The present invention relates to bandgap voltage reference circuits and in particular to a low noise bandgap voltage reference circuit.
Bandgap voltage reference circuits are well known. Such circuits provide for a summation of two voltages having opposite variations with temperature. The first voltage corresponds to a forward biased p-n junction having a Complimentary to Absolute Temperature (CTAT) variation. A first order temperature insensitive voltage is generated by adding a CTAT voltage to a Proportional to Absolute Temperature (PTAT) voltage such that the two slopes compensate each other. The PTAT voltage is generated by amplifying the base-emitter voltage difference of two transistors operating at different collector current density.
An example of such a low noise implementation of a bandgap voltage reference is described in
The nominal output voltage reference of the circuit of
These and other problems are addressed by provision of a bandgap voltage reference circuit configured to provide a low noise voltage reference at an output thereof. Such a circuit may be implemented using an amplifier coupled to first and second transistors respectively, the transistors being configured to generate a voltage indicative of a base emitter voltage difference between each of the first and second transistors across a sensing resistor, this voltage difference being used to generate the required voltage reference. By providing an additional current to the sensing transistor it is possible to reduce the contribution of noise from the first transistor into the amplifier, thereby reducing the noise characteristics of the circuit.
Such a circuit may be considered as being temperature insensitive to a first order. By including a temperature dependent current source providing a current to the first transistor within the circuit, it is possible to reduce second order temperature effects from the voltage reference.
These and other features will be better understood with reference to the followings Figures which are provided to assist in an understanding of the teaching of the invention.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
To address the problems of the prior art and other problems, the invention teaches the provision of a bandgap voltage reference circuit that can be implemented with low noise characteristics. To achieve such low noise, a bandgap reference circuit is provided that includes an amplifier coupled at its inputs to first and second transistors respectively, the transistors being arranged to generate a voltage representative of the base emitter voltage differences between each of the first and second transistors across a sensing resistor. The circuit additionally provides an additional current to the sensing resistor to reduce the noise contribution into the amplifier from the first transistor.
Circuits provided in accordance with the teaching of the invention will now be described. Such circuits are provided to assist the person skilled in the art with an understanding of the implementation of the teaching and it is not intended to limit the invention in any way except may be as deemed necessary in the light of the claims that follow. Therefore it will be understood that components or elements which are described with reference to the exemplary arrangements that follow could be replaced or interchanged with other components or elements without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Modifications to the circuitry described hereinafter will be apparent to the person skilled in the art and should be considered as falling within the scope of the teaching of the invention.
Each of Q1 and Q3 are provided in first and second legs of the circuit and are desirably coupled in series to first r1 and second r3 resistors respectively. The value of r1 is desirably much greater than that of r3. These legs provide first I1 and second I3 currents respectively To provide for a further reduction in noise within the circuit, an additional current I2 is provided at the sensing resistor R4. This current reduces the contribution required from the first current I1, which results in less noise being provided at the input to the amplifier. This additional current or shunt current is desirably generated by providing a third leg of the circuit which includes the diode connected transistor Q2 provided in series with a resistor, r2. The value of the resistor r2 is desirably much less than that of r1.
The provision of this shunt current serves to reduce the circuit noise as base-emitter voltage difference which is generated across the sensing resistor, r4, is provided mainly via the diode connected transistor Q2 and r2 for r1>>r2. The collector and base current of Q1 is reduced in comparison to Q3 as r1>>r3 such that a very large base-emitter voltage difference from Q3 to Q1 is established. As base-emitter voltage difference is large the gain in proportional to absolute temperature, PTAT, voltage is low and the noise is low.
The noise contribution from the amplifier A is also reduced as Q1 act as an amplifier with a gain of more than 10. As a result the offset voltage and noise due to the amplifier are accordingly reduced.
As the amplifier A keeps its two inputs at substantially the same voltage level the voltage drop across r1 and r3 are substantially the same:
I
1
*r
1
=I
3
*r
3 (1)
The base-emitter voltage difference from Q3 to Q1 is reflected across the sensing resistor r4 as:
As equation (2) shows this base-emitter voltage difference, ΔVbe, is enlarged by the ratio of r1/r3. Here it will be understood that it is assumed that the base currents are negligible compared to emitter and collector currents. Also the saturation current of Q1 is “n” times larger compared to Q3.
The current via Q2 and r2 is:
Where I1 is the collector (and emitter) current of Q1.
The reference voltage is provided at the output voltage of the amplifier according to Equations (4) and (5):
V
ref
=V
be(Q3)+I3*r3=Vbe(Q3)+I1*r1 (5)
It can be assumed that an ideal amplifier I1 can be expressed as:
From Equations (2), (3), (4), (5) and (6) we get:
As Equation (7) shows the reference voltage consists of two fractions of CTAT voltages, due to Q2 and Q3 and a corresponding PTAT voltage, due to ΔVbe. When CTAT and PTAT voltages are well balanced the reference voltage is at the first order, temperature insensitive.
Q2 and Q3 are preferable unity emitter bipolar transistors. If they operate at the same collector current then their base-emitter voltages are similar and the reference voltage is:
Preferably r1>>r2 and the reference voltage is:
From a review of Equation (9) it will be noted that by trimming one of the two resistors, r2 or r4 it is possible to trim the reference to an optimum temperature coefficient, TC.
For applications where die area and cost are more important than noise, the reference according to
It will be understood that transistor Q1 acts as a preamplifier with a gain:
G
1
=g
m(Q1)*r1 (10)
Here transistor Q1 may be considered as being provided in a common emitter configuration as the emitter voltage of transistor Q1 is mainly provided via transistor Q2 and resistor r2.
