The present disclosure relates to bandgap reference circuits, and, more particularly, to curvature compensated bandgap reference circuits and to methods and techniques for reducing process variation of these circuits.
Bandgap circuits are common in analog design and are used to provide a precision DC reference voltage with minimal variation across temperature. The bandgap circuits are used in integrated circuits to provide a stable and precise reference voltage for analog-to-digital converters (ADC), voltage comparators, voltage regulators, temperature sensors and other circuits having to deal with analog voltages or the conversion thereof to digital values.
Referring to
Like all temperature-independent bandgap references, the Brokaw circuit maintains an internal voltage source that has a positive temperature coefficient and another internal voltage source that has a negative temperature coefficient. By summing the two together, the first order temperature dependence can be canceled. In the Brokaw bandgap reference, the circuit provides negative feedback with an operational amplifier 402 to force a constant current through two bipolar transistors 426, 428 with different emitter areas, where transistor 426 has an emitter area (for example) eight times that of transistor 428. The transistor 426 with the larger emitter area requires a smaller base2-emitter voltage for the same current. The difference between the two base-emitter voltages has a positive temperature coefficient. The base-emitter voltage for each transistor 426, 428 has a negative temperature coefficient. The bandgap voltage output 418 is the sum of one of the base-emitter voltages with a multiple of the base-emitter voltage differences. With appropriate component choices, the two opposing temperature coefficients will substantially cancel each other and the output voltage will have significantly reduced temperature dependence. However, there is still a “bow” in voltage versus temperature where the bandgap voltages at the lowest and highest temperatures are less than the bandgap voltage at temperatures between the high and low temperatures. The resultant bandgap voltage has a bowed second order shape in relation to temperature.
Most existing solutions to obtain less bandgap voltage variation with temperature rely on modifying a traditional bandgap circuit, as shown in
Therefore, a need exists to provide a precision bandgap reference circuit that exhibits decreased sensitivity to temperature, supply voltage and process variations, does not require individual device tuning to achieve the desired voltage precision over an operating temperature range, and therefore reduces production testing costs by providing an architectural solution versus a test solution.
According to an embodiment, a precision bandgap reference circuit may comprise: a core bandgap circuit producing a voltage having a bowed second order shape by a temperature; and a proportional-to-absolute-temperature (ptat) circuit coupled to the core bandgap circuit, wherein the coupled core bandgap and ptat circuits produce a bandgap voltage having a varying sigmoidal shape by the temperature.
According to a further embodiment, the core bandgap circuit may comprise: a main operational amplifier having an output coupled to a base of a first NPN transistor, wherein the first NPN transistor has a collector coupled to a power supply positive and an emitter coupled to a bandgap voltage node; diode configured second and third NPN transistors coupled to positive and negative inputs, respectively, of the main operational amplifier and to second and third resistors, respectively, coupled to the bandgap voltage node, and the emitters thereof coupled to a power supply common; and a first adjustable resistor may be coupled between the negative input of the main operational amplifier and the third NPN transistor.
According to a further embodiment, the ptat circuit may comprise: a compensation operational amplifier having an output coupled to an emitter of the second NPN transistor and a fourth resistor; a diode configured fourth NPN transistor coupled between the fourth resistor and a negative input of the compensation operational amplifier; a positive input of the compensation operational amplifier coupled to a fifth diode connected NPN transistor; a fifth resistor coupled between the positive input of the compensation operational amplifier and the bandgap voltage node; and a sixth resistor coupled between the output of the main operational amplifier and the negative input of the compensation operational amplifier.
According to a further embodiment, the temperature may be from about minus 40 degrees Celsius to about 120 degrees Celsius. According to a further embodiment, a selected resistance value of the first adjustable resistor may be stored in a nonvolatile memory.
According to another embodiment, a precision bandgap reference circuit may comprise: a core bandgap circuit having a positive temperature coefficient; and proportional-to-absolute-temperature (ptat) circuit having a negative temperature coefficient coupled to the core bandgap circuit and is subtracted from the core bandgap circuit output voltage to produce a bandgap voltage.
According to a further embodiment, the bandgap circuit may comprise: a main operational amplifier having an output coupled to a base of a first NPN transistor, wherein the first NPN transistor has a collector coupled to a power supply positive and an emitter coupled to a bandgap voltage node; second and third PNP transistor coupled to positive and negative inputs, respectively, of the main operational amplifier and to second and third resistors, respectively, coupled to the bandgap voltage node, and the collectors thereof coupled to a power supply common; and a first adjustable resistor coupled between the negative input of the main operational amplifier and the emitter of the third PNP transistor.
According to a further embodiment, the ptat circuit may comprise: a compensation operational amplifier having an output coupled to bases of a fourth and the second PNP transistors; a sixth diode configured PNP transistor may be coupled between a positive input of the compensation operational amplifier and the power supply common; a fourth resistor coupled between a negative input of the compensation operational amplifier and an emitter of the fourth PNP transistor, wherein a collector of the fourth PNP transistor may be coupled to the power supply common; a fifth resistor coupled between the positive input of the compensation operational amplifier and the bandgap voltage node; and a sixth resistor coupled between the output of the main operational amplifier and the negative input of the compensation operational amplifier.
According to a further embodiment, the negative temperature coefficient ptat circuit may generate a correlated output that may be subtracted from the bandgap voltage to produce a sigmoidal voltage temperature curve that may have minimal voltage variation over a temperature range. According to a further embodiment, the temperature range may be from about minus 40 degrees centigrade to about 120 degrees Celsius. According to a further embodiment, the fourth resistor may linearize operation of the fourth PNP transistor.
According to a further embodiment, a unit ratio for the second and third PNP transistors may be N:M, respectively, where M may be greater than N. According to a further embodiment, M is eight (8) and N is one (1). According to a further embodiment, the third PNP transistor may comprise a parallel combination of M PNP transistors and may have a greater current density than the second PNP transistor. According to a further embodiment, a resistance value of the first adjustable resistor may be stored in a nonvolatile memory.
A more complete understanding of the present disclosure may be acquired by referring to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
While the present disclosure is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific examples thereof have been shown in the drawings and are herein described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the description herein of specific examples is not intended to limit the disclosure to the forms disclosed herein.
Referring now to the drawings, the details of examples are schematically illustrated. Like elements in the drawings will be represented by like numbers, and similar elements will be represented by like numbers with a different lower-case letter suffix.
Referring to
The output of the main operational amplifier 102 is Vbe above the Band Gap voltage 118. A proportional-to-absolute-temperature (ptat) circuit 101 comprises a compensation operational amplifier 104, diode configured NPN transistors 120 and 130, and resistors 108, 110 and 122. The ptat circuit 101 generates a highly correlated output, very near ground, that is subtracted from the core bandgap voltage via an emitter connection of the diode configured NPN transistor 126. The core bandgap 100 and ptat 101 circuits are designed and sized such that the resulting “Bandgap Voltage” at terminal 118 conforms generally to a third order function (a sideways “S” shaped response with two inflection points within the temperature region of interest vs the bowed/“rainbow” response of a classical bandgap circuit) response in relation to temperature.
It is known (from the mathematics that a solution for the compensation bandgap components exists that should theoretically cancel the curvature and temperature coefficient (TC) when the correct ratio of resistors and bipolar transistors are in place. In practice though this is only approximate. The compensation bandgap components are selected somewhat empirically because of imperfections in the process modeling and various manufacturing non-idealities. The absolute values of the resistors are set based on current consumption which will also affect noise. Proportionally increasing or decreasing all resistor values over a reasonable range have only a small effect and can serve as an initial solution which can then be further improved once a solution is found for a given supply current.
