Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6441594
-
Patent Number
6,441,594
-
Date Filed
Friday, April 27, 200123 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, August 27, 200222 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Mansfield; Heather L.
- Pappas; Joanne N.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 323 225
- 323 226
- 323 273
- 323 274
- 323 275
- 323 276
- 323 277
- 323 279
- 323 280
- 323 281
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A voltage regulator 100, 130 for isolating radio frequency circuits from on chip digital circuit originated noise and an integrated circuit chip including the voltage regulator. The voltage regulator 100, 130 includes regulator device (a PFET) 106 driven by a sense amplifier 110 to derive a regulator voltage 108 from a supply voltage 102. Another sense amplifier 114 senses changes in output load and adjusts current flow through a current shunt 120, 122 so that the current shunt 120, 122 shunts excess load current. The sense amplifier 110 driving the voltage regulator device 106 senses current flow through the current shunt 120, 122 and adjusts the current supplied by the regulator device 106 to reduce excess current. The current shunt 120, 122 is a series connected PFET 120 and NFET diode 122, with the gate of the PFET 120 driven to control current flow. Each of the sense amplifiers 110, 114 includes a pair of PFETs 132, 134 140, 142 and a pair of NFETs 136, 138 144, 146, the drain of each PFET of the pair is tied to a corresponding drain of one of the pair of NFETs. A voltage divider 116, 118 connected between the regulator voltage 108 and ground provides a sense voltage to the output sense amplifier 114 so that the output sense amplifier compares the sense voltage against a reference voltage (VREF) to determine whether the regulator device is providing too much, not enough or just the right output current level.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to power supply regulators for radio frequency applications and more particularly to a shunt regulator for high frequency applications.
2. Background Description
Voltage regulators are well known. An ideal voltage regulator provides a constant voltage regardless of load. Thus, the voltage regulator provides the same voltage under no load (at no current) as it does fully loaded. Current used by circuits in the complementary insulated gate field effect transistor (FET) technology, commonly known as CMOS, primarily, is switching current with negligible static (or DC) current flow.
CMOS circuit current flow usually occurs only during switching, primarily, either to charge or discharge the circuit's load (capacitance). Thus, digital circuits that are synchronized by a common clock signal may exhibit sporadic episodes of very high switching current, e.g., from a counter switching from FFFF
16
to OOOO
16
. By contrast, typical radio frequency circuits, such as may be used in a radio telephone or cellular phone, exhibit relatively uniform switching and, therefore, have relatively uniform current. Variations between no load and full load current, such as may occur with digital circuits, can cause large switching noise that must be filtered to prevent errors in CMOS analog circuits on the same integrated circuit substrate or chip. Shunt regulators may be used to reduce switching and other current related noise.
A typical shunt regulator includes an alternate current path for regulator current, the regulator supplying constant current during no load conditions as well as during full load. The parallel current path maintains an effective load such that even as the load varies, the regulator supplies constant (full load) current with excess current being shunted through the parallel path. Many state of the art shunt regulators are designed to maintain effective constant current. That unused portion of the full load current in excess of the load current is shunted through a shunt device in the shunt regulator and so, wasted.
High frequency circuits, and especially radio frequency (RF) circuits, are very sensitive to noise. Switching noise from digital circuits can easily couple into radio frequency circuits thereby, degrading circuit performance. As higher degrees of integration are being achieved, larger numbers of complex high frequency circuits are being integrated onto a single integrated circuit chip. Further, as digital circuit performance improves, digital functions are also being combined with RF functions onto monolithic integrated circuit chips integrating more and more digital and RF circuits onto the same chip and resulting in an increased number of local potential noise sources on a given chip. To mitigate this problem on-chip voltage regulators may be used to provide separate isolated voltage supplies for digital and for RF circuits, thereby, isolating digital switching currents from input power supplies and from other on-chip RF circuits. This approach significantly reduces the digital switching noise that might otherwise couple into the RF circuits. Typically, shunt regulators are used for this type of isolation.
A typical prior art shunt regulator is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,432 entitled “Highly Stable Constant-Voltage Power Source Device” to Noro. Noro describes a shunt regulator that is biased to deliver a constant current to a parallel combination of a load and shunt device. This constant current value must be set high enough to supply the maximum load current and any lesser variations thereof with the excess passing through the shunt device. Consequently, Noro's shunt regulator constantly provides the maximum current and, when there is no load current, i.e., it is unloaded, all of the supply current is shunted through the shunt device. Accordingly, when the load is less than full, Noro wastes some of the power supplied.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,260,644 entitled “Self-Adjusting Shunt Regulator and Method” to Curtis describes a shunt regulator which attempts to isolate power supply and load, automatically adjusting supply current to compensate for load variations. Unfortunately, the Curtis shunt regulator also consume & excess power when it is not fully loaded. The Curtis shunt regulator varies shunt current to compensate for changes in load currents such that fluctuation of total supply current are only a small fraction of fluctuations of load current.
