1. Field
This disclosure relates to voltage mirroring circuits supplying scalable voltage biases across all circuits in voltages zones to prevent over-voltage stress at minimum cost in voltage headroom, and more particularly relates to voltage scaled biasing and device stacking for high-voltage operations.
2. Description of the Related Art
In conventional communication systems there is a tradeoff between transmission speed and transmission distance. As lithography and wafer processing technologies enable fabrication of circuits with finer features and thinner gate oxides, the next generation circuits will continue to operate at ever higher speeds, but the over voltage (OV) rating at which these circuits become susceptible to dielectric breakdown also continues to decrease, according to the Johnson limit. Communicating over long distances with large attenuation can require that the transmitted signal is sent as a high voltage signal exceeding the OV rating of fast circuits having thin gate oxides.
For example, a 28 nm thick oxide is rated at 1.8V, and thus a 28 nm thick oxide does not support high voltage, e.g., 3.3V, applications such as Ethernet over unshielded twisted pair (UTP). On the other hand, laterally diffused MOSFET (LDMOS) circuits are compatible with operation at 3.3V across the drain and source. However, LDMOS circuits are too slow and bulky for wideband applications such as 1000BASE-T1 automotive Ethernet.
Some conventional circuits use device stacking to extend the upper bound of voltage scaling in technologies using devices with low OV ratings. However, device stacking also creates inflexibility at the lower bound of voltage scaling, making it difficult to manufacture a single high-bandwidth circuit capable of satisfying alternatively the requirements for low power operation when high voltage signals are not required, and trading off power consumption for high voltage operation when high voltage signals are required. For example, in case of low attenuation and low noise (e.g., in a communication system using short coaxial cables), power saving may be desirable or even mandatory by decreasing the supply voltage. However, the flexibility to decrease the supply voltage may be absent in circuits using conventional device stacking configurations. A wide range of voltage scaling can provide an important advantage, for example, in 100/1000BASE-T1 automotive and small business Ethernet applications. Conventional circuit configuration can be improved to provide better voltage scaling, creating flexibility in a single circuit to alternatively transmit high-voltage signals in applications with high attenuation or noise or by scaling down the supply voltage to save power by transmitting lower voltage signal in applications without high attenuation and noise.
According to aspects of the disclosure, there is provided a voltage supply, including: a voltage-divider network dividing the master voltage into at least one intermediate voltage; and a plurality of voltage zones, each voltage zone including at least one main circuit. Further included in the voltage supply is at least one soft rail, which is configured to provide voltage biasing to the plurality of voltage zones, and the voltage of the at least one soft rail being the at least one intermediate voltage. Additionally, the voltage biasing includes at least one voltage mirroring circuit configured to provide voltage bias to the at least one soft rail and configured to maintain the voltage of the at least one soft rail at the at least one intermediate voltage, wherein the at least one intermediate voltage scales with the master voltage.
A more complete understanding of this disclosure is provided by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
To overcome the scaling inflexibility of conventional device stacking circuits, main circuits can be organized into voltage zones, with each voltage zone receiving voltage biases from non-invasive soft rails using a voltage mirror configuration, wherein the voltage mirrors act as a buffer circuit between a voltage divider network that determines the scaled voltages of the rails and the main circuits that receives voltage bias from the rails. These voltage mirrors are referred to alternatively as “buffer circuits” or as “biasing circuits.” Because the non-invasive soft rails are also applied to the biasing circuits themselves using circuit elements with the same over voltage (OV) rating as the main circuit components in the corresponding voltage zones, the biasing circuit supplying voltage bias to the respective voltage zones is said to be “self zoned.” One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the voltage scaling architecture discussed herein can be realized using circuit elements in the biasing circuits having different OV ratings than the circuit elements in the corresponding main circuits. Thus, the self-zoned feature and the voltage-scaling feature discussed herein can be realized independently.
