The present invention relates to a multi-stage charge pump circuit for the generation of positive and negative voltages.
A charge-pump circuit is a type of circuit configured to provide a voltage with a high voltage level that is either more positive than a power supply voltage (referred to as a high positive voltage) or has a reverse polarity with respect to the power supply voltage (referred to as a high negative voltage). In many circuit applications, both the high positive voltage and the high negative voltage are required, and it is common for these voltages to be generated on-chip. To that end, the conventional solution is to include two distinct charge-pump circuits, one for generating the needed high positive voltage and another for generating the needed high negative voltage. The drawbacks associated with this conventional solution are: an increased area on chip that is occupied by the two distinct charge-pump circuits (more specifically with respect to the needed capacitors and resistors) and an increase in power consumption.
Depending on the magnitudes of the needed high positive voltage and high negative voltage, a multi-stage charge pump circuit may be required for each voltage generator circuit. The use of multiple stages to acquire the desired voltage magnitudes can have adverse consequences in terms reduced efficiency and reduced reliability. Additionally, separate voltage generators for generating the high positive voltage and high negative voltage require separate clock buffer circuits to drive the capacitive switching operation, and this can result in an undesirable increase in on chip current consumption.
There is a need in the art for a multi-stage charge pump circuit that addresses the foregoing and other problems to support the simultaneous generation of both a high positive voltage and a high negative voltage from a common charge pump circuit.
In an embodiment, a charge pump circuit comprises: a plurality of boosting circuits coupled in cascade between a first node and a second node, wherein each boosting circuit has an A node and a B node and is operable in a positive voltage boosting mode to positively boost voltage from the A node to the B node and is operable in a negative voltage boosting mode to negatively boost voltage from the B node to the A node; a first switching circuit configured to apply a first voltage at the A node of one of the boosting circuits in said plurality of boosting circuits in response to a first logic state of a periodic enable signal so that boosting circuits of said plurality of boosting circuits operate in the positive voltage boosting mode to produce a high positive voltage at the second node; and a second switching circuit configured to apply a second voltage at the B node of another of the boosting circuits in said plurality of boosting circuits in response to a second logic state of said periodic enable signal so that boosting circuits of said plurality of boosting circuits operate in the negative voltage boosting mode to produce a high negative voltage at the first node.
In an embodiment, a method is presented for controlling operation of a plurality of boosting circuits coupled in cascade between a first node and a second node, wherein each boosting circuit has an A node and a B node and is operable in a positive voltage boosting mode to positively boost voltage from the A node to the B node and is operable in a negative voltage boosting mode to negatively boost voltage from the B node to the A node. The method comprises: applying a first voltage at the A node of one of the boosting circuits in said plurality of boosting circuits in response to a first logic state of an enable signal so that boosting circuits of said plurality of boosting circuits operate in the positive voltage boosting mode to produce a high positive voltage at the second node; storing charge from said high positive voltage at a positive voltage output; applying a second voltage at the B node of another of the boosting circuits in said plurality of boosting circuits in response to a second logic state of said enable signal so that boosting circuits of said plurality of boosting circuits operate in the negative voltage boosting mode to produce a high negative voltage at the first node; storing charge from said high negative voltage at a negative voltage output; and cyclically switching between the first and second logic states to simultaneously generate a positive voltage at the positive voltage output and a negative voltage at the negative voltage output.
For a better understanding of the embodiments, reference will now be made by way of example only to the accompanying figures in which:
Reference is now made to
The circuit 100 further includes an n-channel MOS transistor MN3 having a source terminal coupled to node NA1 and a drain terminal coupled to node NB1 and an n-channel MOS transistor MN4 having a source terminal coupled to node NA2 and a drain terminal coupled to node NB2. The transistors MN3 and MN4 are cross-coupled with the gate terminal of transistor MN3 coupled to the source terminal of transistor MN4 at node NA2 and the gate terminal of transistor MN4 coupled to the source terminal of transistor MN3 at node NA1.