These prior art shunt regulators are used to provide isolation between a chip power supply and a digital circuit portion of the chip load. These shunt regulators can tolerate rapidly varying load current. Unfortunately, these typical prior art shunt regulators suffer from excessive power consumption, while only providing limited isolation between digital and RF circuits that are integrated onto the same integrated circuit chip.
Thus, there is a need for improved shunt regulators that more effectively isolate digital circuits from RF circuits integrated onto the same chip, but with a minimum increase in load current.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The foregoing and other objects, aspects and advantages will be better understood from the following detailed preferred embodiment description with reference to the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1
shows an example of a preferred embodiment integrated circuit chip with both digital and RF circuits;
FIGS. 2 and 3
show a block diagram of the preferred embodiment voltage regulator according to the present invention; and
FIG. 4
shows a schematic of an implementation of the voltage regulator of FIGS.
2
and
3
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is a voltage regulator, which may be termed a shunt regulator, for isolating radio frequency circuits from on-chip digital circuit originated noise and the integrated circuit chip. Unlike prior art shunt regulators, which constantly supply full current, shunting any current not used by the load; the voltage regulator of the present invention constantly shunts a minimum current, e.g., 1 mA, and supplies whatever current needed for the load in excess of that minimum, responsive to variations in the shunt current. The voltage regulator includes regulator device (a PFET) driven by a sense amplifier to derive a regulator voltage from a supply voltage. Another sense amplifier senses changes in output voltage resulting from load current changes and adjusts current through a current shunt so that the current shunt shunts excess load current. The sense amplifier driving the regulator device senses current flow through the current shunt and adjusts the current supplied by the regulator device, to reduce excess current. The current shunt is a series connected PFET and NFET diode with the gate of the PFET driven to control current flow. Each of the sense amplifiers includes a pair of PFETs and a pair of NFETS, the drain of each PFET of the pair is tied to a corresponding drain of one of the pair of NFETs. A voltage divider connected between the regulator voltage and ground provides a sense voltage to the output sense amplifier so that the output sense amplifier compares the sense voltage against a reference voltage to determine whether the current shunt is providing too much, not enough or just the right output voltage level.
Turning now to the drawings and more particularly
FIG. 1
shows an example of an integrated chip
50
with both digital circuits
60
and radio frequency circuits
70
isolated by voltage regulator
100
with constant shunt current according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2
shows a block diagram of the voltage regulator
100
according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The present invention is a low power, high performance voltage regulator
100
that senses and compensates for load variations reflected in a minimum shunt current, e.g., one milliamp (1 mA), supplying load current as needed, thereby maintaining unneeded shunt current at an efficiently low level, while providing improved voltage regulation to connected circuits. Experimentally, a 12 dB supply noise reduction has been shown using the shunt regulator circuit
100
for improved on-chip isolation between noisy digital circuits and sensitive high performance analog circuits integrated on the same chip.
In
FIG. 2
, chip supply voltage (VDD) is applied to the voltage regulator
100
at supply line
102
. An input decoupling capacitor
104
is connected between VDD (or VDD)
102
and ground (GND). The source of a voltage regulation device, PFET
106
, is connected to the unregulated input or supply voltage
102
. The drain of PFET
106
is connected to provide output regulated voltage
108
, isolating VDD from regulated supply voltage VDDREG. Sense amplifier
110
drives the gate of regulator PFET
106
with frequency compensation capacitor
112
connected between the output of sense amplifier
110
and unregulated supply voltage VDD
102
. The negative input to sense amplifier
110
is connected to a bias voltage V
BIAS
and its positive input is connected to a current sense device in the output of the shunt regulator
100
. Resistors R
1
,
116
and R
2
,
118
are connected between the regulated output voltage
108
and ground to form a voltage divider. A reference voltage (VREF) is provided to the positive input of a voltage sensing sense amplifier
114
and a sense voltage from voltage divider resistors
116
,
118
provides its negative input. The output of sense amplifier
114
biases the gate of shunt PFET
120
. The drain of PFET
120
is connected to the gate to drain connection of diode connected NFET diode
122
. The source of diode connected NFET
122
is connected to ground. Frequency compensation capacitor
124
is connected between the output of sense amplifier
114
and ground. The drain connection of NFET
122
and PFET
120
is the current sense output, connected to the positive input of sense amplifier
110
. Output decoupling capacitor
126
is connected between regulated output voltage VDDREG
108
and ground.
