1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to gain-controlled amplifier techniques, and more particularly, to a gain-controlled amplifier having high linearity and high response speed, and capable of providing a negative gain.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A gain-controlled amplifier is a widely used circuit, which is designed according to practical applications. In general, three major design parameters are considered for a gain-controlled amplifier, linearity, response speed, and gain controllable range. As is well known, it is difficult to have the gain-controlled amplifier possess high linearity, high response speed, and wide gain controllable range all at the same time. For example, high linearity may be reached by utilizing an operational amplifier to implement the gain-controlled amplifier at the expense of response speed.
It is therefore one of the objectives of the present invention to provide a gain-controlled amplifier having high linearity and high response speed, and further capable of providing a negative gain so as to increase the flexibility in using the gain-controlled amplifier.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a gain-controlled amplifier is disclosed. The gain-controlled amplifier comprises a set of switches; first and second transistors which respectively have a control terminal, a first terminal and a second terminal, second terminals of the first and second transistors being coupled to each other via a resistive element; a first current mirror which is coupled to the first terminal of the first transistor and a first terminal of the resistive element, and is for providing a set of first currents; a second current mirror which is coupled to the first terminal of the second transistor and a second terminal of the resistive element, and is for providing a set of second currents; a first resistive network which is coupled to the second terminal of the first transistor via a first current source, and is for providing a first output signal; and a second resistive network which is coupled to the second terminal of the second transistor via a second current source, and is for providing a second output signal; wherein both the first and second resistive networks have a plurality of taps, coupling to either a first current or a second current through a switch of the set of switches.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a gain-controlled amplifier is also disclosed. The gain-controlled amplifier comprises a plurality of switches; a voltage to current converter which is for generating a set of first currents and a set of second currents according to a differential input voltage; a first resistive network which has a plurality of taps, coupling to either a first current or a second current through a switch of the set of switches; and a second resistive network which has a plurality of taps, coupling to either a first current or a second current through a switch of the set of switches; wherein the first and second resistive networks generate a differential output voltage.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
The transistors utilized in the following embodiments can be implemented by MOS transistors or bipolar transistors, and each transistor has a control terminal, a first terminal and a second terminal. For the MOS transistor, the control terminal is the gate, the first terminal is the drain, and the second terminal is the source. For the bipolar transistor, the control terminal is the base, the first terminal is the collector, and the second terminal is the emitter. In practice, an NMOS transistor can be replaced with an NPN bipolar transistor, and a PMOS transistor can be replaced with a PNP bipolar transistor.
Please refer to
In this embodiment, both the first transistor 102 and the second transistor 104 are implemented by NMOS transistors. As shown in
In the gain-controlled amplifier 100, the first current mirror 110 is used for supplying a set of first currents IP1, IP2, . . . , IPX, and the second current mirror 120 is used for supplying a set of second currents IN, IN2, . . . , INX. The first current mirror 110 includes a plurality of third transistors, such as the transistors 112, 114, 116, and 118 shown in
In the first current mirror 110, the first terminal of the transistor 112 (i.e. drain) is coupled to the first terminal of the resistive element 106, the node K1, while the first terminals of other transistors (i.e. transistors 114, 116, and 118 in
Equally, in the second current mirror 120, only the first terminal of the transistor 122 (i.e. drain) is coupled to the second terminal of the resistive element 106, and the node K2, and the first terminals of other transistors (i.e. transistors 124, 126, and 128 in
As shown in
In operation, the source voltage of the first transistor 102 (i.e. voltage at the node K3) will change with the variation of the gate voltage Vip of the first transistor 102, and the source voltage of the second transistor 104 (i.e. voltage at the node K4) will change with the variation of the gate voltage Vip of the second transistor 104. When there is a potential difference between the node K3 and the node K4, the drain currents of the transistor 112 and the transistor 122 will change so as to change the current values of the set of first currents and the set of second currents. Suppose the resistive element 106 is implemented by a resistor whose resistance value is R0. The current value of the current outputted from the first current mirror 110 can be represented by the following equation:
IPY=(Vip−Vin)/R0+I1−I2 Y=1, 2, . . . , x (1)
The current value of the current outputted from the second current mirror 120 can be represented by the following equation:
INY=(Vin−Vip)/R0+I1−I2 Y=1, 2, . . . , x (2)
In the gain-controlled amplifier 100, the first resistive network 130 and the second resistive network 140 are symmetric to each other. In this embodiment, both the first resistive network 130 and the second resistive network 140 are implemented by a resistor network respectively. As shown in
For convenience of explanation, it is provided that the resistance value of R1 is equal to R3 and R2 is twice R1 in the first resistive network 130 and the second resistive network 140. In other words, both the first resistive network 130 and the second resistive network 140 are an R−2R ladder network. Under this assumption, the relation between the output voltage Vop of the first resistive network 130 and the differential input voltage of the gain-controlled amplifier 100, Vip and Vin, can be represented by the following equation:
In the same way, the relation between the output voltage Von of the second resistive network 140 and the differential input voltage of the gain-controlled amplifier 100, Vip and Vin, can be represented by the following equation:
In light of the above equations (3) and (4), it can therefore be known that the output common mode of the first resistive network 130 and the second resistive network 140 are both R1·(I1−I2)·(2−21−X). In this embodiment, the differential output signal of the gain-controlled amplifier 100 is as below:
Dividing the equation (5) by the differential input signal of the gain-controlled amplifier 100, i.e. Vip−Vin, the gain of the gain-controlled amplifier 100 can be obtained as below:
It can therefore be known from equation (6) that the gain of the gain-controlled amplifier 100 in this embodiment is related to the resistance value R0 of the resistive element 106, the control signals S1, S2, . . . , SX, and the resistance values in the first resistive network 130 and the second resistive network 140; however, the gain of the gain-controlled amplifier 100 is independent of resistance values of switches in the set of switches 190. Even if the impedance value of each switch of the set of switches 190 is nonlinear, the gain of the gain-controlled amplifier 100 will not be affected; therefore, the gain-controlled amplifier 100 disclosed above has an excellent linearity. In addition, each control signal SY is either 0 or 1 in this embodiment so that the term (1−2*SY) in equation (6) is either 1 or −1. For this reason, if the control signals S1, S2, . . . , SX are programmed properly, the gain-controlled amplifier 100 of this embodiment is capable of providing a negative gain so as to increase the flexibility in using the gain-controlled amplifier 100.
On the other hand, the above-mentioned gain-controlled amplifier 100 is implemented by a V-to-I converter and two resistance networks symmetric to each other, so that the response speed of the gain-controlled amplifier 100 is better than that of a conventional gain-controlled amplifier implemented by operational amplifiers. In practice, the PMOS transistors in the above-mentioned gain-controlled amplifier 100 can be replaced with NMOS transistors, and vice versa.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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95127106 A | Jul 2006 | TW | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5668502 | Rijns | Sep 1997 | A |
5828265 | Mensink et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
6621343 | Hart | Sep 2003 | B2 |
6693491 | Delano | Feb 2004 | B1 |
7368990 | Tsuchi | May 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080024220 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |