1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a rectifier circuit.
2. Description of the Related Art
A rectifier circuit is a circuit converting an alternating current (AC) signal into a direct current (DC) signal. The rectifier circuit is widely used for most products including electronic components such as fluorescent light lamps or vehicles using electric energy. In particular, in recent years, research into wireless power transmission technology has been actively performed. In the wireless transmission technology, to restore and use power transmitted via a wireless line to a source voltage, it should be converted into a DC value. In this case, a main circuit is the rectifier circuit.
The higher conversion efficiency is, the better the rectifier circuit is. Namely, in an input AC signal having the same magnitude, the greater a magnitude of an output DC signal is, the lower the conversion loss is. Accordingly, efficiency of the rectifier circuit is higher. Recently, many enterprises or research institutions have been studying products with high energy efficiency. In general, the higher efficiency of the rectifier circuit producing a source voltage is, the higher the efficiency of a total system is.
A main factor reducing efficiency of the rectifier is a threshold voltage of a diode included therein.
Although it is not shown, if a full wave rectifier is constructed in the same way as in the half wave rectifier of
Several approaches have been pursued in the art to attempt to solve low efficiency problems of the rectifier circuit. The most widely used prior art method to increase efficiency is to use a diode such as a Schottky diode with a low threshold voltage. Since the Schottky diode has a lower threshold voltage as compared with a PN junction diode, energy loss is reduced at the time of conversion. However, because the Schottky diode cannot be provided by a general CMOS process, the cost is expensive. Accordingly, upon using the Schottky diode, this results in an increase of manufacturing cost in a product.
The present invention has been made in view of the above problems, and it is an object of the present invention to provide a rectifier circuit that gets high rectification efficiency and does not need an external power source.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a PMOS diode module flowing a forward current from an input terminal to an output terminal, comprising: a first PMOS transistor including a source connected to the input terminal, and a drain connected to the output terminal; a second PMOS transistor including a source connected to the output terminal, and a gate and a drain connected to each other; a switch connecting the gate of the first PMOS transistor to one of the output terminal and the drain of the second PMOS transistor; and a bias resistor including one terminal connected to the gate of the second PMOS transistor and another terminal to which a bias voltage is applied.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, there is provided an NMOS diode module flowing a forward current from an input terminal to an output terminal comprising: a first NMOS transistor including a drain connected to the input terminal, and a source connected to the output terminal; a second NMOS transistor including a drain connected to the gate of the first NMOS transistor, and a gate and a drain connected to each other; a switch connecting the gate of the first NMOS transistor to one of the output terminal and the drain of the second PMOS transistor; and a bias resistor including one terminal connected to the gate of the second NMOS transistor and another terminal to which a bias voltage is applied.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a rectifier circuit receiving and rectifying differential signals through a first input terminal and a second terminal, and outputting the rectified differential signals to an output terminal, comprising:
first to fourth diode modules each including an input terminal, an output terminal, and a control input terminal,
wherein the output terminal of the second diode module is connected to the input terminal of the first diode module,
the output terminal of the fourth diode module is connected to the input terminal of the third diode module, the input terminal of the first diode module is connected to the first input terminal, the input terminal of the third diode module is connected to the second input terminal, the output terminal of the first diode module and the output terminal of the third diode module are connected to the output terminal of the rectifier circuit, the input terminal of the second diode module and the input terminal of the fourth diode module are connected to each other to constitute a ground voltage terminal, the first and third diode modules each is constructed by the PMOS diode module according to claim 1 or the NMOS diode module according to claim 2, and the second and fourth diode modules each is constructed by the PMOS diode module according to claim 1 or the NMOS diode module according to claim 2.
The rectifier circuit further comprises a switch control unit switching switching states of switches in the first to fourth diode modules when a voltage of the output terminal is equal to or greater than a predetermined value.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, a rectifier circuit comprising: a plurality of rectifier circuits according to claim 3 cascade-connected, wherein among the plurality of rectifier circuits, a ground voltage terminal of a rectifier circuit of the lowest state is grounded, a load capacitor is connected to an output terminal of a rectifier circuit of the highest stage, and
storage capacitors are connected between ground voltage terminals and output terminals of the plurality of rectifier circuits.
The rectifier circuit further comprises a switch control unit switching switching states of switches in the diode modules in the plurality of rectifier circuits when a voltage of the output terminal of the rectifier circuit of the highest stage is equal to or greater than a predetermined value.
In claim 1 of the present invention, a threshold voltage may be reduced using an output voltage without using a power source in a diode module.
In claim 2 of the present invention, a threshold voltage may be reduced using an output voltage without using a power source in a diode module.
