This invention relates to use of a transient blocking unit (TBU) to protect an electrical load from over-voltage and/or over-current conditions.
Many circuits, networks, electrical devices and data handling systems are operated in configurations and environments where external factors can impair their performance, cause failure or even result in permanent damage. Among the most common of these factors are over-voltage and over-current. Protection against these factors is important and has been addressed in the prior art in various ways.
Fuses that employ thermal or magnetic elements are one common protection measure. In other cases, protection circuits are available. Some examples are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,130,262; 5,625,519; 6,157,529; 6,828,842 and 6,898,060. Protection circuits are further specialized depending on conditions and application. For example, in the case of protecting batteries or rechargeable elements from overcharging and over-discharging one can refer to circuit solutions described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,789,900; 6,313,610; 6,331,763; 6,518,731; 6,914,416; 6,948,078; 6,958,591 and U.S. Published Application 2001/00210192. Still other protection circuits, e.g., ones associated with power converters for IC circuits and devices that need to control device parameters and electric parameters simultaneously also use these elements. Examples can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,929,665; 6,768,623; 6,855,988; 6,861,828.
When providing protection for very sensitive circuits, such as those encountered in telecommunications the performance parameters of the fuses and protection circuits are frequently insufficient. A prior art solution embodied by transient blocking units (TBUs) that satisfy a number of the constraints is considered in international publications PCT/AU94/00358; PCT/AU04/00117; PCT/AU03/00175; PCT/AU03/00848 as well as in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,533,970; 5,742,463 and related literature cited in these references.
In a TBU, two or more transistors are arranged such that they normally provide a low series resistance. However, when an over-voltage or over-current transient is applied to the TBU, the transistors switch to a high impedance current blocking state, thereby protecting a load connected in series to the TBU. Variations and/or refinements of the basic TBU concept are considered in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,916,220, 5,319,515, 5,625,519, 5,696,659, 5,729,418, 6,002,566, 6,118,641, 6,714,393, 6,865,063, and 6,970,337
When a TBU is in a current blocking state, it is possible in some cases (e.g., if device pinch-off characteristics are not well matched) for a terminal voltage at one or more of the TBU transistors to rise to a potentially damaging level. One solution to this problem is to employ TBU transistors which can handle such terminal voltages. For example, MOS transistors with thick gate oxides can be employed. However, this solution has drawbacks, since increasing the gate oxide thickness increases the channel resistance and decreases device transconductance. Furthermore, many IC foundries only provide thin gate oxides.
Accordingly, it would be an advance in the art to provide a TBU having improved voltage handling capability.
According to the invention, one or more of the TBU transistors is shunted in order to reduce transistor terminal voltages during transient blocking. More specifically, at least one of the TBU transistors is a protecting device having a shunt circuit element connected in parallel with its channel. When the TBU is in its high impedance state, the shunt circuit element provides a current path, thereby decreasing terminal voltages on at least one of the TBU transistors. The shunt element can be a discrete or integrated resistor, a current source including a transistor, or an appropriately engineered device parasitic.
A key operating principle of the invention is that the current leakage provided by the shunt element prevents the development of high voltages across one or more of the TBU transistors in the high impedance state. Such high voltages can occur in conventional TBUs if the distribution of input voltage between the TBU transistors is asymmetric (e.g., due to device mismatch).
The invention provides various advantages. One advantage of the invention is that TBU transistor gate voltages during transient blocking can be reduced to low levels comparable to device pinch-off voltages. Thus, low voltage transistors having a thin gate oxide can be used in TBUs according to the invention. Another advantage of the invention is that the controlled current leakage provided by the shunt element can facilitate automatic TBU resetting by providing a current discharge path (e.g., in cases where the input to the TBU is capacitive). A further advantage of the invention is that simple CMOS-type technologies, which do not feature isolation between the body(channel) region of N-MOS devices (referred to as “low-side NMOS” by some technologists), since they are on the same substrate, can be utilized for this type of TBU circuit. To achieve full isolation, a BiCMOS-style process with at least one epi layer and at least one buried layer and multiple deep diffusions for junction isolation, or trenches for isolation, would have to be used, which results in a higher wafer cost. The cost difference can be significant (1.5 to 2× depending on the technologies).
a-c show examples of shunt resistance elements suitable for use in embodiments of the invention.
