1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to generating a reference voltage in integrated circuits, and more particularly to reference voltage circuits for low-power applications.
2. Description of the Related Art
A bangap reference circuit has improved temperature stability and is less dependent on power supply voltage than other known voltage reference circuits. Bandgap reference circuits typically generate a reference voltage approximately equal to the bandgap voltage of silicon extrapolated to zero degrees Kelvin, i.e., VG0=1.205V. Typical voltage reference circuits include a current mirror coupled to the power supply and the voltage reference node to provide a current proportional to the absolute temperature to the voltage reference node.
Integrated circuits having 3V power supplies can easily meet the demands of operating devices included in a cascoded current mirror and generate the reference voltage without compromising stability of the reference voltage. For example, a voltage reference generator with a power supply of 3V provides a reference voltage of 1.2V. The VDS of a MOSFET included in the current mirror has a magnitude of 3V−1.2V=1.8V, which is sufficient to operate the device under typical conditions with an acceptable power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) (i.e., the ability of the voltage reference generator to reject noise on the power supply). However, as the power supply voltage drops, e.g., for low-power applications, available voltage headroom required to operate the devices included in the current mirror is reduced, the PSRR becomes more critical, and the voltage reference generator is less likely to provide a sufficiently stable reference voltage with respect to variations on the power supply.
Accordingly, improved techniques for generating stable reference voltages for low-power applications are desired.
A voltage reference generator generates a stable reference voltage that is less than the bandgap voltage of silicon for power supply voltages less than 2V, yet provides sufficient voltage headroom to operate a current mirror. In one embodiment, the voltage reference generator has a power supply rejection ratio of at least 60 dB and has a noise performance comparable to traditional bandgap circuits. These advantages are achieved by subtracting a current proportional to a complement of an absolute temperature from a current proportional to the absolute temperature to generate a voltage having a positive temperature coefficient, which is then added to a voltage that is a complement of the absolute temperature to achieve a voltage that has a low temperature coefficient.
In some embodiments of the present invention, an integrated circuit includes a first circuit and a second circuit that generate first and second currents, respectively. The first current is proportional to the absolute temperature. The second current is proportional to a complement of the absolute temperature. The integrated circuit further includes a node at which the second current is subtracted from the first current to generate a third current. The third current is proportional to an absolute temperature. The integrated circuit includes a third circuit that compensates for a temperature coefficient of the third current with a first voltage proportional to a complement of the absolute temperature. A reference voltage at the node is based at least in part on the third current and the first voltage. The temperature coefficient of the reference voltage is low.
In some embodiments of the present invention, a method for generating a reference voltage on a node of a circuit includes subtracting a current proportional to a complement of absolute temperature from a first current proportional to absolute temperature at a reference node. The subtracting generates a second current proportional to absolute temperature. The second current has a temperature coefficient more positive than the temperature coefficient of the first current. The method includes generating a first voltage proportional to absolute temperature across a resistor using the second current. The method further includes combining a second voltage proportional to a complement of absolute temperature with the first voltage to provide, at the reference node, a voltage having a low temperature coefficient.
In some embodiments of the present invention, a method of manufacturing an integrated circuit product includes forming a first circuit that generates a first current. The first current is proportional to an absolute temperature. The method includes forming a second circuit that generates a second current. The second current is proportional to a complement of the absolute temperature. The method includes forming a node at which the second current is subtracted from the first current to generate a third current. The third current is proportional to an absolute temperature. The method further includes forming a third circuit that compensates for a temperature coefficient of the third current with a first voltage proportional to a complement of the absolute temperature. A temperature coefficient of a reference voltage at the node is low. The reference voltage is based at least in part on the third current and the first voltage.
In some embodiments of the present invention, a voltage reference generator includes a resistor coupled to receive a first current. The first current is formed by subtracting a current proportional to a complement of an absolute temperature from a current proportional to the absolute temperature at a reference node, thereby generating a voltage proportional to absolute temperature across the resistor. The voltage reference generator includes a bipolar transistor coupled to the resistor and provides a voltage proportional to a complement of the absolute temperature to be combined with the voltage proportional to absolute temperature. The combination provides a reference voltage at the reference node. The reference voltage has a low temperature coefficient.