The resulting bandgap voltage at terminal 118, denoted VBG, or vbg, has less voltage change over temperature than the core bandgap second order voltage response over temperature. All bipolar transistors are NPN devices in unit ratios (emitter area sizes) and may be, for example, silicon germanium (SiGe) construction which are low noise transistors. All resistors are the same type in unit ratios.
The top of resistor 108 is one Vbe (of transistor 106) above the bandgap voltage at terminal 118 which bandgap voltage at terminal 118 is assumed to be substantially flat over temperature. The bottom of resistor 108 is one Vbe above ground 132 because the inputs of the compensation operational amplifier 104 are forced to be the same by compensation operational amplifier 104; i.e., one Vbe of diode configured transistor 130 above ground 132. If we assume those Vbe's cancel, then resistor 108 essentially has the bandgap voltage across it. Of course, it's not exact because transistor 106 and transistor 130 have different current densities but the current through resistor 108, denoted Iconst, will be close to flat over temperature with an absolute value of bandgap voltage/resistor 108.
Referring to
Resistor 232 (Rdegen) may be used to linearize operation of the bipolar transistor 220, which causes it to not match the other one quite as well. It may be used to compensate for non-ideal performance in the bipolar transistors and flatten the temperature curve a little bit in certain scenarios and with certain manufacturing processes.
The bandgap circuit shown in
A proportional to absolute temperature (ptat) circuit 201 comprises a compensation operational amplifier 204, PNP transistor 220, diode configured PNP transistor 230, and resistors 208 and 210. The ptat circuit 201 generates a highly correlated output, very near ground, that is subtracted from the core bandgap voltage via the PNP transistor 226. The core bandgap 200 and ptat 201 circuits are designed and sized accordingly.
The transistor ratios (classically 8 to 1) may be selected for matching and noise performance. The resistors are adjusted such that the TC and curvature is minimal at the bandgap voltage at terminal 118, i.e., the output, which TC curvature exhibits a 3rd order shape. Much of this may be done empirically in simulation. The 3rd order shape in relation to temperature is just the residual curvature that results from summing the small curvature gain difference in the core bandgap circuit 200 and the ptat circuit 201. It can be made very small but never eliminated completely, such that the resulting “Bandgap Voltage” at terminal 118 conforms generally to a 3rd order shape whereas the core bandgap circuit would have a bowed 2nd order shape in relation to temperature. The resulting bandgap voltage at terminal 118 has less voltage change over temperature than the core bandgap 2nd order voltage response over temperature of the prior art. All bipolar transistors are in unit ratios and may be, for example, BCD (Bipolar-CMOS-DMOS) transistors such as, but not limited to, 0.18 μm. Any type of bipolar transistor can be used, however a good quality device with high beta will provide the best accuracy. Many CMOS processes do not have such devices or any bipolar devices at all beyond low beta vertical PNP bipolar transistors.
The compensation operational amplifier 204 drives its output as required to make its inputs equal, so the base of transistor 220 is driven as required to keep the current through resistor 208 and transistor 220 (neglecting base current) constant over temperature. The base of transistor 226 is also driven by the compensation operational amplifier 204. However, the result of the feedback loop of main operational amplifier 202 sets the currents through the two legs of the core bandgap circuit 200 to be PTAT, there is a very small temperature dependent signal on the inputs of the main operational amplifier 202 which creates an opposite bow (smile) at the bandgap output. The superposition of these is what flattens the bandgap.
Temperature range of the bandgap devices disclosed herein may be from about minus 40 degrees Celsius to about 120 degrees Celsius.
Referring to
Theory of Operation for the Circuit of
The voltage at the inputs of the main operational amplifier 102, in steady state denoted vx, looking from the top can be determined as:
vx=vbg−I114*R114 and:
vx=vbg−I116*R116
Combining these equations gives equation 1:
The voltage at the inputs of the main operational amplifier 102, in steady state, looking from the bottom can be calculated as:
Where: vbe(d,T) is the bipolar base to emitter voltage as a function of current density (d, expressed as collector current over emitter area, and absolute temperature (T).