FIG. 3
is an example of a bias voltage (V
BIAS
) generator. A bias reference current (I
bias
) source
127
is connected to the gate/drain of a diode connected NFET
128
. The source of NFET
128
is connected to ground. The bias voltage (V
BIAS
) is the gate to source voltage of NFET
128
and is representative of bias reference current I
BIAS
.
At steady state, VDDREG =VREF *(R
1
+R
2
)/R
2
. The output of sense amplifier
114
is equal to VDDREG less the magnitude of the PFET threshold voltage (V
Tp
) and some small voltage (*
p
), i.e., VDDREG−*V
TP
*−*p. PFET
120
, the gate of which is driven by sense amplifier
114
, is controlled to shunt excess current at the output of shunt regulator
100
, thereby maintaining a steady state regulator output voltage of VDDREG. The current shunted by PFET
120
passes through diode connected NFET
122
, driving NFET
122
to a voltage (V
SHUNT
) representative of the shunt current and approximately equal to V
BIAS
. The voltage developed across NFET
122
is applied to the positive input of sense amplifier
110
. V
BIAS
is applied to the negative input of current sense amplifier
110
and may be generated as described hereinabove for FIG.
3
. To provide adequate frequency stability of the shunt current feedback control loop, the shunt current from PFET
120
is nominally driven to a current level of about 1 mA. Innput decoupling capacitor
104
is charged to VDD and output capacitor
126
is charged to VDDREG. Capacitors
112
and
124
are charged appropriately.
Sense amplifier
110
compares voltages V
SHUNT
and V
BIAS
to effectively compare reference current I
ref
to the current shunted by PFET
120
. Optimally, PFET
106
is driven just enough to pass sufficient current that regulated output voltage VDDREG maintains its desired output voltage level, while simultaneously maintaining the shunt current of PFET
120
to a constant current level and proportional to the reference current I
ref
. Thus, if load current is zero (0), current through PFET
106
is 1 mA, i.e., the shunt current. If, on the other hand, load current is 10 mA, for example, current supplied through PFET
106
is 11 mA, i.e., load current plus shunt current. In this way power consumption is minimized.
FIG. 4
shows a schematic of voltage regulator
130
, which is a CMOS circuit implementation of the shunt regulator
100
of FIG.
2
. Devices in
FIG. 4
having identical functions as those of
FIG. 2
are labeled identically. Sense amplifier
110
, which includes current mirror PFET pair
132
,
134
and NFET pair
136
,
138
, is connected between unregulated voltage supply line
102
, VDD, and ground. The gates of PFET pair
132
,
134
are tied together and, to the drain of PFET diode
134
, which is also connected to the drain of NFET
138
. The source of both PFETs of pair
132
,
134
are connected to unregulated supply voltage
102
. The drain of PFET
132
is connected to the drain of NFET
136
and, as the output of sense amplifier
110
, also is connected to the gate of pass device
106
and a plate of capacitor
112
, which in this example is the gate of a PFET capacitor. The other plate of PFET capacitor
112
(the source/drain of the PFET) is connected to unregulated supply voltage
102
. V
BIAS
is provided to the gate of NFET
136
. The input to sense amplifier
110
at the gate of NFET
138
is connected to the anode (i.e. gate drain) of current mirror diode connected device, NFET
122
, and to the drain of PFET
120
. The source of PFET
120
is connected to regulated voltage
108
, VDDREG.
The gate of PFET
120
is connected to the output of sense amplifier
114
and the plate of capacitor
124
, which in this example is the gate of an NFET capacitor. Sense amplifier
114
includes PFET pair
140
,
142
, NFET pair
144
,
146
and current bias NFET
114
. PFET diode
140
and PFET
142
are a current mirror pair with their gates being tied together and to the drain of diode PFET
140
. The drain of NFET
144
is connected to the drain of current mirror device PFET
140
. The drain of PFET
142
is connected to the drain of NFET
146
. The gate of PFET
120
and capacitor
124
, which in this example is an NFET capacitor, are connected to the output of sense amplifier
114
at the drain of the PFET
142
and the drain of NFET
146
. The source of NFET pair
144
and
146
are connected together in common and that ommon connection is connected to the drain of NFET
148
. The source of NFET
148
is connected to ground. Reference voltage (V
REF
) is provided to positive input of sense amplifier
114
at the gate of NFET
144
and V
BIAS
is provided to the gate of NFET
148
. The negative input of sense amplifier
114
at the gate of NFET
146
is connected between voltage divider resistors
116
,
118
. Output decoupling capacitor
126
, in this example an NFET capacitor, is connected between VDDREG
108
and ground.
