1. Field of the Invention
The present application relates to buffer circuits that may be placed before sample and hold circuits.
2. Background Information
Buffers operating with sample and hold circuits sometimes include a zeroing function that may be automatic. The auto-zeroing removes DC offsets that appear with the signal of interest. In some prior art zeroing approaches, the input signal may be tied to the sampling capacitor and draw current from it. In some applications where current is sensed, drawing current from the sampling capacitor may introduce unacceptable errors.
Auto-zeroing is especially useful where an op-amp (operational amplifier) may be part of the buffer and has an offset voltage that may substantially affect the signal of interest. Offset voltages in op-amps may be of any polarity and are typically amplified along with the input signal if the op-amp circuit is arranged with a gain.
Eliminating or zeroing offset voltages advantageously allows the circuit to operate without any adverse effects from an offset voltage changing, e.g., with temperature or common mode voltages.
The present invention buffer includes an input op-amp that may be placed between the input signal and a sample and hold module. The op-amp presents a high impedance to the input signal and does not draw appreciable current from the input. An additional amplifier may be used between the input and the op-amp. The op-amp includes an inherent offset voltage that is zeroed out so that the input signal alone is presented to the sample and hold module. The present invention accommodates virtually any generic sample and hold module.
Typically a sample and hold circuit includes a two stage process that first samples an input signal and then holds that signal for processing. For example, an ADC (analog to digital converter) may use the holding time to convert the held analog signal into a digital value. After the hold and conversion, the input signal is sampled again.
Illustratively, when the sample and hold module is holding the input signal, the buffer may be auto-zeroing the input signal to remove the buffer's op-amp offset voltage. A capacitor is configured to accumulate only the offset voltage of the buffer, and hold that offset voltage for the sample operation. Then, when the sample and hold module is sampling the input signal, the buffer circuit is configured to incorporate the offset voltage held on the capacitor to cancel the offset voltage of the op-amp. In this manner, the buffer's op-amp output only contains the input signal free of any offset voltage.
Advantageously, the auto-zeroing buffer removes the offset voltage without loading the input signal, and the input signal does not connect to the sampling capacitor in the sample and hold module, where it may draw current adulterating the signal. Thus the present invention provides a buffer output signal with substantially no offset associated with the buffer while also drawing substantially no input bias current.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that although the following Detailed Description will proceed with reference being made to illustrative embodiments, the drawings, and methods of use, the present invention is not intended to be limited to these embodiments and methods of use. Rather, the present invention is of broad scope and is intended to be defined as only set forth in the accompanying claims.
The invention description below refers to the accompanying drawings, of which:
As evident from
P1 and P2 are switches, typically MOSFET transistors, that couple Vin1 and Vin2 to the capacitor C and to the op-amps 4 and 6, respectively. Herein “coupling” and “connecting” may be used interchangeably and both may include intervening components that do not appreciably affect the functions.
Vin1 is input to a unity gain amplifier 22 that output V′in1. V′in1 couples through a P1 switch to one side of C1 and to the + (non-inverting) input of the op-amp 4. Vin1 also couples through a P2 switch to the other side of C1 and then through a P1 switch to the − (inverting) input of op-amp 4. Vin2 connects similarly via unity gain amplifier 23 producing V′in2 and then through P1 and P2 switches to C2 and to the + and − inputs of op-amp 6.
The outputs of BUFA and BUFB are input to a differential sample and hold module 2 whose differential output, typically, will connect to an ADC (analog to digital converter) for converting the held signal into a digital number.
Referring to the timing diagrams of
When Vsam is high, the P1 switches are open and the P2 switches are closed. The sample and hold module 2 is in the sample mode 10 and the BUFA and BUFB are in the buffer mode 12.
In
Note that even though the Vin1 is connected to point 30, no charge is transferred from Vin1 to C1 since the other end of C1 only connects to the high impedance + input of op-amp 4 and therefore there is no current path.
The same analysis for BUFB circuit yields Vout of BUFB will be Vin2 at sample time 10.
Interestingly, the unity gain amplifier 22, that outputs V′in1 (similar for the unity gain amplifier 23 for Vin2) does not contribute its offset to the final output signal of the op-amp 4 when in the buffer 12 mode. V′in1 is used to accumulate the Voff1 across C1 during the auto-zero stage mode. But during the buffer 12 mode Vin1, not V′in1, is input to the op-amp + input via C1. Here the Voff1 across C1 cancels the actual Voff1, and Vin1 is output to the sample and hold module 2.
It should be understood that above-described embodiments are being presented herein as examples and that many variations and alternatives thereof are possible. Accordingly, the present invention should be viewed broadly as being defined only as set forth in the hereinafter appended claims.