In some embodiments of the present invention, a method includes generating a first and second currents proportional to absolute temperature. The first current has a first temperature coefficient and the second current has a second temperature coefficient. The second temperature coefficient is greater than the first temperature coefficient. The method includes generating a reference voltage based on the first and second currents.
The present invention may be better understood, and its numerous objects, features, and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings.
The use of the same reference symbols in different drawings indicates similar or identical items.
A typical voltage reference circuit (e.g., voltage reference generator 100 of
A voltage proportional to absolute temperature (i.e., a ‘ptat’ voltage) may be obtained by taking the difference between two VBEs biased at different current densities:
where J1 and J2 are saturation currents of corresponding bipolar transistors. Accordingly, voltage reference circuit 100 includes a pair of pnp bipolar transistors (i.e., transistors 106 and 108) that are connected in a diode configuration (i.e., the collectors and bases of these transistors are coupled together) and coupled to ground. Transistor 108 has an emitter area that is M times larger than the area of transistor 106. Thus, the saturation currents of transistor 108 and transistor 106 vary by a factor of M. The emitter of transistor 106 is coupled to an inverting input of operational amplifier 116. The emitter of transistor 108 is coupled, via resistor R1, to the non-inverting input of operational amplifier 116. Operational amplifier 116 maintains equivalent voltages at nodes 118 and 120, i.e., V118=V120=VBE106. Hence, the difference between VBE106 and VBE108 (i.e., ΔVBE106,108) forms across resistor R1. Operational amplifier 116 and transistors 102 and 104 convert this voltage difference into a current (i.e., current I1) proportional to the voltage difference:
Since the thermal voltage VT has a positive temperature coefficient of k/q, k=1.38*10−23J/K and q=1.6*10−19C, the current proportional to the voltage difference is proportional to an absolute temperature, i.e., I1 is a ‘ptat’ current.
Transistor 114 provides a voltage nearly complementary to absolute temperature (i.e., a ‘ctat’ voltage) because the VBE of a bipolar transistor is nearly complementary to absolute temperature. By compensating the ptat current with a ctat voltage, transistors 102, 104, 106, 108, 112, and 114, and resistors R1 and R2, may be appropriately sized to generate a particular reference voltage output having a zero temperature coefficient:
Setting
for VREF to have a zero temperature coefficient,
VBE114=VBE106=0.74 at 300° K for an exemplary process and choosing M=8, N=¼, P/N˜4, and R2/R1˜1.2:
at 300° K, VREF=0.74V+0.45V=1.19V≈1.2V.
VREF is approximately equal to, VG0=1.205V, i.e., the bandgap voltage of silicon extrapolated to zero degrees Kelvin.
When the power supply is 3V, the VDS of transistor 112 has a magnitude of 3V−1.2V=1.8V, which is sufficient to operate the device to provide a current independent of fluctuations in VDS. Thus power supply noise will have a minimal effect on I1. However, for an exemplary low-power application, the power supply voltage is 1.62V. Voltage reference generator 100 provides only a VDS of 0.42V for device 112. Transistor 112 may be operating in a linear/quasi-saturation current region and noise on the power supply will cause significant noise in PI1, thereby generating a noisy VREF and degrading the accuracy of VREF. The PSRR is typically determined empirically by presenting a varying signal on the power supply and measuring variations exhibited at the VREF node. At a 1.62V power supply, voltage reference generator 100 is unable to provide a desired 60 dB PSRR. The poor power supply rejection of voltage reference generator 100 makes voltage reference generator 100 inoperable for the purpose of providing a stable voltage reference. A desired voltage reference generator PSRR for a low-power application is at least 60 dB over process and temperature variations. In addition, noise from operational amplifier 116, which dominates the circuit noise of voltage reference generator 100, is amplified by a factor of √{square root over (P)} by the current mirror thus amplifying noise on VREF.
Referring to
Since the thermal voltage VT has a positive temperature coefficient of k/q, k=1.38*10−23J/K and q=1.6*10−19C, I4, is a ptat current. Transistor 228 provides node REF with a mirrored I4 current, amplified by B.
Transistor 206 provides a ctat voltage because the VBE of a pnp bipolar transistor is nearly complementary to absolute temperature. The emitter of transistor 206 is coupled to an inverting input of operational amplifier 222. The resistor R4 is coupled to the non-inverting input of operational amplifier 222. Operational amplifier 222 maintains equivalent voltages at nodes 223 and 224, i.e., V223=V224=VBE206. Hence, a ctat current proportional to VBE206 flows through resistor R4:
Transistors 226, 230, and 232 form mirror current I5 with a gain of A, thus, providing a ctat current AI5 that is subtracted from BI4 at node VREF.