In claim 3 of the present invention, rectification efficiency reduction due to a threshold voltage cannot be reduced in a rectifier circuit.
In claim 4 of the present invention, an output voltage of a rectifier circuit is equal to or greater than a predetermined value, a threshold voltage of a diode may be automatically reduced.
In claim 5 of the present invention, since a rectifier circuit is cascade-connected, an output voltage may be increased.
In claim 6 of the present invention, an output voltage of a rectifier circuit is equal to or greater than a predetermined value, a threshold voltage of a diode may be automatically reduced to improve rectification efficiency.
The objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Hereinafter, exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. The use of the same reference number throughout the several figures designates a like or similar element.
In order to operate the rectifier circuit according to the present invention, an input voltage should be greater than a threshold voltage of a diode-connected transistor. Meanwhile, after the diode-connected transistor is turned-on, the input voltage may be less than the threshold voltage of the diode-connected transistor. The reason is because the threshold voltage of the diode-connected transistor was previously compensated for.
When a voltage input to an input terminal Vin is equal to or greater than a predetermined value |Vthp|, a PMOS diode module 400 becomes a state that may flow an electric current from the input terminal Vin to an output terminal Vout. The PMOS diode module 400 includes a first PMOS transistor MP1 with a source and a drain respectively connected to the input terminal Vin and the output terminal Vout, and a second PMOS transistor MP2 with a source connected to the output terminal Vout and a gate and a drain connected to each other. The PMOS diode module 400 further includes a switch 410 and a bias resistor R. The switch 410 connects a gate of the first PMOS transistor MP1 to one of the output terminal Vout and a drain of the second PMOS transistor MP2. One terminal of the bias resistor R is connected to the gate of the second PMOS transistor MP2, and a bias voltage is applied to another terminal of the resistor R. In this case, the another terminal of the bias resistor R may be grounded.
Referring to
When the voltage of the output terminal Vout becomes high enough to turn-on the second PMOS transistor MP2, as shown in
Referring to
When the bias voltage VBIAS applied to the gate of the second NMOS transistor MN2 through the bias resistor R becomes high enough to turn-on the second NMOS transistor MN2, as shown in
The half wave rectifier circuit 600 includes a first diode module 610, a second diode module 620, and a load capacitor CL. An input terminal of the first diode module 610 functions an input terminal Vin of the half wave rectifier circuit 600. An output terminal of the first diode module 610 functions as an output terminal Vout of the half wave rectifier circuit 600. An input terminal of the second diode module 620 is grounded, and an output terminal of the second diode module 620 is connected to the input terminal of the first diode module 610. One terminal of the load capacitor CLis connected to the output terminal of the first diode module 610, and another terminal of the load capacitor CLis grounded. When the first diode module 610 and the second diode module 620 operates as a general diode, this circuit operates as a half rectifier circuit. In the present invention, the forgoing PMOS diode module 400 or NMOS diode module 500 may be used as the first diode module 610. The forgoing PMOS diode module 400 or NMOS diode module 500 may be used as the second diode module 620. Although
AC signals (differential signals) having phases inverted to each other, namely, phase difference of 180 degrees from each other are input to a first input terminal Vin+ and a second input terminal Vin− of the full wave rectifier circuit 700. The full wave rectifier circuit 700 includes a first diode module 710, a second diode module 720, a third diode module 730, a fourth diode module 740. The first and third diode modules 710 and 730 may be the PMOS diode module 400 of
The full wave rectifier circuit 800 includes a first diode module 810, a second diode module 820, a third diode module 830, and a fourth diode module 840. The first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840 are detailed constructions of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 710, 720, 730, and 740 of
A ground voltage terminal VN of the full wave rectifier circuit 800 is grounded, and the load capacitor CL is connected to the output terminal VP. A voltage capable of turning-on NMOS transistors included in the full wave rectifier circuit 800, namely, a voltage greater than that of the ground voltage terminal by at least Vthn, is applied to the bias voltage terminal VBIAS. When sine waves having a phase difference of 180 degrees are input through input terminals Vin+ and Vin−, the load capacitor CL is charged with a predetermined charge, thereby increasing an output voltage, that is, a voltage of the output terminal VP. If a switch continues to stay in a position of
In the present invention, when a voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a predetermined value, positions of switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 change. When the full wave rectifier circuit 800 starts to operate, respective switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 operate to connect drains and gates of first transistors M11, M21, M31, and M41 of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840 to each other. During operations of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4, when the voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a predetermined value, the respective switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 are switched to connect respective gates of the first transistors M11, M21, M31, and M41 of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840 to respective gates of second transistors M12, M22, M32, and M42 of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840. A time when the voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a voltage capable of turning-on a second transistor M12 of the first diode module 810 and a second transistor M22 of the second diode module 820 can be selected as a switch time of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4. Accordingly, the present invention includes a switch controller 910 outputting a switch control signal SW CRT when the voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a predetermined voltage. The switch controller 910 may be a power-on-reset (POR) circuit.
