This invention pertains generally to the field of voltage regulation circuits and, more particularly, to the wake-up behavior of such circuit.
A voltage regulation circuit is an analog block that provides a regulated power supply output for various circuit blocks of an integrated circuit. During stand-by or reset periods, these regulator circuits are frequently reset to reduce power consumption, being enabled to provide the expected output voltages during the circuits operation. The enabling of these regulators from stand-by or reset is termed as “wake-up”. A key specification for the regulators is the time required for wake-up. A number of techniques are known in the prior art for reducing wake-up times; however, in many high performance applications the wake-up behavior of these previous approaches is still often below desired levels.
According to a general aspect of the invention, a voltage regulation system includes a regulator section and detection circuitry. The regulator section has a power transistor connected between a supply level and the output of the voltage regulation system; a feedback path to receive feedback from the output of the voltage regulation system; and an operational amplifier having first and second inputs and having an output connected to the gate of the power transistor. The first input of the operational amplifier is connected to a reference level and the regulator section also has switching circuitry, whereby the second input of the operational amplifier is selectively connectable to either receive feedback from a the feedback path or to ground. The detection circuitry is connected to the switching circuitry and to receive the output of the operational amplifier and an enable signal, whereby the second input of the operational amplifier is connected to ground when the enable signal is asserted and the voltage level on the output of the operational amplifier is above a first regulation level and is otherwise connected to receive the feedback.
Other general aspects include a method of resetting a voltage regulation circuit, the voltage regulation circuit including a power transistor connected between a supply level and the output node of the voltage regulation circuit, and an operational amplifier having first and second inputs and having an output connected to the gate of the power transistor, where the first input of the operational amplifier is connected to a reference level. The method includes setting the output of the operational amplifier to the supply level; subsequently setting the second input of the operational amplifier to ground; while the second input of the operational amplifier is connected to ground, determining when the output voltage of the operational amplifier falls below a regulation level; and in response to the output voltage of the operation falling below the first regulation level, connecting the second input of the operation amplifier to receive feedback from the output of the voltage regulation circuit.
Other aspects present a voltage regulation circuit that forms a component of an integrated circuit. The voltage regulation circuit is connected between a supply voltage and ground and is also connected to receive a reference voltage and generate from it a regulated output voltage at an output node. The method includes receiving a chip enable signal at the integrated circuit and, in response to the chip enable signal being asserted, determining whether the voltage regulation circuit is active. In response to determining that the voltage regulation circuit is not active, the voltage regulation circuit is activated and, subsequently to the enable signal being asserted, a command to perform an operation using the regulated output voltage is received at the integrated circuit. It is determined whether the command is received within a first interval after activating the voltage regulation circuit and, in response to the command being received within the first interval, the output node is shorted to the supply voltage.
Various aspects, advantages, features and embodiments of the present invention are included in the following description of exemplary examples thereof, whose description should be taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. All patents, patent applications, articles, other publications, documents and things referenced herein are hereby incorporated herein by this reference in their entirety for all purposes. To the extent of any inconsistency or conflict in the definition or use of terms between any of the incorporated publications, documents or things and the present application, those of the present application shall prevail.
Considering the wake-up behavior of voltage regulation circuits further,
To speed up wake-up operation, at reset, the PPG node can be initialized to VEXT and then discharged to the desired VB level for wake-up. The rate at which this node discharges, though, is limited by using only about half of the tail current (ITAIL, the amount of current flowing though the op-amp to ground), as illustrated schematically at 131. This can be seen by referring to
Consequently, under the closed-loop approach of
In addition to the regulator section 300, the system now also has a detection section 340 to provide the control signals of the switches ON 347 and OFF 349. In this embodiment, the detector section is made up of a PMOS transistor 341, whose gate is controlled the level at PPG, connected in series with an NMOS device 343 between VEXT and ground. The gate of the transistor 343 is connected to a control signal ACTIVEnVDD and which of the OFF 349 and ON 347 switches closed can be determined by the level at the node between transistors 341 and 343 (for OFF) and, through inverter 345, its inverse (for ON).
To improve wake-up response, after the PPG node is initialized to VEXT the + input is set to ground by the ON switch 347 to increase the current used to discharge the PPG node. (The OFF switch 349 is left open, leaving PMON to float at the on the divider chain.) This is schematically illustrated at the current 331 where the full tail current is used to discharge PPG. This provides for faster wake-up as 100% of ITAIL can now be used to discharge. The required area increase is small (in this embodiment, the switches OFF 349 and ON 347 and the PMOS, NMOS and inverter of detector 340) and the required extra power consumption required is low. It should be noted that this scheme can be used along with other wake-up schemes Although the op-amp is switched off during wake-up to make the regulator operate in an open loop, this is can be ignored since during wake-up the levels at PPG, VDD, and PMON are all in transition and the closed loop behavior has yet to be established.