Transistor 234 provides a ctat voltage because the VBE of bipolar transistor is nearly complementary to absolute temperature. By subtracting a ctat current from a ptat current and compensating for a remaining ptat current with a ctat voltage, transistors 214, 216, 202, 204, 218, 206, 220, 226, 228, 230, and 234, and resistors R3, R4, and R5, may be appropriately sized to generate a particular reference voltage output, VREF, having a low (e.g., substantially zero) temperature coefficient (e.g., less than 1 μV/° K over a given temperature range):
Choosing M=8 and N=1/4,
Choosing A=1/4, B=3/2;
Setting
for VREF to have a zero temperature coefficient,
For currents AI5 and I6 to be positive,
Evaluating over a temperature range (e.g., −55° C.<T<125° C.), at −55° C. (i.e., T=218° K),
Also,
for the ratio of the two resistors to be positive;
Assuming VBE206=VBE234=VBE,
Substituting
From above,
V
REF>(1.464)0.61=0.893V.
Hence, 0.893V<VREF<1.22V.
Choosing VREF=0.96V, in one embodiment of the present invention, R3=7.5 kΩ, R4=5.28 kΩ, R5=4.82 kΩ. The values given above are exemplary. Other values (e.g., resistances and transistor sizes) may be selected to obtain an appropriate voltage reference in a given environment.
Voltage reference generator 200 provides reference voltages less than 1.0V (e.g., 0.96V) by subtracting a ctat current AI5 from ptat current BI4 to generate a current proportional to absolute temperature having a temperature coefficient more positive than the temperature coefficient of BI4. A current having a temperature coefficient greater than the temperature coefficient of BI4 may also be achieved by adding a ptat current to B I4 to form I6. As described above, the reference voltage of voltage reference generator 100 is
which may be modeled as
VREF=VBE+C1R2T.
The reference voltage of voltage reference generator 200 is
which may be modeled as
VREF=VBE+C2R5T+C3R5.
Since C2 (i.e., the slope of current I6 with respect to temperature) is greater than C1 (i.e., the slope of current I1 with respect to temperature), to maintain a constant voltage with respect to temperature, resistor R5 is smaller than R2. However, C3, i.e., the offset of ptat current I6, is negative, thus reducing the reference voltage produced by voltage reference generator 200 from that produced by voltage reference generator 100 (e.g., below 1.2V). The increase in the temperature coefficient of I6 and the offset of current I6 allows reducing VREF below 1.2V while maintaining a substantially zero temperature coefficient of VREF. The increase in the temperature coefficient of I6 also allows reducing B, which reduces noise contributions from operational amplifier 212 at VREF. A smaller B also results in transistor 228 operating farther from its linear/quasi-saturation region.
The reduction in VREF from 1.2V improves the PSRR because the voltage headroom for the current mirror is at least 1.62V−0.96V=0.66V. Noise performance of voltage reference generator 200 is similar to that for voltage reference generator 100 because the noise from operational amplifier 222 is attenuated by A, thus the dominant noise component is from operational amplifier 212. Ptat current I6 has a greater slope as a function of temperature than ptat current BI4. The exemplary embodiment of circuit 200 was designed for a supply voltage of 1.62V and a reference voltage of 0.96V, however, this circuit is not limited thereto. Voltage reference generator 200 may be operated at other supply voltages and reference voltages, and remains operable so long as VDD−VREF>400 mV (i.e., the current mirror remains operable) and 1.22V>VREF>0.893V.
While circuits and physical structures are generally presumed, it is well recognized that in modern semiconductor design and fabrication, physical structures and circuits may be embodied in computer readable descriptive form suitable for use in subsequent design, test, or fabrication stages. Structures and functionality presented as discrete components in the exemplary configurations may be implemented as a combined structure or component. The invention is contemplated to include circuits, systems of circuits, related methods, and computer-readable medium encodings of such circuits, systems, and methods, all as described herein, and as defined in the appended claims. As used herein, a computer readable medium includes at least disk, tape, or other magnetic, optical, semiconductor (e.g., flash memory cards, ROM), or electronic medium and a network, wireline, wireless or other communications medium.
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