This relates to a voltage regulator with high noise rejection. It is especially useful in a phase lock loop (PLL) power supply.
In a practical application, transistor 120 is physically a relatively large device. Because of this size and the Miller effect, the gate-to-drain capacitance, Cgd, of this circuit is substantial. In addition, to ensure stability, the circuit requires compensation capacitor 130 to be connected across the gate and drain. As a result, the drain is strongly coupled to the gate and at high frequencies is coupled to the power supply, which greatly degrades the power noise rejection of the voltage regulator. In some applications, a common drain device may be used as a source follower to improve noise rejection but this results in a much reduced regulator output.
Power supply noise is often the major cause of jitter in the output clock of a phase lock loop (PLL). To minimize the PLL's sensitivity to noise, it is desirable to regulate the power supply to the analog circuit blocks of the PLL which are extremely sensitive to noise.
In accordance with the invention, a native MOS transistor is used as a source follower in place of a conventional common source MOS transistor in a voltage regulator circuit. The native transistor has a threshold voltage of approximately 0 volts which allows the maximum voltage output of the regulator to be higher by approximately the threshold voltage of a conventional NMOS transistor, e.g., 0.7 volts, than the maximum voltage output that might be obtained from a voltage regulator that used a conventional NMOS transistor. Alternatively, a depletion transistor can be used to achieve even higher output voltage for a given supply voltage.
In a first illustrative embodiment of the invention, the regulator comprises an op amp, a native NMOS transistor connected as a source follower to an output of the op amp, a compensation capacitor connected between the output of the op amp and ground, a current leaker resistor connected between the regulated output and ground, a decoupling capacitor connected between the regulated output and ground and a feedback network for supplying a portion of the regulated output voltage to an inverting input of the op amp. Because the source follower is not subject to the Miller effect and because the compensation capacitance for the regulator stability is placed between the gate of the source follower and the ground, in contrast to placing it between the gate and the drain in a common source device, the power noise rejection of this regulator is superior to the conventional regulator using a PMOS common source transistor.
In a second illustrative embodiment of the invention, the op amp of the voltage regulator is operated as a unity gain buffer. For this purpose, the regulated output voltage is fed back unattenuated to the inverting input terminal of the op amp. In other respects, the circuit of this embodiment is the same as that of the first embodiment. The unity gain buffer can also be combined with the first illustrative embodiment so that the regulated output voltage of the first illustrative embodiment is supplied to the non-inverting input terminal of the op amp of the unity gain buffer. In this arrangement, the output of the two voltage regulators will track each other while the outputs are isolated from each other.
In a third illustrative embodiment, a conventional bandgap reference circuit is modified by replacing a common source transistor connected to the output of an op amp with a native NMOS transistor connected as a source follower. As is known in the art, a bandgap reference circuit generates a fixed DC reference voltage that remains substantially constant with variations in temperature. It achieves this constant output by adding two quantities which have opposite temperature coefficients (TCs) with proper weighing, to result in a zero TC. Illustratively, in the third illustrative embodiment, an op amp is used to sense the voltage difference of two forward-biased base-emitter junctions and the output of the op amp is provided to a native transistor connected as a source follower, and to the base-emitter junctions through resistors. Since the forward-biased base-emitter voltage exhibits a negative TC while the voltage difference between two base-emitter junctions operating at unequal current densities has a positive TC, these effects can be offset to produce an output voltage that is substantially constant with variations in temperature. Advantageously, the bandgap reference circuit of the present invention can be combined with the first illustrative embodiment so that the output voltage of the bandgap reference circuit is supplied as an input to the non-inverting input terminal of the op amp of the first illustrative embodiment.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more readily apparent from the following Detailed Description in which:
Conventional NMOS device 150 of
Native n-channel NMOS device 160 of
Depletion NMOS device 170 of
As the source voltage of an NMOS device increases, the threshold voltage of the NMOS device also increases (but not in proportion the source voltage). If the source voltage of depletion NMOS device 170 increases sufficiently, its threshold voltage rises above zero. However, the threshold voltage of depletion NMOS device 170 is less than the threshold voltage of native NMOS device 160 at the same source voltage.
In accordance with the invention, transistor 220 is a native NMOS transistor. As a result, the threshold voltage at which the transistor begins to conduct between source and drain is approximately 0 volts. Since the threshold voltage of transistor 220 is approximately 0 volts, the maximum regulator output voltage of voltage regulator 200 is higher by approximately one conventional NMOS threshold voltage, typically 0.7 volts, than the maximum output voltage that would be provided by a voltage regulator using a conventional NMOS transistor source follower.