Where
And:
Here K is gain factor for the ΔVbe voltage at which the PTAT and CTAT components are balanced in order to provide a temperature insensitive voltage reference.
Finally the gain of transistor Q1 is:
As Equation (13) shows this gain is temperature insensitive. It has a typical value of about 15 to 20. Accordingly the noise and offset voltage introduced by the amplifier A are reduced by the same factor.
For those skilled in the art it is apparent that the circuit of
It will be understood that a circuit in accordance with the teaching of the present invention provides for many advantages over prior art implementations. Such advantages include:
operable with very low noise;
it may be implemented using a single type of bipolar transistors, NPN or PNP;
it is operable with very low supply voltages, close to the reference voltage.
While the circuit of
A modification to the circuit of
The circuit of
In a circuit such as that provided in
I
1
*r
1
=I
3
*r
3 (14)
It will be understood that the collector currents of Q2 and Q3 are essentially PTAT currents such that I3 can be expressed as:
Here I30 is Q3 collector current at reference temperature, T0.
The collector current of Q1 corresponds to the current difference from I1 in r1 and offset current, I0(1−T/T0). As a result the base-emitter voltage difference from Q3 to Q1 is:
VT0 in Equation 16 corresponds to thermal voltage at temperature T0; for T0=300K it is of the order of 26 mV.
Equation 16 can be transformed as Equation 17:
For:
The base-emitter voltage difference is:
The voltage difference of Equation 19 may be expanded as shown in Equation 20 to have two components; the first, VT0n, independent of the offset current, and the second, F(T), which is a non-linear temperature dependent component:
It is known that the non-linear term in base emitter voltage of a bipolar transistor biased with PTAT current may be given by Equation 21:
Here XTI which is a temperature constant, is of the order of 3 to 5.
At a temperature of approximately T0, Equation 21 can be approximated as:
The non-linear component of base-emitter voltage difference (F(T) in Equation 20) can also be approximated as:
As the base-emitter voltage difference of the circuit (i.e. voltage drop across r4) is scaled to balance the base-emitter voltage of Q2 the non-linear component of base-emitter voltage is scaled by the same factor:
This factor is temperature independent. At temperature T0, say room temperature, it is:
For typical values of Vref=1.25V, Vbe(Q20)=0.7V and ΔVbe0=0.15V the gain factor is GPTAT=3.66.
Accordingly the non-linear component in the PTAT voltage is:
The reference voltage provided at the output of the circuit is therefore curvature corrected as is evident from an examination of Equation 27:
v
non
lin
be
+V
non
lin
PTAT=0
This corresponds to:
From Equation 28 we get:
Now from Equations 18 and 29 it can be seen that the offset current amplitude, I0, can be calculated as:
It will be understood therefore that by incorporating a current of the form of I0(1−T/T0) that second order curvature effects can be reduced. Such a current may be provided in any one of a number of different ways. One solution is to generate it as a difference of two currents one PTAT, one CTAT.
As shown in
From the following analysis it is evident that such an arrangement provides the current through r5 of the form of I0(1−T/T0).
If A is assumed to be with zero offset, across r5 a voltage difference is established:
V
r5
=V
be(Q3)−(Vref−Vbe(Q2)) (31)
The reference voltage is a combination of a CTAT voltage, which is base-emitter voltage of Q2 or Q3 assumed to be the same, and a PTAT voltage, the voltage across r4 and r2. For r1>>r2 the voltage reference can be approximated as:
From Equations 31 and 32 we get:
The linear term in base-emitter voltage of Q3 is:
Here VG0 is extrapolated bandgap voltage from temperature T0to 0K with a typical value of about 1.15V.
From Equations 31 and 34 it is evident that the voltage drop across r5 is:
As it is known for any bandgap type voltage reference to be close to the middle of the temperature range, T0, the base-emitter voltage, Vbe(T0), is balanced by the scaled base-emitter voltage difference, such that at Vr5 is of the desired form:
As Equation 36 shows the voltage Vr5 drops linearly from a VG0 value at zero Kelvin to zero value at T0. For T>T0 this voltage is negative. In other words the current through r5 is positive for T<T0 and negative for T>T0.
Two voltage reference circuits according to
As the simulations show the voltage deviation in the specified temperature range of 185° C. for uncorrected reference voltage is 4 mV. This corresponds to a temperature coefficient, TC, of 18 ppm/° C. The reference voltage deviation for the circuit of
While the inclusion of the I0(1−T/T0) current has been described with reference to a simple arrangement where first, second and third transistors are provided in each of the first, second and third legs respectively it will be understood that the inclusion of such a current may be applied to any variation of the circuit of
Advantages of the implementation of such a curvature corrected reference voltage include the very fact of its simplicity. As the desired current can be achieved by incorporation of a single resistor, curvature correction can be achieved with a minimum of area loss within the silicon. Such simplicity is also desirable in that the circuit may be implemented with low temperature coefficients.
It will be understood that the present invention has been described with specific NPN configurations of bipolar transistors but that these descriptions are of exemplary embodiments of the invention and it is not intended that the application of the invention be limited to any such illustrated configuration. It will be understood that many modifications and variations in configurations may be considered or achieved in alternative implementations without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Specific components, features and values have been used to describe the circuits in detail, but it is not intended that the invention be limited in any way except as may be deemed necessary in the light of the appended claims. It will be further understood that some of the components of the circuits hereinbefore described have been with reference to their conventional signals and the internal architecture and functional description of for example an amplifier has been omitted. Such functionality will be well known to the person skilled in the art and where additional detail is required may be found in any one of a number of standard text books.
Similarly the words comprises/comprising when used in the specification are used to specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps or components but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more additional features, integers, steps, components or groups thereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11880760 | Jul 2007 | US |
Child | 11890759 | US |