The basic principle of TBU operation is to pass the TBU current ITBU through one or more normally on transistors (e.g., depletion mode transistors). The transistors are connected such that the voltage drops generated by the flow of ITBU tend to turn off the transistors. As a result of this positive feedback, when ITBU exceeds Iout the TBU switches to a high impedance state, thereby protecting the load. The threshold current Iout can be set to a predetermined value by appropriate design. There are various ways to connect the TBU transistors to provide this functionality. For example,
Conventional TBU operation is best appreciated by beginning with the unipolar example of
The example of
The circuit of
When a TBU is in its high-impedance state (i.e., it is blocking a transient), ITBU is not zero. Instead, a finite leakage current Ileak flows through the TBU. The leakage current Ileak is typically in a range from about a few μA to about 0.5 mA, depending on the TBU design. Since the same leakage current flows through all transistors of a TBU, mismatch of device characteristics can be problematic.
For example, suppose a TBU has an input NMOS transistor 106 which has a soft leakage characteristic compared to JFET 110. In this situation, the gate-source voltage Vgs of input transistor 106 will be significantly larger than Vgs of JFET 110 to provide the same leakage current Ileak. High gate-source voltages can adversely affect device reliability (e.g., typically the maximum Vgs is restricted to ˜½ to ⅓ of the gate breakdown voltage). Thus a transistor having a 50 nm gate oxide thickness typically has a Vgsmax of about 15-20 V.
One possible solution is to employ transistors having a high voltage handling capability (e.g., having a thicker gate oxide). However, this solution has drawbacks, since increasing oxide thickness degrades device performance (e.g., increased channel resistance, reduced transconductance). Furthermore, thick gate oxide transistors are often not available from IC foundries.
In more general terms, the invention relates to a TBU having at least one n-channel depletion mode device and at least one p-channel depletion mode device. These depletion mode devices are connected (e.g., as in the unipolar and bipolar examples above) such that an applied electrical transient that exceeds a threshold value alters the bias voltages of the devices so as to turn the devices off. In accordance with the invention, one or more of the depletion mode devices are protected devices and one or more of the depletion mode devices are protecting devices. Each protecting device has a shunt circuit element electrically connected in parallel with its channel. These shunt elements have parameters (e.g., resistances) selected such that terminal voltages (e.g., gate-source voltages) of the protected devices remain below a specified value when the TBU is blocking a transient.
Thus in the example of
A key idea of the invention is that this shunting decouples the TBU transistors from each other in the sense that transistor terminal voltages when the TBU is blocking are independent of how the device pinch-off characteristics match up, in sharp contrast to the situation with a conventional TBU. To further appreciate the invention, it is noteworthy that in the particular case of TBU design, a “leaky” transistor having a non-negligible shunt element in parallel with its channel is useful. This is in sharp contrast to most transistor applications, where such shunt elements are highly undesirable. Design of general purpose transistors routinely includes minimization of such shunt device parasitics.
Shunt circuit elements suitable for practicing the invention include discrete thin film resistors, discrete diffused resistors, resistors integrated with the channel of a protecting device, programmable arrays of resistors, and current sources including transistors.
The shunt circuit element can also be a device parasitic designed to provide an appropriate resistance, as shown on
The resistance provided by this device parasitic will depend on device layout, spacing and dimensions, the resistivity of substrate 702, and (to second order) on the resistivity of the device epitaxial layers. These parameters can be tailored to provide a desired level of shunt resistance. Advantages of this embodiment include fewer components leading to reduced die size and cost, low current density, and the ability to alter the resistance by selecting substrate resistivity. Typical p-substrate resistivities are in the range from 5-20 Ωcm, but a much wider range of resistivity (i.e., about 10−3 Ωcm to about 103 Ωcm) is commercially available. Preferably the substrate resistivity is about 100-200 Ωcm, which is suitable for obtaining ˜5 kΩ shunt resistance in a TBU having a die size of about 1 mm×2 mm.
The preceding description of the invention is by way of example as opposed to limitation. Thus the invention can be practiced according to many variations of the above embodiments. For example, voltage protected TBUs can make use of any kind of depletion mode transistor, such as N or P channel MOSFETs, N or P channel JFETs, static induction transistors, or any other kind of field effect transistor. Although NMOS input and output transistors in combination with a p-channel JFET is preferred, any combination of transistor types is suitable for practicing the invention.
The preceding description refers to various field effect transistors having a source, gate and drain for specificity. It is well known in the art that many field effect transistors are symmetric with respect to their source and drain, in the sense that these connections can be exchanged without substantially altering device or circuit operation. Such transistors often have their source and drain terminals designated with “D/S”. For the bipolar TBU embodiment of
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Nos. 60/644,478 filed on Jan. 14, 2005, 60/693,693 filed on Jun. 30, 2005, and 60/735,667 filed on Nov. 10, 2005, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60644478 | Jan 2005 | US | |
60693693 | Jun 2005 | US | |
60735667 | Nov 2005 | US |