The circuit 100 still further includes an n-channel MOS transistor MN5 having a drain terminal coupled to node B and a source terminal coupled to node NA1 and an n-channel MOS transistor MN6 having a drain terminal coupled to node B and a source terminal coupled to node NA2. The gate terminal of transistor MN5 is coupled to node NB1 and the gate terminal of transistor MN6 is coupled to node NB2.
A capacitor C1 has one terminal coupled to node NA1 and another terminal coupled to receive a clock signal CK. A capacitor C2 has one terminal coupled to node NA2 and another terminal coupled to receive a clock signal CKN (which is a logical inversion of the clock signal CK). A bootstrapping capacitor Cbs1 has one terminal coupled to node NB1 and another terminal coupled to receive a clock signal CKH. A bootstrapping capacitor Cbs2 has one terminal coupled to node NB2 and another terminal coupled to receive a clock signal CKHN (which is a logical inversion of the clock signal CHK).
The clock signals CKH and CKHN are generated from the clock signals CK and CKN using a clock voltage boosting circuit 110 shown in
A capacitor C1′ has one terminal coupled to node 114 and another terminal coupled to receive the clock signal CK. A capacitor C2′ has one terminal coupled to node 118 and another terminal coupled to receive the clock signal CKN.
A CMOS inverter 120 has an input coupled to the supply voltage node VDD and an output generating the clock signal CKH. A source terminal of the p-channel MOS transistor in inverter 120 is coupled to the node 114 and a source terminal of the n-channel MOS transistor in inverter 120 is coupled to receive the clock signal CK.
A CMOS inverter 122 has an input coupled to the supply voltage node VDD and an output generating the clock signal CKHN. A source terminal of the p-channel MOS transistor in inverter 122 is coupled to the node 118 and a source terminal of the n-channel MOS transistor in inverter 122 is coupled to receive the clock signal CKN.
The clock voltage boosting circuit 110 functions to level shift the clock signals CK and CKN to generate the clock signals CKH and CKHN.
The voltage doubler circuit 100 of
The voltage doubler circuit 100 advantageously operates from just two clocks (CK/CKH and CKN/CKHN).
The voltage doubler circuit 100 operates as follows in the high positive voltage mode:
To begin, assume that no clock is present. In this situation, the nodes NA1 and NA2 will be charged to the VDD−Vt voltage level, where Vt is the threshold voltage of the n-channel MOS transistors MN1 and MN2. Now, assume the clock signal is applied. With the clock signal CK at the VDD voltage level and the clock signal CKN at the 0 (ground GND) voltage level, then the clock signal CKH is at the 2*VDD voltage level and the clock signal CKHN is at the ground voltage level. In this configuration, the node NA1 will shift to the 2*VDD−Vt voltage level and the node NA2 will shift to the VDD voltage level. Due to the cross coupling between transistors MN3 and MN4, the node NB1 will be charged to the 3*VDD voltage level and the node NB2 will be charged to the VDD voltage level. As the node NB1 is at the 3*VDD voltage level and the node NA1 is at the 2*VDD voltage level, the n-channel MOS transistor MN5 has sufficient Vgs (gate to source voltage) to pass the 2*VDD voltage from node NA1 to node B. In this way, a high positive voltage (higher than input supply voltage VDD) is generated and passed for output. So, during high positive voltage mode operation, the voltage VDD is applied at node A and the 2*VDD voltage is generated at node B. During the opposite phase of the clocks, the nodes NA1 and NA2 switch between the VDD voltage level and the 2*VDD voltage level. Similarly, the nodes NB1 and NB2 switch between the VDD voltage level and the 3*VDD voltage level.
It will be noted that the foregoing voltage levels are mentioned with the assumption of an ideal operating situation when there is no current load at the output and there is no charge loss.
