This invention relates to an internally compensated low-dropout regulator, and in particular to such a regulator that does not necessarily require an off-chip capacitor for stability, to improve both load transient response and power supply rejection ratio.
Power management is necessary to reduce standby power consumption of low-power portable applications such as mobile phones and personal digital assistants (PDAs). A low-dropout regulator (LDO) is a type of voltage regulator that is widely utilized in power management integrated circuits. They are especially suitable for applications that require a low-noise and precision supply voltage with minimum off-chip components. With the rapid development of system-on-chip designs, there is a growing trend towards power-management integration. On-chip and local LDOs are used to power up system sub-blocks individually and this can significantly reduce cross talk, improve voltage regulation and eliminate voltage spikes. However, an off-chip capacitor, which provides LDO stability and good load transient response, cannot be eliminated in conventional LDO designs based on pole-zero cancellation. This is the main obstacle to the full integration of LDOs in system-on-chip designs. Though there are some LDO designs with internal compensation, the frequency and transient performances are sacrificed as tradeoffs.
A conventional CMOS LDO, as shown in
According to the present invention there is provided a circuit of low-dropout regulator comprising an error amplifier, a high-gain second-stage amplifier, a power p-type MOS transistor operating in either linear or saturation region, a first-order high-pass feedback network, a frequency compensation circuitry implementing damping-factor-control compensation and a voltage reference.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described by the way of example and with reference to accompanying drawings, in which
The present invention provides a low-dropout regulator which is based on the concept of frequency compensation of a three-stage amplifier with a pole-splitting effect. The theory of existing frequency compensation topologies of multi-stage amplifier has been disclosed in K. N. Leung and P. K. T. Mok, “Analysis of Multi-Stage Amplifier-Frequency Compensation,” IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I, vol. 48, no. 9, pp.1041–1056, September 2001. In fact, the loop-gain bandwidth, which relates significantly to the response time of LDO, is controlled by the associated frequency compensation scheme.
An example of a LDO according to an embodiment of the invention is illustrated in
The stability of the LDO illustrated in
The stability of the LDO according to this embodiment of the invention may be considered for two cases: IOUT=0 and IOUT≠0. Define that
When an off-chip capacitor is connected to the output of the LDO and IOUT=0, the transconductance and the output resistance of the power p-type MOS transistor is minimum and maximum, respectively. This is the worst-case stability of the LDO with a damping-factor-control frequency compensation scheme. In this situation, the LDO has a transfer function, which is given by
With the condition gm4=4gm1, the complex pole has a damping factor of 1/√{square root over (2)}. Thus, the position of this complex pole is given by
The effect of p2,3 can be canceled by ze and zf. Since p2,3 splits to a high frequency by the DFC compensation scheme, ze and zf are at high frequencies. This implies that a low electrostatic series resistance is needed. A better load transient response and power supply rejection ratio can be obtained. Moreover, pf is designed to be larger than the unity-gain frequency of the loop gain for a good phase margin. Due to the advanced pole-splitting effect by damping-factor-control frequency compensation, the pole frequency of p2,3 is high and a wide loop-gain bandwidth can be achieved.
When the load current increases (IOUT≠0), gmp also increases and the transfer function is rewritten as
It is reduced to a one-zero three-poles system, and a new pole
is created. zf can be used to cancel p2 to make the system stable. Moreover, the low-frequency loop gain decreases and p1 shifts to a higher frequency since gmprop is inversely proportional to √{square root over (IOUT)}. Moreover, it is noted that the electrostatic-series-resistance zero has no effect on this condition since an electrostatic-series-resistance pole is created simultaneously. The simulated Bode plot of loop gain with an off-chip capacitor is shown in
When the LDO according to this embodiment of the invention is used for an application without using the off-chip capacitor, the LDO is also stable for finite load current range. Under such circumstance, COUT=0 and electrostatic series resistance does not exist. Moreover, the second and third poles are pushed to frequencies that are much higher than the unity-gain frequency of loop gain due to a large gmp with transfer function given by
Pole-zero cancellation is automatically achieved for zf and pf, and thus the theoretical phase margin is about 90°. However, parasitic poles and zeros will degrade the phase margin. The simulated Bode plot of loop gain with an off-chip capacitor is shown in
It should also be noted that the damping-factor-control means could be connected not only to the output of the first gain stage, but also to the output of the second gain stage.
At least in preferred embodiments, the present invention solves stability problem of LDO design and makes system-on-chip possible by providing stable operation and fast dynamic responses either with or without an off-chip capacitor. The structure and the corresponding schematic of the LDO invention are illustrated in
With this structure, the LDO is absolutely stable either with or without the output capacitor. Moreover, the required internal compensation capacitors are small and can be easily integrated in any standard CMOS technology. The small compensation capacitors speed up the transient response as well. The wide bandwidth of the LDO provides a good power supply rejection ratio to reject high-frequency noise from voltage supply, and the LDO serves well as a post regulator for switching-mode power converters. The measured load transient responses and the power supply rejection ratios show that the LDO is absolutely stable and provides fast responses. Moreover, the good ripple rejection of the LDO shows the post-regulation ability of the LDO.
An example of the present invention has been described above but it will be understood that a number of variations may be made to the circuit design without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. At least in its preferred forms the present invention provides a significant departure from the prior art both conceptually and structurally. While a particular embodiment of the present invention has been described, it is understood that various alternatives, modifications and substitutions can be made without departing from the concept of the present invention. Moreover, the present invention is disclosed in CMOS implementation but the present invention is not limited to any particular integrated-circuit technology and also discrete-component implementation.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6208206 | Leung et al. | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6300749 | Castelli et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6304131 | Huggins et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6441680 | Leung et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6696869 | Tan | Feb 2004 | B1 |
6710583 | Stanescu et al. | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6819165 | Ho et al. | Nov 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040164789 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60435357 | Dec 2002 | US |