1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a very large bandwidth amplifier circuit, and more particularly to a transimpedance amplifier with a frequency-selective overall negative feedback active at DC and low frequencies only.
2. Description of the Related Art
Currently, optical networks are operating at several gigabits/s data rate. An important component of the optical network is the Transimpedance Amplifier (TIA). At the receiving end of the optical network, a photodiode is used to convert the optical pulses into electrical current pulses. The TIA picks up these current pulses, amplifies them and converts them into voltage pulses. At such high speeds, the conventional approach of designing TIA using overall wide-band negative feedback suffers from bandwidth as well as stability problems. This is because to maintain stability with such feedback, some bandwidth has to be sacrificed, i.e., the bandwidth has to be intentionally narrowed. Additionally, while maintaining a wide bandwidth, the TIA must have low sensitivity to DC input currents and also the output must be DC offset free so as to directly couple to the next stage. To solve these DC problems, usually a large external capacitor is required. Therefore, such implementations are not suitable for high data rate designs.
The general scheme used in the prior art is shown in
Reference is made to U.S. Pat. No. 6,639,472 (Wilson et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 6,611,174 (Sherman), U.S. Pat. No. 6,552,615 (Pavan et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 6,593,810 (Yoon), U.S. Pat. No. 6,583,671 (Chatwin), U.S. Pat. No. 6,462,327 (Ezell et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 6,275,114 (Tanji et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 6,242,732 (Rantakari), U.S. Pat. No. 6,084,478 (Mayampurath), U.S. Pat. No. 5,606,277 (Feliz), U.S. Pat. No. 5,198,658 (Rydin), U.S. Pat. No. 5,216,386 (Wyatt), U.S. Pat. No. 4,498,001 (Smoot), and U.S. Pat. No. 4,872,209 (Blanken). The present invention is different from all above cited U.S. Patents.
Clearly a Multi-Gigabit/s transimpedance amplifier is desired with wide bandwidth, improved stability, low sensitivity to DC input currents and a DC offset free output. The present invention described hereinafter satisfies all these requirements.
It is an object of at least one embodiment of the present invention to provide an amplifier, and methods for producing such, for use in optical networks, capable of operating at Multi-Gigabit-per-second frequencies where the amplifier is stable at all conditions and minimizes inter-symbol interference.
It is another object of the present invention to provide the input of that amplifier with a low sensitivity to DC input currents and to have its output DC offset free.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide correct DC bias and low input impedance at the input of that amplifier
It is still another object of the present invention to provide the low-frequency roll-off without using any additional circuitry or external components.
It is a further object of the present invention is to provide a method and an amplifier suitable for high data rates.
It is yet a further object of the present invention is to suppress the effects of dark or ambient current from the input source.
These and many other objects have been achieved by an amplifier design with a forward-path amplifier section with a very large bandwidth and a feedback section which is frequency-selective and is active only from DC to low frequencies. The forward-path of the amplifier comprises a regulated cascode (transimpedance amplifier) for receiving the input signal, a regulated cascode for receiving the feedback signal, a single-ended to differential converter and an output buffer. Stability and frequency selection is achieved by capacitive means in the operational amplifier in the feedback path. The Miller multiplication of the capacitive means creates a low-frequency pole and stabilizes the feedback loop and limits the frequency range of the feedback signal from DC to low frequencies. Because the feedback loop is active at low frequencies the low-frequency roll-off reduces the DC gain and suppresses the dark current and ambient current. The transconductance amplifier of the feedback loop and the high gain of the operational amplifier suppresses DC offsets. Correct DC bias and a low input impedance is provided by the regulated cascode input circuit. Capacitive means in both regulated cascode circuits stabilize against ringing or self-oscillations insuring high data rates.
These and many other objects and advantages of the present invention will be readily apparent to one skilled in the art to which the invention pertains from a perusal of the claims, the appended drawings, and the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
Use of the same reference number in different figures indicates similar or like elements.