The voltage doubler circuit 100 operates as follows in the high negative voltage mode:
With the ground reference voltage GND applied to node B, when the clock signal CKH transitions to the 2*VDD voltage level, the clock signal CK is simultaneously at the VDD voltage level, and the n-channel MOS transistor MN5 turns on and node NA1 is charged to the 0 (GND) voltage level. During the next clock cycle, the clock signal CKH switches from the 2*VDD voltage level to the ground voltage level, with the clock signal CK changing state from the VDD voltage level to ground voltage level, and the node NA1 accordingly transitions from the 0 voltage level to the −VDD voltage level. Also, the node NB1 discharges to the −VDD voltage level via the transistor MN3 and the switch off of the transistor MN5. In this way, the node NA1 also goes to the −VDD voltage level. Due to effect of the clock signals CKN and CKHN, the node NA2 is charged to the ground voltage level via transistor MN6. As the NA2 is at the ground voltage level, and the NA1 is at the −VDD voltage level, this configuration causes the transistor MN1 to turn on and pass the −VDD voltage level voltage to the node A. During this negative high voltage mode of operation, the nodes NA1 and NA2 switch between the ground voltage level and the −VDD voltage level, and vice versa. Similarly, the nodes NB1 and NB2 switch between the VDD voltage level and the −VDD voltage level, and vice versa.
The circuit 100 possesses at least the following advantages: a) a single circuit configuration can be used to generate either a positive or a negative voltage depending on the configured operating mode; b) there is no threshold voltage drop in output voltage so the efficiency of this voltage doubler circuit stage is improved; c) because a single voltage doubler circuit can be used for positive and negative voltage doubling operation, there is a reduction in occupied circuit area in comparison with some prior art circuits, and there is also a reduction in power consumption; d) the circuit uses n-channel MOS transistors only, so there is no condition of body-bias and junction stress that is common with some prior art circuits, and thus circuit reliability is not an issue; and e) the circuit uses a cross coupled architecture of NMOS switches, so there is no need for a non-overlapping clock scheme or a four phase clock scheme as is the case with some prior art circuits.
Reference is now made to
A first diode D1 has an anode terminal coupled to the negative output node VNEG and a cathode terminal coupled to node 202. A capacitor C3 has a first terminal coupled to the negative output node VNEG and a second terminal coupled to a ground reference node. The capacitor C3 functions to store charge associated with the generated high negative output voltage. A second diode D2 has a cathode terminal coupled to the positive output node VPOS and an anode coupled to node 204. A capacitor C4 has a first terminal coupled to the positive output node VPOS and a second terminal coupled to a ground reference node. The capacitor C4 functions to store charge associated with the generated high positive output voltage.
The N voltage doubler circuits 100 are coupled in cascade between node 202 and node 204. The first voltage doubler circuit 100(1) has its node A coupled to node 202 and its node B coupled to node A of the second voltage doubler circuit 100(2). The second voltage doubler circuit 100(2) its node B coupled to node A of the third voltage doubler circuit 100(3). This connection sequence is repeated until the Nth voltage doubler circuit 100(N) which has its node A coupled to the node B of the immediately preceding voltage doubler circuit 100(N−1) and its node B coupled to node 204.
A clock circuit 206 and a clock voltage boosting circuit 110 (see,
The control circuitry for operating the cascaded voltage doubler circuits 100(2)-100(N) in the positive voltage mode to generate the high positive voltage and in the negative voltage mode to generate the high negative voltage includes a first switching circuit 210 and a second switching circuit 212. The first switching circuit 210 comprises a pMOS control transistor 220 source-drain coupled in series with a pMOS cascode transistor 222 between the supply voltage node VDD and the A node (also identified as node 203) of one of the voltage doubler circuits 100 in the cascaded voltage doubler circuits 100(2)-100(N). In the illustrated implementation, the selected one of the voltage doubler circuits 100 is the second voltage doubler circuit 100(2) for reasons of selecting the magnitude of the high positive voltage to equal the magnitude of the high negative voltage (although the A node of any one of the voltage doubler circuits 100 could be selected). The gate terminal of the pMOS control transistor 220 is coupled to receive the polarity control signal EN, and the gate terminal of the pMOS cascode transistor 222 is coupled to the ground reference node. The second switching circuit 212 comprises an nMOS control transistor 224 source-drain coupled in series with an nMOS cascode transistor 226 between the ground reference node and the B node of one of the voltage doubler circuits 100 in the cascaded voltage doubler circuits 100(2)-100(N). In the illustrated implementation, the selected one of the voltage doubler circuits 100 is the Nth voltage doubler circuit 100(N) so that the magnitude of the high negative voltage will equal the magnitude of the high positive voltage (although the B node of any one of the voltage doubler circuits 100 could be selected). The gate terminal of the nMOS control transistor 224 is coupled to receive the polarity control signal EN, and the gate terminal of the nMOS cascode transistor 226 is coupled to the supply voltage node VDD.
