This application claims priority to Chinese Patent Application No. 2011110008191.2, filed on Jan. 14, 2011, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated herein by reference.
The field relates to a temperature sensor, particularly to a temperature sensor based on magnetic tunneling junction device.
There are a variety of available temperature sensors. Some are designed according to the PN junction theory; some are designed according to the threshold voltage of MOS transistor. However, there are more varistor temperature sensors made on the basis of the characteristic that varistor resistance changes according to the temperature.
Many of the available sensors at least have some of these problems; they cannot simultaneously perform functions such as temperature detection, over-temperature protection and over-current protection.
There remains a continuing need for improved temperature sensors.
In one exemplary embodiment, a temperature sensor based on magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) device, comprises an MTJ device, a PMOS device and an analog switch. In this embodiment, a source electrode of the PMOS device is connected to a power supply, a drain electrode of the PMOS device is connected to the input terminal of the MTJ device and is connected to a voltage output terminal of the temperature sensor.
Additionally, the output terminal of the MTJ device is connected to the ground or a circuit via the analog switch, and the drain electrode of the PMOS device is short circuited with the gate electrode of the PMOS device.
Further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent when the following detailed description is read in view of the drawing figures, in which:
The examples and drawings provided in the detailed description are merely examples, which should not be used to limit the scope of the claims in any claim construction or interpretation.
The following terms used throughout the specification are abbreviations. “MTJ” stands for “magnetic tunnel junction.” “CMOS stands for “complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor.” “NMOS stands for “n-channel MOSFET (metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor). “PMOS stands for “p-channel MOSFET (metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor).
An object of the invention, among many, is to provide a temperature sensor based on magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) device. The sensor is compatible with CMOS process and is able to simultaneously perform the functions such as temperature detection, over-temperature protection and over-current protection.
An exemplary temperature sensor based on magnetic tunneling junction device, includes an MTJ device, a PMOS device and an analog switch, where the source electrode of the PMOS device is connected to a power supply; the drain electrode of the PMOS device is connected to the input terminal of the MTJ device and is connected to the voltage output terminal of the temperature sensor; the output terminal of the MTJ device is connected to the ground or a circuit via the analog switch; and the drain electrode of the PMOS device is short circuited with the gate electrode of the PMOS device.
The exemplary temperature sensor also includes an operational amplifier. The negative input terminal of the operational amplifier is connected to the voltage output terminal; the positive input terminal of the operational amplifier is provided with a reference voltage. Therefore, an over-temperature protection circuit is formed when the voltage is being detected.
The temperature sensor also includes an NMOS device. The source electrodes and the drain electrodes of the NMOS device and the PMOS device are connected with each other respectively, and the drain electrode of the NMOS device is short circuited with the gate electrode of the NMOS device.
The MTJ (Magnetic Tunneling Junction) device can be an STT-MTJ (Spin-Transfer-Torque Magnetic Tunnel Junction) device or an MTJ device of another type.
In order to protect an integrated circuit from damage of high temperature which causes the degradation of its circuit performance, and even failure in certain cases, a temperature sensor is normally integrated within the integrated circuit. The sensor is required to detect the temperature of the integrated circuit and shut down power supply in time when the integrated circuit is faced with over-temperature or short circuit, for protection purpose.
An exemplary temperature sensor is based on magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) device. In one example, the temperature sensor is made by utilizing the magnetic tunneling junction device, and this sensor is compatible with CMOS process and able to simultaneously perform the functions such as temperature detection, over-temperature protection and over-current protection.
The structure principle of exemplary embodiments is shown in
The MTJ device is in anti-parallel state at the beginning of temperature detection. The gate electrode G of the PMOS device MP1 is short circuited with the drain electrode D of the PMOS device MP1, so the device is always in a saturation state, in this example.
Therefore, a circuit for conducting current is constructed between the power supply VDD and the ground GND after the analog switch S is connected with the contact point 2; in this case, MP1 and MTJ device compose a single-stage CMOS amplifier. On the premise that the length-to-width ratio of MP1 is fixed, the output voltage of this sensor varies with the resistance of the MTJ device; a temperature change causes the resistance of the MTJ device to change, so the output voltage also changes. therefore, the temperature measurement function of this sensor is that it can measure the temperature through measuring the corresponding output voltage.
Current flows from free layer to fixed layer during a temperature measurement, and the current is negative current for the MTJ device. The conductance of the device is increased as temperature rises, so the current is also increased. For MTJ device, there is a parameter, representing the current density for MTJ's transfer from antiparallel to parallel state, of:
JCAP→P,
where AP represents anti-parallel state, P represents a parallel state, C represents current and J represents current density. MTJ will flip into parallel state after that the current density exceeds the parameter.
The equivalent resistance of MTJ will suddenly drop after that MTJ flip into parallel state, and cause the output voltage drop in
As shown in
From the examples provided, it is evident that the exemplary temperature sensor based on magnetic tunneling junction device is compatible with CMOS process and able to simultaneously perform the functions such as temperature detection, over-temperature protection and over-current protection since it comprises an MTJ device, a PMOS device and an analog switch, and the source electrode of the PMOS device is connected to a power supply, the drain electrode is connected to the input terminal of the MTJ device and is connected to the voltage output terminal, the output terminal of the MTJ device is connected to the ground or a circuit via the analog switch, and the drain electrode of the PMOS device is short circuited with the gate electrode.
While the principles of the invention have been described herein, it is to be understood by those skilled in the art that this description is made only by way of example and not as a limitation as to the scope of the invention. Other embodiments are contemplated within the scope of the present invention in addition to the exemplary embodiments shown and described herein. Modifications and substitutions by one of ordinary skill in the art are considered to be within the scope of the present invention, which is not to be limited except by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201110008191.2 | Jan 2011 | CN | national |