Monolithic finite gain amplifiers employing active voltage attenuators in the feedback and a charge conserving macromodel for MOSFETs

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1995
Authors
Kim, Joon-Yub
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Randall L. Geiger
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Electrical and Computer Engineering

The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECpE) contains two focuses. The focus on Electrical Engineering teaches students in the fields of control systems, electromagnetics and non-destructive evaluation, microelectronics, electric power & energy systems, and the like. The Computer Engineering focus teaches in the fields of software systems, embedded systems, networking, information security, computer architecture, etc.

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The Department of Electrical Engineering was formed in 1909 from the division of the Department of Physics and Electrical Engineering. In 1985 its name changed to Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering. In 1995 it became the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

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1909-present

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  • Department of Electrical Engineering (1909-1985)
  • Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering (1985-1995)

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Electrical and Computer Engineering
Abstract

Two separate topics, both focused on analog and mixed signal monolithic circuit design, are presented. The first concentrates on the design of monolithic finite gain amplifiers employing active voltage attenuators in the feedback loop. Three MOS active voltage attenuators suitable for realizing finite gain amplifiers along with an operational amplifier are investigated. Monolithic single input amplifiers, two or more input summing/subtracting amplifiers, and differential amplifiers are readily attainable with this approach. The attenuators and amplifiers are theoretically analyzed, simulated on SPICE, and experimentally characterized in the laboratory. The performance of the attenuators and amplifiers is characterized with experiments by measuring the accuracy of the gain, the range of the linear operating region, and the degree of linearity. It is verified experimentally that amplifiers can be built with gains that are accurate to 0.5-2% of the design value. A differential amplifier designed in a single 5V process was experimentally characterized and exhibited a maximum signal output to total non-signal output ratio of 66.2dB at an output amplitude of 482mV (0-P);The second topic concentrates on developing a charge conserving macromodel for MOSFETs. The mechanisms which make MOSFET switches inject charge is reviewed. Based on the review and the nature of the parasitic capacitances in the MOSFET, a charge conserving macromodel is developed. This macromodel provides a convenient and accurate means for simulating the non-ideal effects of charge injection of MOSFET switches. A simple sample-and-hold circuit for characterizing the accuracy of the macromodel was designed, fabricated, and tested. Experimental results for this test circuit showed a maximum difference between the simulated and measured errors of 1.31 mV over a wide range of input voltages.

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Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 1995