Accordingly, the shunt regulator circuit
100
,
130
controls and maintains minimum excess current through the regulating shunt device, PFET
120
, and provides improved isolation from a digital switching load circuit at regulated voltage output
108
. Further, power consumption as well as wasted power is minimized. Current through shunt device
120
, i.e., that which is not provided to load, passes through the PFET
120
to diode NFET
122
. NFFT
122
exhibits a voltage proportional to current flow at the input to sense amplifier
110
. Sense amplifier
110
reacts to voltage changes across NFET
122
, sensing the change of current through load device
120
. So, any current change through NFET
122
causes a proportionate change in voltage (V
DS
) across NFET
122
, which is provided to the input of sense amplifier
110
, i.e., gate of NFET
138
. NFET
138
mirrors current through NFET diode
122
. The same current through NFET
138
passes through PFET diode
134
. A corresponding voltage develops across PFET
134
to bias the gate of PFET
132
. Therefore, the current through PFET diode
134
is mirrored in PFET
132
. NFET
136
is biased with bias voltage V
BIAS
, such that variation in current through it (I
DS
) is reflected as a proportionate change in its drain to source voltage, V
DS
Thus, the change in I
DS
for NFET
136
changes device drain to source voltage V
DS
, (which is the voltage at the gate of regulator device PFET
106
), thereby, adjusting the current passed through PFET
106
. PFET frequency compensation capacitor
112
frequency compensates sense amplifier
110
and also filters instantaneous changes in the drain voltage of NFET
136
to eliminate any noise that might otherwise be imposed across the gate to source terminals of PFET
106
, and, so, passed to the regulated output
108
. The change in gate voltage of PFET
106
compensates for instantaneous load variations in such a way that instantaneous current changes through PFET
120
do not change regulated output voltage VDDREG. Consequently, most current provided by PFET
106
passes only to a connected load, and only a minor constant current is shunted through the shunt device
120
and so, very little current is wasted.
Thus, if the output load
108
increases sufficiently to drop the output voltage VDDREG
108
, the voltage at the negative input to second sense amplifier
114
is reduced proportionately through the voltage divider
116
,
118
. This reduced divider voltage reduces the current flow through NFET
146
at the negative input of second sense amplifier
114
. Reduced current flow through NFBT
146
allows PPET
142
to pull the gate of PFET
120
slightly higher, reducing the drive on PFET
120
and, correspondingly, current therethrough, i.e. I
SD
. Reduced I
SD
through PFET
120
causes correspondingly reduced ISD through NFET
122
. Reduced current through NFET diode
122
reduces the voltage across NFET
122
, V
DS
, thereby reducing the drive on device
138
. Reduced drive on NFET device
138
reduces the current through NFET
138
and, correspondingly, through PFET
134
. Reduced current flow through PFET
134
reduces the drain to source voltage across PFET
134
, V
SD
, thereby, reducing the drive to PFET
132
. Reducing the drive to PFET
132
reduces the I
SD
current through PFET
132
and, correspondingly, reduces the drain to source voltage, V
DS
, of NFET
136
. As the drain to source voltage of NFET
136
falls, the gate voltage on PFET
106
is pulled lower, turning PFET
106
on slightly harder, thereby, applying more regulator current to pull the regulated output
108
back up to the desired regulated voltage level. By contrast, if the regulated output voltage rises, the gate of regulator PFET
106
is driven slightly higher, reducing the drive to regulator PFET
106
, thereby, reducing output current and adjusting the regulated output voltage down, slightly, to the desired regulator voltage level.
Advantageously, the majority of the current provided by PFET
106
is supplied to any attached load with only a small portion of the supplied current being wasted through the shunt. Whenever a load current fluctuation occurs, the current supplied by PFET
106
is adjusted to compensate for the change in load current. Additional decoupling is provided by output decoupling capacitor
126
which shunts any noise at regulator PFET
106
that might otherwise be passed back to the supply voltage VDD. Also, input decoupling capacitor
104
significantly attenuates any instantaneous high frequency voltage noise that might otherwise pass through PFET
106
to the chip supply VDD. Further, current through the substrate connection exhibits less fluctuation, which in turn reduces substrate noise level.
While the invention has been described in terms of preferred embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Claims
- 1. A voltage regulator comprising:a regulator device deriving a regulator voltage from a supply voltage; a first sense amplifier sensing a regulator voltage change; a current shunt shunting excess load current responsive to said first sense amplifier; and a second sense amplifier driving said regulator device responsive to current shunted through said current shunt.