The self-zoned biasing circuit supplies voltage bias to a plurality of voltage zones, wherein each voltage zone corresponds to a voltage drop that is a predetermined ratio of a master voltage that is supplied by a master power supply. When the master voltage changes either increasing or decreasing, the voltage zones scale with the master voltage maintaining a voltage drop that is the predetermined ratio of the master voltage. The voltage zones are distinguished from conventional over-voltage (OV) prevention circuits by several features.
First, in contrast to a conventional device stacking circuit architecture that is technology dependent; the architecture of the voltages zones and the voltage drop applied across each zone discussed herein are technology independent.
Second, the voltage-zone rails are non-invasive, meaning the insertion of the rails perturbs the main circuits and the self-zoned biasing circuits very little. The rail voltages are applied to the circuits through voltage buffer circuits mirroring the outputs of a voltage-divider network. In one implementation, voltage mirror includes the gate of a first field-effect transistor (FET) being connected to a drain and gate of a second FET and the source of the second FET is directly connected to the voltage divider network. In this implementation, the source of the first FET provides voltage bias to the circuits, and the source of the first FET is maintained at a voltage corresponding to the voltage divider network output without electrical current being drawn directly from the voltage divider network for use in the circuit. When the first FET is inserted at a node of the circuit, the drain of the first FET is connected to the low impedance (Lo-Z) or high voltage swing (Hi-S) side of the circuit node, while the source of the first FET is connected to the high impedance (Hi-Z) side of the circuit node. Thus, the soft rails are said to be non-invasive because rail voltage bias is applied to the circuit node without disturbing the node impedance and signal swing.
Third, when the master supply voltage becomes low, the FETs in the buffer circuits squash to the triode region and the voltage rails provided by the buffer circuits become “soft”, minimizing the headroom voltage occupied by the buffer circuits at low voltage scaling of the master voltage. Of course, some headroom is taken by the FET providing voltage bias to the zoned circuit. This headroom is determined by the drain-to-source voltage of the first FET of the voltage mirror FET pairings. The drain-to-source voltage becomes small when FET operates in the triode region. Also, the headroom taken by the first FET becomes a more significant issue when the master voltage becomes small. Thus, it is advantageous that for master voltages less than a predetermined voltage threshold the first FET will operate in the triode region rather than the saturation region, resulting in decreasing the headroom taken by the first FET (i.e., the FET providing the soft rail or voltage bias to the main or self-zoned biasing circuits) when the master voltages is less than the predetermined voltage threshold.
The voltage drop across each voltage zone is determined by the voltage divider network, but the circuits in the voltage zones and receiving voltage bias from the soft rails do not draw current directly from the voltage divider network. Rather, current is sourced to each of the voltage-zoned main and bias circuits through voltage mirrors, as discussed above. Each voltage mirror includes a first and a second FET. The second FET has its drain electrically connected to its gate and has its source connected to the voltage divider network. Then the source of the second FET is mirrored to be equal to the source of first FET. This mirroring of the source voltages is achieved by choosing the parameters of the first and second FETs such that when a predetermined current flows through the second FET, then the current sourced by the first FET is such that the gate-to-source voltage of the first FET equals the gate-to-source voltage of the second FET. Because the gates of the two FETs are electrically connected and the gate-to-source voltage of the first and second FETs are equal, the source voltage of the first FET will equal source voltage of the second FET. Therefore, the main and bias circuits are provided with voltage bias by a non-invasive soft rail that is scaled to the master voltage even though the main and bias circuits are not directly connected to the voltage divider network determining the voltage scaling.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate identical or corresponding parts throughout the several views,
The intermediate voltages ƒVdd and αVdd, are then supplied to the circuits within the respective first, second, and third zones using non-invasive soft rails. Thus, in zones 3, the circuits have an OV rating V3 that is greater than the voltage drop (1−β)Vdd applied to zone 3. Similarly, in zones 2, the circuits have an OV rating V2 that is greater than the voltage drop (β−α)Vdd applied to zone 2. Finally, in zones 1, the circuits have an OV rating V1 that is greater than the voltage drop αVdd supplied to zone 1.
