistor, a second transistor, a third transistor and a fourth transistor operable in a class AB biasing arrangement; a circuit coupling the first transistor to a sixth transistor in a cascode arrangement; a circuit coupling the second transistor to a fifth transistor in a cascode arrangement; the fifth transistor and the sixth transistor being operable to bootstrap the collector-base capacitances of the second transistor and the first transistor, respectively; and the first transistor, second transistor, third transistor, fourth transistor, fifth transistor and sixth transistor being operable to drive a load with minimal cross-over distortion with an output gain to input signal of (βn−βp)*I+((βn+βp)/2).
  • 10. The output stage driver recited in claim 9, further comprising a feedback circuit operable to remove the term (βn−βp)*I from the output.
  • 11. The output stage driver recited in claim 9 being configured in an integrated circuit.
  • 12. The output stage driver recited in claim 9 being configured in a DSL line driver.
  • 13. An output stage driver, comprising:a first voltage rail VCC being coupled to a first terminal of a first current source; a second terminal of the first current source being coupled to each of the emitter of a first transistor, the base of a fifth transistor and to the base of a third transistor; the base of the first transistor being coupled to the base of a second transistor; the collector of the first transistor being coupled to the emitter a sixth transistor in a cascode arrangement; the collector of the second transistor being coupled to the emitter of the fifth transistor in a cascode arrangement; the emitter of the second transistor being coupled to each of the base of the sixth transistor, the base of a fourth transistor and a first terminal of a second current source; a second terminal of the second current source being coupled to a second voltage rail Vee; the collector of the fifth transistor being coupled to the first voltage rail Vcc; the collector of the third transistor being coupled to the first voltage rail Vcc; the collector of the sixth transistor being coupled to the second voltage rail Vee; the collector of the fourth transistor being coupled to the second voltage rail Vee; the emitter of the third transistor being coupled to the emitter of the fourth transistor; and an output terminal being coupled to a node connecting the emitter of the third transistor and the emitter of the fourth transistor.
  • 14. The output stage driver recited in claim 13, further comprising the first, fourth and sixth transistors being pnp transistors and the second, third and fifth transistors being npn transistors.
  • 15. The output stage driver recited in claim 13, being operable to provide current gain from input to output of (βn−βp)*I+((βn+βp)/2)*δI regardless of where the output stage driver is biased.
  • 16. The output stage driver recited in claim 15, further comprising a feedback circuit operable to remove the term (Bn−Bp)*I from the output.
  • 17. The output stage drive recited in claim 13, wherein the first voltage rail Vcc is maintained at a potential higher than the second voltage rail Vee.
  • 18. The output stage driver recited in claim 13, being configured in an integrated circuit.
  • 19. The output stage driver recited in claim 13, being configured in a DSL line driver.
  • 20. A method of amplifying a signal (δI) in an output stage driver, comprising:biasing a plurality of transistors in the output stage driver class AB; injecting the signal into the output stage driver by altering the magnitudes of the signal in equal but opposite quantities; amplifying the injected signal using a plurality of transistors; outputting the amplified signal gained by (βn−βp)*I+((βn+βp)/2), where βn is the beta of an npn transistor and βp is the beta of a pnp transistor; and sensing and correcting offset current at the output using feedback principles.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number Name Date Kind
6278326 Murray et al. Aug 2001 B1
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
36051012 Mar 1985 JP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
Trask “High Efficiency Broadband Linear Push-Pull Power Amplifiers Using Linearity Augmentation” IEEE Symposium on Circuits and Systems vol. 2, 2002 pp 432-435.