In the detection section 340 of the system, the gate of the PMOS 341 is connected to the output of the op-amp 301 and the NMOS 343 connected to a control signal ACTIVEnVDD. The ACTIVEnVDD signal is high when disabled and low when enabled, including the wake-up operation. After resetting of PPG to VEXT, the device 341 turns off and the OFF node below it goes low, so that the ON switch 347 is closed and OFF switch 349 is opened. This open loop arrangement then allows for a faster response than the closed loop behavior in bringing down PPG toward the desired level of VB. ACTIVEnVDD then goes LOW so that as PPG drops down to the normal operation mode, this allows for the OFF signal to be pulled HIGH (and ON signal to go LOW), so that the op-amp 301 is connected back to the feedback loop at PMON. In the exemplary embodiment, ACTIVEnVDD is disabled automatically when the generator is enabled. This use of a detection circuit based on the level at PPG for setting the switches for the op-amp input allows for better tracking of device operation across processing corners. The operation of the detection circuit can be trimmed or determined by a user based upon the sizing of the PMOS 341.
Also shown in the embodiment of
Shorting Scheme for Suspend-Resume
This section considers a complementary set of techniques that can be used for resuming operation of suspended regulation circuits. In general terms, when a regulation circuit comes back on and its output is needed for an operation, but has yet to come back up to the operating regulation level after being suspended, the output can be temporarily shorted to the supply level to speed up the process.
An example of where this situation can arise in the operation of non-volatile memory systems of a controller and one or more memory chips. During double data rate (DDR) operations, data-out operations can be susceptible to failure due to large internal power drops, such as would occur for the first data out DDR operation when a chip is enable for an insufficient time before the output clock starts toggling, or a data-out suspend-resume operation during which internal generators go into standby node. In such conditions, internal regulation circuits are not completely (due to their internal wake-up time) and any initial large current requirements would mainly be supplied by large pool capacitances. This section presents techniques for addressing this problem without the need of adding a large amount of pool capacitance.
More specifically, in a first set of aspects, to prevent power drop in the absence of regulators, the device shorts the internal power bus with the external power supply for a short duration, which can be trimmable. This scheme can provide for large initial currents without resort to increasing pool capacitance in the absence of regulation. This sort of an arrangement can have the side-effect that when the regulators are on, such as for data-out resume times being too short to go into a standby mode, the shorting of the internal bus to the external supply can cause an over-shoot for the internal power bus. Such an over-shoot can lead to an erroneous data out operation. In another set of aspects, to counter this side-effect, a detector circuit is used to detect when the data-out suspend resume time is less than the time needed to trigger going into standby more. This can mask the shorting pulse width if the regulator is on (avoiding overshoot) and unmask the pulse width when the regulator is off (to regulate internal power drop). This arrangement can provide a full solution to regulate internal power bus drop within design specifications for known marginal out data situations that could otherwise result in failure during DDR or other high speed operation, and in a way that can reduce die size by limiting requirements for large poop capacitances.
In the exemplary embodiment, the circuit can be taken as a non-volatile memory chip and the regulation circuit's output can be used as a rad voltage. More generally, the read operation would be replaced with, say, a write operation or whatever operation will be using the output of the voltage regulator circuit. Here, the third line in
The signals REnx and CEnx are received from off chip and from these the circuit internally generates ActivenVDD, LOWVDDn, and EQ_VEXT_VDD as just described. These three internally generated signals and VDD then serve as inputs for the logic circuitry of
The process described here has several delays or time intervals, including how long the shorting pulse lasts; how long the chip is disabled before the regulation circuit is shut down; and how long after the restating of the regulator being restart the pulse is needed. These values can be settable and user and user specification dependent. These intervals can have a duration or width that be set based on the specific design and controller by use of a parameter. The values can then be changed by a user (such as a NAND controller), but should adhere to JEDEC or other relevant timing specification guidelines.
The foregoing detailed description of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The described embodiments were chosen in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.
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U.S. Appl. No. 13/750,794 entitled “LDO/HDO Architecture Using Supplementary Current Source to Improve Effective System Bandwidth,” filed Jan. 25, 2013, 21 pages. |
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