In the self-zoned bias circuit, a buffer circuit is provided between the voltage divider network 110 and the main circuits 122, 124, and 126. Thus, the main circuits drawing current from the rails having voltages βVdd and αVdd do not disturb or otherwise perturb the ratios β and α because the buffer circuits isolate the voltage divider network determining the voltages βVdd and αVdd from downstream effects such as perturbations resulting from the main circuits. In one implementation, the buffering between the voltage divider network and the main circuits is provided by voltage-mirror circuits.
In one implementation, the bias circuits (i.e., the zone 1 bias circuit 112, zone 2 bias circuit 114, and zone 3 bias circuit 116) generating the soft rails are OV free (i.e., they are OV free because their OV rating is greater than the voltage drop applied across them) because the bias circuits have the same OV rating as the corresponding main circuits. Thus, the bias circuits 112, 114, and 116 in the self-zoned bias circuit 110 are said to be self-zoned. The feature of being OV free results from being self-zoned by biasing circuit elements having the same OV rating as the main circuit elements in the corresponding voltage zone. The configuration of voltage zones illustrated in
The input main circuits are categorized into two voltage zones: an upper Vdd/2 zone and a lower Vdd/2 zone. The upper Vdd/2 zone includes a main circuit having PMOS circuit elements rated with an OV rating of 1.8V. Similarly, the lower Vdd/2 zone includes a main circuit having NMOS circuit elements rated with an OV rating of 1.8V.
Among the output circuits, three zones are provided: an upper Vdd/4 zone, a middle Vdd/2 zone and a lower Vdd/4 zone. The upper Vdd/4 zone includes a main circuit having PMOS circuit elements rated with an OV rating of 1.0V. Similarly, the lower Vdd/4 zone includes a main circuit having NMOS circuit elements rated with an OV rating of 1.0V. Finally, the middle Vdd/2 zone includes a main circuit having both NMOS and PMOS circuit elements arranged in a Cascode configuration and the Cascode configured circuitry is rated with an OV rating of 1.8V. One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that many zoning configurations of self-zoned biasing circuits and main-circuit zones are possible and that the configuration in
Next, the operation of the self-zoned biasing circuits will be described with reference to
All of the current flowing through FET M6 will also flow through FET M12, which is paired in a current mirror configuration with FET M7. The parameters of this paring between FET M12 and FET M7 are chosen such that the current Ip is equal to In to within a few micro amps. Similarly, the parameters of FET M11 and M7 are chosen such that the current flowing through FET M11 is equal to the current flowing through FET M7. Each of the current supplies 361, 362, 363, and 364 respectively source current In to the FETs M11, M7, M8, and M12. Each of the current supplies 351, 352, 353, and 354 respectively source Ip current to the FETs M5, M9, M10, and M6. Thus, in
To supply voltage bias to main circuit 312, which circuit has a high input impedance, the PMOS configuration of a voltage mirror is used consisting of FET M1 and FET M5. The gate of FET M1 is connected to the gate and drain of FET M5. The source voltage of FET M1 is maintained at the voltage βVdd by choosing the parameters of FET M1 and FET M5 such that gate-to-source voltages of FET M1 and FET M5 are equal when the desired bias current is being supplied to main circuit 312. Thus, the source of FET M1 will be maintained at the same voltage as the source of FET M5, which is connected to the voltage divider network and therefore maintained at βVdd.
Similar reasoning can be used to determine that the sources of the FETs supplying voltage biases to the main circuits 332 and 334 are being maintained at the voltage of the soft rail αVdd. Similar to main circuit 314 being supplied with voltage bias using the NMOS paring of FET M2 and FET M6, main circuit 334 is supplied with voltage bias using the PMOS pairing of FET M4 and FET M8. The gate of FET M4 is connected to the gate and drain of FET M8. The parameters of FET M4 and FET M8 are selected such that the gate-to-source voltages of FET M4 and FET M8 are equal when main circuit 334 is biased with a predetermined current. Because the source of FET M8 is maintained at the voltage αVdd, the source of FET M4 is also maintained at the voltage αVdd and main circuit 334 is biased with the voltage αVdd.