The present invention provides a very successful solution of the problem outlined above by not applying an overall wide-band negative feedback, but by applying a frequency-selective overall negative feedback, which is active at DC and low frequencies only. Referring now to
Still referring to
This voltage is further amplified by the two differential amplifier stages 27 and 29. The first amplifier stage 27 is formed by M5, M6, M7, RL3 and RL4, and the following second amplifier stage 29 by M8, M9, M10, RL5 and RL6. The bias current IB and M11 provides the necessary bias voltage to both M7 and M10. The two stages also help to perform single-ended to differential conversion since the signal from PD develops only across RL1, whereas there is no signal across RL2. RL5 and RL6 are 50Ω each in order to match the external 50Ω loads. It is obvious that, numerically, RB1=RB2, RG1=RG2, RL1=RL2, RL3=RL4, RL5=RL6 and all differential devices are identical.
An overall negative feed back is applied from the outputs of TIA 20 through an operational amplifier A and a transconductance amplifier G back to the input of the second regulated cascode 25. Operational amplifier A provides a large DC voltage gain and transconductance amplifier G converts the voltage from operational amplifier A into a current. However, unlike the TIAs of the related art, this feed back is not a broad-band one. It is effective only at low frequency; the frequency selection being done by capacitive means CA in the operational amplifier A. Miller multiplication of this capacitive means creates a low-frequency pole. This pole stabilizes the feedback loop and also limits the frequency range of the feedback signal.
The circuit of prior art operational amplifier A, shown in
The feedback loop, being active at low frequencies, reduces the DC gain of the TIA 20. In other words, it adds a low-frequency roll-off to the otherwise flat-to-DC response of the TIA. This is essential to suppress the effects of dark current/ambient current from the photodiode PD. However, it is also important to maintain as wide a bandwidth as possible (at both low and high frequency) to minimize inter-symbol interference (ISI) of the signal pulses through the TIA. The feedback loop also helps to suppress DC offsets, due to device mismatches, appearing at the outputs. This is possible since operational amplifier A has a high DC gain and this helps to maintain its inputs (TIA outputs) at almost identical DC potentials. Additionally, with the inactive terminal of transconductance amplifier G being returned to AGND, the output of operational amplifier A will be close to the same potential, i.e., analog ground. The output of transconductance amplifier G is at the DC potential provided by the input of the second regulated cascode 25. These ensure that both operational amplifier A and transconductance amplifier G work in the desired linear range of operation.
The inventive circuit 20 takes care of the DC problems without an external capacitor because of the Miller multiplication of CA, which can be integrated and can still provide a low enough low-frequency roll-off. The mathematical analysis of the low frequency response of the TIA is given below, assuming A(s) is the frequency dependent voltage gain of the operational amplifier A and G0 is the transconductance of the transconductance amplifier G.
The open-loop (forward path) transimpedance gain of the TIA is given by:
R0=RL1gm5RL3gm8RL5 (1)
The loop gain, with the help of (1), is given by:
Al(s)=A(s)G0RL1gm5RL3gm8RL5=A(s)G0R0 (2)
Then, the closed-loop transimpedance gain of the TIA is given by:
The response of the operational amplifier A can be expressed in terms of its DC gain A0 and a single pole ωp created by CA, Miller multiplied by the gain of the second stage in conjunction with the output resistance of the first stage (
Combining (2) to (4) we have the final expression for the closed-loop transimpedance gain of the TIA 20:
It can be seen from (5) that provided all other poles are at much higher frequencies, the transfer function has a single dominant pole and, therefore, is stable. The closed-loop DC transimpedance gain is given by:
It can be observed from (5) that the frequency response has a high-pass characteristic with the high frequency gain approaching R0. This is shown in
The low-frequency roll-off frequency of the TIA is given by:
ωl=(1+A0G0R0)ωp (7)
Let the output resistances and the transconductances of the first and second stages of the operational amplifier A be r01, r02, gm1 and gm2 respectively, then:
Combining (7) with (8) we have:
We can see that (9) suggests the use of low values of G0 and gm1 in order to maintain a low enough roll-off frequency ωl. Keeping this constraint in mind, it can be seen from (6) that, to meet the other DC requirements, A0 has to be kept high. In spite of the above mentioned constraint, this can still be done by maintaining high values for r01 and gm2r02.
The MOS transistors shown in the circuit configuration of
Primary parameters (determined by design and specifications):
Secondary parameters (calculated/simulated/measured):
The method of providing a multi-Gigabit/s amplifier for optical networks comprises the following steps:
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.