- 2. A voltage regulator as in claim 1 wherein said current shunt comprises a device of a first conduction type connected in series with a device of a second conduction type.
- 3. A voltage regulator as in claim 2 wherein the regulator device is a device of said second conduction type.
- 4. A voltage regulator as in claim 3 wherein said devices are field effect transistors (FETs), said first conduction type is N-type, said second conduction type is P type and said NFET is tied gate to drain.
- 5. A voltage regulator as in claim 4 wherein the output of said first sense amplifier drives the gate of said current shunt PFET.
- 6. A voltage regulator as in claim 5 wherein the output of said second sense amplifier drives the gate of said regulator PFET.
- 7. A voltage regulator as in claim 6 wherein said first sense amplifier and said second sense amplifier each comprises:a pair of PFETs; and a pair of NFETs, the drain of each of said pair of PFETs being tied to a corresponding drain of one of said pair of NFETs.
- 8. A voltage regulator as in claim 7 wherein one of said pair of PFETs is tied gate to drain.
- 9. A voltage regulator as in claim 8 wherein said first sense amplifier further comprises:a current biasing device, the drain of said current biasing device being tied to the source of each of said pair of NFETs.
- 10. A voltage regulator as in claim 6 further comprising:a voltage divider connected between said regulator voltage and a first reference voltage, said voltage divider providing a sense voltage to said first sense amplifier, said first sense amplifier comparing said sense voltage against a second reference voltage.
- 11. A voltage regulator for isolating radio frequency circuits from on-chip digital circuit switching noise, said shunt regulator comprising:a regulator device of a first conduction type connected between a regulator voltage and a supply voltage; a voltage divider connected between said regulator voltage and a first reference voltage and providing a sense voltage; a first sense amplifier sensing a change in said sense voltage; a current shunt controlled by said first sense amplifier and shunting excess load current; and a second sense amplifier receiving a voltage representative of shunted current and providing therefrom an output to a control terminal of said regulator device.
- 12. A voltage regulator as in claim 11 wherein said current shunt comprises a device of said first conduction type connected in series with a device of a second conduction type.
- 13. A voltage regulator as in claim 12 wherein said devices are field effect transistors (FETs), said first conduction type is P-type, said second conduction type is N-type, said NFET is tied gate to drain, wherein the output of said first sense amplifier drives the gate of said current shunt PFET, and wherein the output of said second sense amplifier drives the gate of said regulator PFET.
- 14. A voltage regulator as in claim 13 wherein the said first sense amplifier and said second sense amplifier each comprises:a pair of PFETs, the gate of both of said pair of PFETs being tied to the drain of one of said pair; and a pair of NFETs, the drain of each of said pair of PFETs being tied to a corresponding drain of one of said pair of NFETs.
- 15. A voltage regulator as in claim 14 wherein said first sense amplifier further comprises:a current biasing NFET, the drain of said current biasing NFET being tied to the source of each of said pair of NFETs.
- 16. An integrated circuit chip including both digital circuits and radio frequency communication circuits, a shunt regulator isolating radio frequency circuits from on-chip digital circuit switching noise, said shunt regulator comprising:a regulator device of a first conduction type connected between a regulator voltage and a supply voltage; a voltage divider connected between said regulator voltage and a first reference voltage and providing a sense voltage; a first sense amplifier sensing a change in said sense voltage; a current shunt controlled by said first sense amplifier and shunting excess load current; and a second sense amplifier receiving a voltage representative of shunted current and providing therefrom an output to a control terminal of said regulator device.
- 17. An integrated circuit chip as in claim 16 wherein said current shunt comprises a device of said first conduction type connected in series with a device of a second conduction type.
- 18. An integrated circuit chip as in claim 17 wherein said devices are field effect transistors (FETs), said first conduction type is P-type, said second conduction type is N-type, said NFET is tied gate to drain, wherein the output of said first sense amplifier drives the gate of said current shunt PFET, and wherein the output of said second sense amplifier drives the gate of said regulator PFET.
- 19. An integrated circuit chip as in claim 18 wherein the said first sense amplifier and said second sense amplifier each comprises:a pair of PFETs, the gate of both of said pair of PFETs being tied to the drain of one of said pair; and a pair of NFETs, the drain of each of said pair of PFETs being tied to a corresponding drain of one of said pair of NFETs.
- 20. An integrated circuit chip as in claim 19 wherein said first sense amplifier further comprises:a current biasing NFET, the drain of said current biasing NFET being tied to the source of each of said pair of NFETs.
US Referenced Citations (5)