The vy term in the second equation represents the voltage on the inputs of the compensation operational amplifier 104 at steady state.
Combining these equations results in equation (2)
The voltage at the plus (+) input of the compensation operational amplifier 104 can be calculated as:
The voltage at the inputs of the compensation operational amplifier 104 looking from the top can be calculated as:
Combining these equations results in equation 4:
Note that by making:
the current I108 can be made independent of temperature with:
One equation can be eliminated by substituting equation (4) into equation (2). The result is 3 new equations:
Solving equation 3 for vbe(I110/A130,T) and substituting it into equation 3, results in two equations:
Equation (8) can now be substituted into equation (9):
Adding I116*R116 to both sides gives:
From device physics we know that the temperature characteristics of the base-to-emitter voltage can be accurately described by,
where:
vbe(d,T)=Vgo˜1.23V in silicon, T0 is a reference temperature, Vbe0 is vbe at the reference temperature
vbe(d0, T0), K is Boltzman's constant (1.38×10∧23), q is the electron charge 1.602×10∧−19
The bandgap voltage can now be calculated by applying the vbe(d,T) function:
The above will have a zero-temperature coefficient when:
Theory of Operation for the Circuit of
The voltage at the inputs of the main operational amplifier 202, in steady state, denoted vx, looking from the top can be determined as:
vx=vbg−I214*R124 and:
vx=vbg−I214*R124
Combining these equations gives equation 1:
The voltage at the inputs of the main operational amplifier 202, in steady state, looking from the bottom can be determined as:
Where: vbe(d, T) is the bipolar base to emitter voltage as a function of current density (d, expressed as collector current over emitter area, and absolute temperature (T). The vbe(d,T) function will obviously be necessary later to calculate vbg but for simplicity its left in this form for now.
The y term in the second equation represents the voltage on the inputs of the compensation operational amplifier 204.
Combining these equations results in equation (11).
The voltage at the + input of the compensation operational amplifier 204 can be determined as:
The voltage at the inputs of the compensation operational amplifier 204 looking from the top can be calculated as:
Combining these equations results in equation 13:
Note that by making:
The current I208 can be made independent of temperature with:
One equation can be eliminated by substituting equation (12) into equation (13). The result is 3 new equations:
An equation can be eliminated by solving equation 11 for vbe(I210/A230,T) and substituting it into equation 12.
This leaves only two equations:
Adding I216*R216 to both sides gives:
From device physics we know that the temperature characteristics of the base to emitter voltage can be accurately described by:
Where:
vbe(d,T)=Vgo˜1.23V in silicon, T0 is a reference temperature,
Vbe0 is vbe at the reference temperature
vbe(d0,T0), K is Boltzman's constant (1.38×10∧23), q is the electron charge 1.602×10∧−19
The bandgap voltage can now be calculated by applying the vbe(d,T) function:
The above will have a zero-temperature coefficient when:
The present disclosure has been described in terms of one or more examples, and it should be appreciated that many equivalents, alternatives, variations, and modifications, aside from those expressly stated, are possible and within the scope of the disclosure. While the present disclosure is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific examples thereof have been shown in the drawings and are herein described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the description herein of specific examples is not intended to limit the disclosure to the particular forms disclosed herein.
This application claims priority to commonly owned U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 63/270,526; filed Oct. 21, 2021; entitled “Curvature Compensated Bandgap With Minimal Process Variation,” which is hereby incorporated by reference herein for all purposes.
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Entry |
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Brokaw, A.P., “A Simple Three-Terminal IC Bandgap Reference,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. SC-9, pp. 388-393, Dec. 1974. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion, Application No. PCT/US2022/025718, 12 pages, dated Jul. 11, 2022. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20230161369 A1 | May 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63270526 | Oct 2021 | US |