While a value of Vin is increased, when it becomes greater than a specific value, a POR value is changed from 0 to 1. A value of Vin can be selected by appropriately adjusting C value when the POR value is changed from 0 to 1. An operation of the POR circuit 910 is described in J.-P. Curty, M. Declercq, C. Dehollain, N. Joehl, “Design and Optimization of Passive UHF RFID Systems” P. 103 (Springer 2007) in detail.
Referring back to
Four full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4 are cascade-connected. The constructions of full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4 are identical with that of the full wave rectifier circuit 800 shown in
In the present embodiment, the output terminal VP of the second full wave rectifier circuit 800-2 is connected to the bias voltage terminals VBIAS of the first and second full wave rectifier circuits 800-1 and 800-2. The output terminal VP of the fourth full wave rectifier circuit 800-4 is connected to the bias voltage terminals VBIAS of the third and fourth full wave rectifier circuits 800-3 and 800-4. This is described by way of example only. The output terminal VP of the fourth full wave rectifier circuit 800-4 may be connected to the bias voltage terminals VBIAS of the first to fourth full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4. Storage capacitors CS are connected between respective output terminals VP and respective ground voltage terminals VN of respective full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4. The storage capacitors CS are charged with a charge to sequentially increase outputs of respective full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4. When sine waves having a phase difference of 180 degrees are input through input terminals Vin+ and Vin− of the first to fourth full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4, the load capacitor CL is charged with a predetermined charge.
In the present invention, when a voltage of an output terminal VP of the fourth full wave rectifier circuit 800-4, that is, a voltage across the load capacitor CL is equal to or greater than a predetermined value, positions of switches of respective full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4 change. When the full wave rectifier circuit 800 starts to operate, respective switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 operate to connect drains and gates of first transistors M11, M21, M31, and M41 of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840 of
During operations of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4, when the voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a predetermined value, the respective switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 are switched to connect respective gates of the first transistors M11, M21, M31, and M41 of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840 to respective gates of second transistors M12, M22, M32, and M42 of the first, second, third, and fourth diode modules 810, 820, 830, and 840. A time when the voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a voltage capable of turning-on a second transistor M12 of the first diode module 810 and a second transistor M22 of the second diode module 820 of the respective full wave rectifier circuits 800-1, 800-2, 800-3, and 800-4 can be selected as a switch time of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4. Accordingly, the present invention includes a POR circuit 910 outputting a switch control signal SW CRT when the voltage of the output terminal VP is equal to or greater than a predetermined voltage.
Although it was described in
a) is a graph showing a dead zone 1002, which cannot be used to increase a charge voltage of a load capacitor due to a turning-on voltage Vt (1201) of a transistor included in a conventional rectifier circuit when a sine wave is input to the rectifier circuit.
b) is a graph illustrating reduction of the dead zone by reducing a turning-on voltage to Vt−Vtb (1023) in the rectifier circuit according to the present invention. In this case, in the rectifier circuit of the present invention, rectification efficiency may be improved and an output voltage may be increased.
A rectifier circuit was manufactured using 0.18 μm 1P6M standard CMOS process. It was measured that respective rectifier peak efficiencies for HF and MICS bands are 54.9% and 45.2%, respectively.
Since the rectifier circuit of the present invention uses ART, rectification efficiency is improved by 18.1% in comparison with a prior art that a ferroelectric capacitor is used in an input of 6 dBm. A result of the prior art using the ferroelectric capacitor is provided from a patent reference disclosed in H. Nakamoto, et al., “passive UHF RFID Tag LSI with 36.6% Efficiency CMOS-Only Rectifier and Current-Mode Demodulator in 0.35 μm FeRAM Technology,” ISSCC Dig. Tech. Papers, pp. 310-311, February 2006.
Referring to
In general, the efficiency and sensitivity are important performance factors in the rectifier circuit. The present invention may improve the efficiency of performance factors in the rectifier circuit. Accordingly, the present invention is effective in a case of improving the efficiency of the rectifier circuit through a CMOS process of a low cost.
Although embodiments in accordance with the present invention have been described in detail hereinabove, it should be understood that many variations and modifications of the basic inventive concept herein described, which may appear to those skilled in the art, will still fall within the spirit and scope of the exemplary embodiments of the present invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2009-0061029 | Jul 2009 | KR | national |