Alternatively, transistor 220 is a depletion NMOS transistor such as that shown in
Capacitor 230 is connected between the output of op amp 210 and ground and current leaker resistor 250 is connected between the regulated output and ground. Capacitor 230 and current leaker 250 are used to provide stability over the range of operating conditions. Advantageously, the current leaker can be a current source device in which the current drawn is inversely proportional to the current drawn by the load. This is especially advantageous in reducing the burden on the regulator where the load is a phase lock loop operating at high frequencies. Capacitor 235 is a decoupling capacitor connected between the regulated output and ground and providing further decoupling between the regulated output and the unregulated voltage supply.
Advantageously, the voltage regulators of
The first temperature dependent circuit 470 comprises a series connection of first and second resistors 472, 474 and a bipolar transistor 476 in which the base and collector are coupled together and connected to ground. The second temperature dependent circuit 480 comprises a series connection of a resistor 482 and a bipolar transistor 486 in which the base and collector are coupled together and connected to ground. The output voltage, Vref, is connected to resistors 472 and 482. A node 473 between resistors 472 and 472 is connected to a inverting input terminal 414 of op amp 410. A node 485 between resistor 482 and transistor 486 is connected to a non-inverting input terminal 412 of op amp 410.
Bipolar transistor 476 comprises several unit transistors in parallel and transistor 486 is a single unit transistor. As a result, transistors 476 and 486 operate at different collector current densities. Op amp 401 amplifies the difference between the voltages at nodes 473 and 485 in circuits 470 and 480 and provides an output to transistor 420. The difference between the voltages at the emitters of transistors 476 and 486 has a positive temperature coefficient (TC). However, the base-emitter voltage between ground and node 485 of transistor 486 exhibits a negative temperature coefficient. The positive TC and negative TC are added with proper weighting by op amp 401, source follower 420 and resistors 472, 473 and 482. The resulting reference voltage, Vref, at node 422 is substantially constant with variations in temperature, thereby displaying substantially zero TC.
As indicated above, bandgap reference circuit 400 is advantageously combined with the voltage regulator 200 so that the output voltage, Vref, available at source 422 is supplied to the non-inverting input terminal 212 of op amp 210; and the voltage regulators 200 and 300 may also be combined. The resulting voltage regulator depicted in
a first operational amplifier 410;
a first native NMOS transistor 420 having a first source 422, a first drain 426 and a first gate 424, the gate being coupled to an output of the first operational amplifier, an unregulated supply voltage being applied to the first drain and a first regulated voltage being provided at the first source;
a first temperature dependent circuit 470 coupled to the source and having an output coupled to an inverting input 414 of the first operational amplifier;
a second temperature dependent circuit 480 coupled to the source and having an output coupled to a non-inverting input 412 of the first operational amplifier;
a second operational amplifier 210 having a non-inverting input 212 coupled to the first source 422;
a second native NMOS transistor 220 having a second source 222, a second drain 226 and a second gate 224, the second gate being coupled to an output of the second operational amplifier, the voltage to be regulated being applied to the second drain and a second regulated voltage being provided at the second source;
a feedback path 240 between the second source and an inverting input 214 of the second operational amplifier;
a third operational amplifier 310 having a non-inverting input 312 coupled to the second source 222;
a third native NMOS transistor 320 having a third source 322, a third drain 326 and a third gate 324, the third gate being coupled to an output of the third operational amplifier, the voltage to be regulated being applied to the third drain and a third regulated voltage being provided at the third source; and
a feedback path between the third source 322 and an inverting input of the third operational amplifier 314.
As will be apparent to those skilled in the art, numerous variations may be practiced within the spirit and scope of the invention. Of particular note, as indicated above, a depletion transistor may be substituted for the native transistor.
This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 11/441,849, filed May 26, 2006 now abandoned, which is incorporated by reference herein.
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5512814 | Allman | Apr 1996 | A |
6114844 | Chang et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6621675 | Ingino, Jr. | Sep 2003 | B2 |
7224204 | Walter | May 2007 | B2 |
7495505 | Chang et al. | Feb 2009 | B2 |
7602101 | Hara et al. | Oct 2009 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11441849 | May 2006 | US |
Child | 12760643 | US |