(1) Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a voltage controlled variable capacitor, and more particularly, to a variable capacitor, formed of a larger number of fixed capacitor segments and a corresponding number of switching elements, which are typically integrated with the capacitance controlling functions on an integrated semiconductor circuit.
(2) Description of Prior Art
One example of a voltage-controlled capacitor is a varactor diode. When a reverse voltage is applied to a PN junction, it creates a depletion region, essentially devoid of carriers, which behaves as the dielectric of a capacitor. The depletion region increases as reverse voltage across it increases; thus the junction capacitance will decrease as the voltage across the PN junction increases. However the characteristics are non-linear and are widely temperature and process dependent. There is also a significant leakage current problem. Varactor diodes must be operated below the junction breakdown voltage. The varactor diode is sometimes called a varicap.
a shows the principle of a varactor diode;
a shows the basic circuit concept. However, as is demonstrated in
U.S. Pat. No. 6,356,135 (to Rastegar) describes an electronically trimable capacitor having a plurality of branch circuits, each including a capacitor which may be selectively controlled by a switch to contribute or not to the net capacitance exhibited by the trimable capacitor. Operation of the switches is under direction of digital instruction.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,514,999 (to Koifman , et al.) shows a differential switched capacitor circuit, comprising: multiple switched capacitor stages, coupled in a chain.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,449,141 and 4,456,917 (to Sato, et al.) disclose a variable capacitor comprising a plurality of variable capacitor elements each having depletion layer control sections and a capacity reading section formed on a semiconductor substrate so that the capacity appearing at each capacity reading section varies in response to the bias voltage applied to the depletion layer control sections.
A principal object of the invention described in the present document is to control the capacitance of a variable capacitor in a strictly linear mode through a tuning voltage. A fundamental requirement is to achieve a high Q-factor at the same time.
The basic aspects of a mechanism to linearly control the capacitance of a variable capacitor in a linear mode through a tuning voltage are described in a related patent application. This related patent application, which is entitled “High Q linear controlled variable capacitor” (Document Nr. DS03-005A), is hereby incorporated by reference.
In accordance with the objectives of this invention, a circuit to implement a voltage controlled variable capacitor, operating in a linear mode and maintaining High Q-Factor is achieved. The invention disclosed in the referenced document DS03-005A added circuits and methods to linearize the capacitance change and to minimize the effect of parasitic resistance in the capacitor switching elements, which would degrade Q-factor. The herewith disclosed invention further implements a translinear amplifier and adds additional circuits to further reduce the effect of parasitic resistance and of temperature deviation.
One key point to obtain highest possible Q-factor is to have at any time only one transistor in the active operating mode, i.e. RDSon-change-mode; all other transistors are either fully switched on or fully switched off.
Key element to achieve the goal of the invention is the introduction of a translinear amplifier into the signal path. Furthermore, functions to limit the switching-signal in order to drive the capacitor-switching element, typically a FET-transistor, into minimum RDSon or maximum RDSoff are added. Even further, a circuit to compensate the temperature effect of the capacitor switching device is added.
The translinear amplifier, typically with a gain of 1, compares a differential voltage at its inputs and provides the same differential voltage at its outputs; i.e. the output difference of said amplifier strictly follows the difference at said amplifier inputs, independent of the absolute voltage level at the outputs; input and output are perfectly decoupled. Said translinear amplifier can operate at different absolute voltage levels at their input and work independent at an output level, best suitable for said switching transistor's operation.
While the switching transistor is kept within its active switching mode (RDS changing mode) the resistance of the transistor linearly follows the input difference of said translinear amplifier. As said translinear amplifier can operate at different absolute voltage levels at their input and output, the resulting level shifting operation is best suitable for said switching transistor's operation.
Additional circuit elements, described in the companion disclosure Document DS03-006, implementing a signal-limiting function, drive said switching transistor either into its fully-on state (RDSon going to 0) or drive it into its fully-off state (RDSoff going very high) when said switching device is outside its dedicated active working area.
There are various techniques to generate a set of reference values defining the threshold points for each of said amplifier stages. And there are various techniques to provide a tuning voltage, dedicated for the voltage controlled capacitance change, to all of said amplifier stages.
The total concept according to the proposed invention is shown in
Depending on the technique to implement the reference values for each of the amplifiers within said translinear amplifier chain, even specific nonlinear relations of capacitance change versus tuning voltage can be constructed.
In accordance with the objectives of this invention, a set of individual capacitors is implemented. Such capacitors could, for example, be discrete metal or polymer capacitors on a common planar carrier or they could be integrated on a semiconductor substrate. The switching device is typically a FET transistor, which could be for example a P-MOS or N-MOS junction FET or a CMOS FET.
The amplifier primarily generating the control signal for the switching devices is, according to the invention, a translinear amplifier. In addition, a signal-limiting function, which is designed to drive said switching device to a fully-on status, when said switching device is outside its dedicated active working area on the lower resistance side or to drive said switching device to a fully-on status, when said switching device is outside its dedicated active working area on the lower resistance side, can be implemented. Such signal-limiting function could, according to the invention, be implemented within the translinear amplifier. It could however be implemented as separate circuit as well.
The circuit also provides the components to generate the set of reference voltages for the threshold voltages of each amplifier stage. A resistor chain is one possible solution. The amplifiers then use the tuning voltage supplied and said reference voltages to generate the control signal for said switching devices, which then switch the capacitors in parallel, one after the other.