Similar to the main circuit 312 being biased using the PMOS paring of FET M1 and FET M5, main circuit 332 is biased using the NMOS paring of FET M3 and FET M7. The gate of FET M3 is connected to the gate and drain of FET M7. The parameters of FET M3 and FET M7 are selected such that the gate-to-source voltages of FET M3 and FET M7 are equal when main circuit 332 is biased with a predetermined current. Because the source of FET M7 is maintained at the voltage αVdd, the source of FET M3 is also maintained at the voltage αVdd and main circuit 332 is supplied with the voltage αVdd.
Regarding supplying voltage bias to main circuit 324, as discussed above the source of FET M2 is maintained at the voltage βVdd and the source of FET M4 is maintained at the voltage αVdd. Thus, the voltage drop across main circuit 324 is maintained at a voltage of (β−α)Vdd. Similarly, the voltage drop across the main circuit 322 is maintained at a voltage of (β−α)Vdd minus the headroom corresponding to the drain-to-source voltage across both of FET M1 and FET M3.
When a soft rail is applied to a main circuit node where either the node impedance is low or the voltage swing is high, the rail voltage is applied with the high-impedance drain of the first FET(s) of the voltage mirror connected to the main circuit node. For example, voltage biases are applied to main circuit 322, which operates in a high voltage swing mode, by the high output impedance drains of FETs M1 and M3. For main circuits having low input impedance, the drain of the voltage biasing FET is also connected to the main circuit. For example, the drain of FET M4 is connected to main circuit 334, and the drain of FET M2 is connected to main circuit 314.
As the voltage Vdd changes to accommodate the requirements of a particular application, the soft rails will respectively track the voltages βVdd and αVdd and thus scale proportionally with Vdd. For applications requiring higher output voltages, a higher Vdd can be applied to the circuit, as long as Vdd does not cause the OV ratings to be exceeded. On the other hand, when power conservation is desired and high voltage signals are not required to overcome noise and attenuation, then a lower Vdd can be applied to the circuit. As the master voltage Vdd decreases further the FETs will eventually transition at a predetermined voltage from operation in the saturation region to operation in the triode region. Advantageously, the headroom contributed by the FETs decreases when operating in the triode region. Thus, at low Vdd, when the headroom occupied by the FETs M1-M4 can potentially become a significant issue, the FETs squash to triode advantageously occupying less headroom.
In the output stage, FETs 512 and 518 are thin-oxide devices with fast response times and an OV rating of 1.0 V. In contrast, FETs 514 and 516 are thick-oxide devices with slower response times and an OV rating of 1.8 V. The two Vdd/4 zones and the Vdd/2 zone sandwiched between the two Vdd/4 zones are automatically biased as the two input voltages of each auxiliary op amp follow each other. As shown in
The self-zoned biasing circuits have several advantages over conventional biasing circuits. First, the configuration is universal because it does not depend on a particular technology for the self-zoned biasing circuit implementation. The voltage zones topology can be implemented in many different circuit fabrication technologies. Second, the self-zoned biasing circuits provide systematic OV prevention. Third, circuits receiving voltage biases using a self-zoned biasing circuit are capable of operating at high speeds because these circuits can avoid relying on special high-voltage devices that are usually slow and bulky. Fourth, using self-zoned biasing circuits enables flexibility to optimize system tradeoffs between signal-to-noise performance and power efficiency by enabling scaling of the master voltage Vdd to optimize performance for a particular application. For example, one device can be utilized for multiple applications, such as supplying voltage biases to 3.3V broadband chips or supplying voltage biases to Ethernet PHY chips for small business or automotive applications using a voltage of 2.5V or lower.
While certain implementations have been described, these implementations have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the teachings of this disclosure. Indeed, the novel methods, apparatuses and systems described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the methods, apparatuses and systems described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of this disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62088116 | Dec 2014 | US |