When the periodic polarity control signal EN is at logic 0, the multi-stage charge pump circuit 200 is configured for operation in the high positive voltage mode. The pMOS control transistor 220 is turned on (with the pMOS cascode transistor 222 also on in response to the ground bias at its gate terminal) and the supply voltage VDD is supplied to the A node of the second voltage doubler circuit 100(2). At the same time, the nMOS control transistor 224 is turned off to isolate node 204 from the ground voltage. Responsive to the clock signals CK and CKN and the clock signals CKH and CKHN, the second through Nth voltage doubler circuits 100(2)-100(N) will boost the input VDD voltage towards a voltage approximately equal to +N*VDD at the node 204. It will be noted that only N−1 stages of the voltage doubler circuits 100 are needed to reach the +N*VDD voltage. The diode D2 is forward biased by the voltage at node 204 and the capacitor C4 is charged (at the positive output node VPOS) towards a high positive voltage VOUT≈+N*VDD (more specifically to a voltage of +N*VDD−Vthd, where Vthd is the threshold voltage drop across the forward biased diode D2).
When the periodic polarity control signal EN is logic 1, the multi-stage charge pump circuit 200 is configured for operation in the high negative voltage mode. The nMOS control transistor 224 is turned on (with the nMOS cascode transistor 226 also on in response to the VDD bias at its gate terminal) and the ground reference voltage is supplied to the B node (also referred to as node 204) of the Nth voltage doubler circuit 100(N). At the same time, the pMOS control transistor 220 is turned off to isolate node 203 from the VDD voltage. Responsive to the clock signals CK and CKN and the clock signals CKH and CKHN, the Nth through first voltage doubler circuits 100(N)-100(1) will boost the input ground reference voltage towards a voltage approximately equal to −N*VDD at the node 202. It will be noted that all N stages of the voltage doubler circuits 100 are needed to reach the −N*VDD voltage. The diode D1 is forward biased by the voltage at node 202 and the capacitor C3 is charged (at the negative output node VNEG) towards a high negative voltage VOUT≈−N*VDD (more specifically to a voltage of −N*VDD+Vthd, where Vthd is the threshold voltage drop across the forward biased diode D1).
The charge pump 200 circuit presents a number of advantages including: 1) positive and negative voltage are generated simultaneously; 2) area of charge-pump used in this configuration is less than with prior art designs; 3) because of using a single circuit in both positive and negative charge-pump configuration the number of clock buffers are reduced so power is also less than with prior art designs; 4) additional complexity to design buffer to drive common load is not required so this solution is easy to implement; 5) due to usage of nMOS transistors for the voltage doubler circuits, there is no condition of body-bias and junction stress, so reliability is improved with this configuration; 6) use of cross coupled architecture of nMOS switches in the voltage doubler circuits does not require a non-overlapping clock scheme or four phase clock scheme, so power consumption and area occupation is reduced in comparison to prior art designs.
The foregoing description has provided by way of exemplary and non-limiting examples a full and informative description of the exemplary embodiment of this invention. However, various modifications and adaptations may become apparent to those skilled in the relevant arts in view of the foregoing description, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the appended claims. However, all such and similar modifications of the teachings of this invention will still fall within the scope of this invention as defined in the appended claims.
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