Furthermore, the temperature deviation, caused by the temperature characteristics of the switching device can be compensated. One concept is to use a device of the identical type of the switching device to produce a temperature dependent signal and feed it as compensating voltage into the output reference point of the translinear amplifier. This will mirror the exact equivalent of the temperature error into the switching control signal and compensate its temperature error.
Even further, a specific non-linear characteristic of the tuning voltage to capacitance relation can be achieved by dimensioning the relation between said tuning voltage and said threshold points as desired. In one proposed solution, the individual steps of the reference resistor chain will be dimensioned to the desired nonlinear curve.
A translinear amplifier typically has a gain of 1. However, a gain different from 1 is also achievable, which, if implemented, gives one more degree of freedom in dimensioning the circuit parameters. For example, the remaining overlapping of neighboring capacitor switching stages may be even further reduced.
In accordance with the objectives of this invention, a method to control the capacitance of a variable capacitor in a strictly linear mode through a tuning voltage and to achieve a high Q-factor at the same time generate, is achieved. One method is to switch a variable number of capacitors in parallel, where only one is in the active transition phase of being switched on in a continual mode. All other capacitors of a larger number of capacitors are either already fully switched on or are still complete switched off. One key method is to linearly control the switching function for each of said continual switching devices, when said switching device is in its dedicated active working area in a linear mode, but to change the signal abrupt, as soon as the control signal for said switching function leaves its dedicated active working area. One method drives said switching device to a fully-on status, when said switching device is outside its dedicated active working area on the lower resistance side. A similar method drives said switching device to a fully-off status, when said switching device is beyond its dedicated active working area on the higher resistance side. A further method amplifies, by the means of a translinear amplifier, the difference of the capacitance tuning voltage and the reference voltage of each amplifier stage, producing the linear control signal for said continually switching operation. Another method generates a set of reference values, one for each of said amplifier stages. Finally, the circuit supplies a tuning voltage, dedicated for the voltage controlled capacitance change, to all of said amplifier stages.
A further method compensates the temperature effect of the switching device. It generates a temperature dependent compensation voltage by using an identical device-type as the switching device and feeds the resulting signal into the output reference point of the translinear amplifier
An even further method is to produce threshold points (or reference points) along a non-linear curve and getting a desired non-linear relation of the total capacitance changes versus tuning voltage.
Even more, with a translinear amplifier with a gain different from 1, the whole concept gains one more degree of freedom in optimizing certain operating parameters, like the overlapping of neighboring switching stages.
In the accompanying drawings, forming a material part of this description, there is shown:
a (Prior Art) shows a simplified structure of a varactor diode.
b (Prior Art) shows the relation of the capacitor over tuning voltage change and shows the effects of temperature and process variation.
a, and 2b (Prior Art) shows a principal circuit of a switched capacitor chain and the relation of the capacitor over tuning voltage change.
a shows the gate voltage versus tuning voltage relation for the series of capacitor switching stages, according to
b visualizes the signal overlapping effect of the switching operations of just 2 stages of the circuit according to
a demonstrates the resulting capacitance versus tuning voltage for multiple capacitor switching stages, according to
b demonstrates the resulting Q-factor versus tuning voltage for multiple capacitor switching stages, according to
The objectives of this invention are to control the capacitance of a variable capacitor in a strictly linear mode through a tuning voltage. A fundamental requirement is to achieve a high Q-factor at the same time.
A discussion of the general principles of a voltage controlled variable capacitor with linear characteristic, formed of a larger number of fixed capacitor segments and a corresponding number of switching elements, using operational amplifiers is disclosed in the related patent application DS03-005A, the entire contents of which is incorporated herewith by reference.
A detailed view on the individual ramp-up functions at the switching transistor's gate, of the circuit according to
According to the objectives of this invention, the operational amplifiers as shown in
The translinear amplifier in
Within a chain of said translinear amplifiers, each one can operate at a different absolute voltage level at their input and work independent at another output level. In this way the network to generate the reference voltages can be optimized independently for each stage, because the voltage level best suitable for the control operation of each switching transistor can be freely selected. In the circuit shown in
Another key point of the invention is the implementation of a signal-limiting function at both ends of the active switch operating area. As long as the switching transistor is kept within its active switching mode (RDS changing mode) the resistance of the transistor linearly follows the input difference of said translinear amplifier. Once the signal controlling the switching device leaves the dedicated active area, the signal condition is changed abrupt.
Furthermore, a concept of this disclosure is to compensate the temperature deviation, caused by the temperature characteristics of the switching device;
The total capacitance versus tuning voltage characteristic for a circuit with n-stages is demonstrated in
Depending on the technique to implement the reference values defining said threshold points for each of the amplifiers within said translinear amplifier chain, even specific nonlinear relations of capacitance change versus tuning voltage can be constructed. The concept is demonstrated in
In accordance with the objectives of this invention, a set of individual capacitors is implemented. Such capacitors could be discrete metal or polymer capacitors on a common planar carrier or they could be integrated on a semiconductor substrate. The advantage of a capacitor not being of the junction (diode) type capacitor is the invariance due to voltage or temperature at the capacitor. The switching device is typically a FET transistor, which could be for example a P-MOS or N-MOS junction FET or a CMOS FET. In the case complementary components are used all voltage levels would just be inverted without changing the principals of operation.
The method to achieve the objectives of this invention is illustrated in
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 04 368 004.0 | Jan 2004 | EP | regional |