Patent classifications
H03F3/00
Low power half-VDD generation circuit with high driving capability
A common mode reference circuit comprises a divider stage and an output stage. The divider stage includes a first n-channel field effect transistor and p-channel filed effect transistor (NFET/PFET) pair connected in series to a high supply voltage circuit node; and a second NFET/PFET pair connected in series to a low supply voltage circuit node. The output stage includes a first FET connected as a current mirror to a transistor of the first NFET/PFET pair; a second FET connected as a current mirror to a transistor of the second NFET/PFET pair; and a common mode reference output at a series connection from the first FET to the second FET.
CHOPPER AMPLIFIER WITH DECOUPLED CHOPPING FREQUENCY AND THRESHOLD FREQUENCY
A chopper amplifier circuit includes a first amplifier path with chopper circuitry, a switched-capacitor filter, and multiple gain stages. The chopper amplifier circuit also includes a second amplifier path with a feed-forward gain stage. A chopping frequency of the chopper circuitry is greater than a threshold frequency at which the second amplifier path is used instead of the first amplifier path.
Dynamic amplifier and related gain boosting method
A dynamic amplifier includes a first output capacitor, a first switch, a current source, a second switch, a voltage detector, a third switch and a level shifter. The first switch is coupled between a first terminal of the first output capacitor and a voltage detection node. The second switch is coupled to the current source and the voltage detection node. The voltage detector is coupled to the voltage detection node and the first switch. The third switch is coupled between the voltage detection node and a power source. The level shifter is coupled to a second terminal of the first output capacitor.
SWITCHED CAPACITOR CIRCUIT TO MAKE AMOUNT OF CHANGE IN REFERENCE VOLTAGE EVEN REGARDLESS OF INPUT LEVEL
A switched capacitor circuit includes a first main sampler circuit, a second main sampler circuit, a first replica sampler circuit, and a second replica sampler circuit. The first main sampler circuit samples a first input of a differential input, and generates a first output corresponding to the sampled first input based on a first reference voltage. The second main sampler circuit samples a second input of the differential input, and generates a second output corresponding to the sampled second input based on a second reference voltage. The first replica sampler circuit receives the first input, and holds the received first input based on the second reference voltage. The second replica sampler circuit receives the second input, and holds the received second input based on the first reference voltage.
APPARATUSES AND METHODS FOR HYBRID SWITCHED CAPACITOR ARRAY POWER AMPLIFIERS
Embodiments of the disclosure are drawn to apparatuses a hybrid switched capacitor array power amplifier (H-SCPA). The H-SCPA may have an array of storage elements divided into sub-arrays. A first sub-array may be configured to receive a delta sigma modulated (DSM) signal. A second sub-array may be configured to receive a Nyquist-rate signal. The H-SCPA may provide an output based on the received DSM and Nyquist-rate signals. The first sub-array and second sub-array may have different architectures. The DSM signal may represent the least significant bits of the signal and the Nyquist-rate signal may represent the most significant bits of the signal.
ACOUSTO-OPTIC COUPLING TECHNIQUES AND RELATED SYSTEMS AND METHODS
Techniques are provided to optomechanically couple light to a crystal structure, thereby producing stable, coherent bulk acoustic modes within the structure. In some embodiments, a resonator may comprise a plano-convex crystal structure to which pump light may be applied. The pump light may transfer energy to acoustic phonon modes of the crystal structure so as to create acoustic phonon modes with a coherence length greater than a length of the crystal structure. High frequency and high quality factor resonators may thereby be produced and operated.
Operational amplifier with switchable candidate capacitors
An operational amplifier includes: a first gain stage for generating a second signal based on a first signal transmitted from a prior stage circuit; a second gain stage for generating an output signal based on the second signal; multiple candidate capacitors; and a capacitor selection circuit for switching the coupling relationship of the multiple candidate capacitors based on the magnitude of an input signal of the prior stage circuit, so that only a portion of the multiple candidate capacitors could be coupled to the second gain stage at a time.
Dynamic amplifier and related gain boosting method
A dynamic amplifier includes a first output capacitor, a first switch, a current source, a second switch, a voltage detector, a third switch and a level shifter. The first switch is coupled between a first terminal of the first output capacitor and a voltage detection node. The second switch is coupled to the current source and the voltage detection node. The voltage detector is coupled to the voltage detection node and the first switch. The third switch is coupled between the voltage detection node and a power source. The level shifter is coupled to a second terminal of the first output capacitor.
LOW-NOISE AMPLIFIER SYSTEM
A low-noise amplifier system is disclosed. The low-noise amplifier system includes a low-noise amplifier having an input node and an output node in a receive path and a capacitance equalization network coupled to the output node. Compensation capacitance of the capacitance equalization network sums with non-linear capacitance of the low-noise amplifier such that a total capacitance at the output node varies by no more than 5% over an output voltage range within voltage headroom limits of the low-noise amplifier for a given supply voltage of the low-noise amplifier. In at least some exemplary embodiments, the compensation capacitance of the capacitance equalization network is a function of output signal voltage at the output node.
DISTRIBUTED DARLINGTON PAIR AMPLIFIER
Aspects of a distributed Darlington pair amplifier are described. In one example, a distributed amplifier device includes a number of distributed amplifier cells. The distributed amplifier cells can each include an input coupled to an input line and an output coupled to an output line. The amplifier device also includes a radio frequency input coupled to the input line and a radio frequency output coupled to the output line. One or more of the distributed amplifier cells can include a Darlington transistor pair rather than a common source transistor. The Darlington transistor pair can have a smaller gate-source capacitance than the common source transistor. This results in the ability to omit a series capacitor used with the common source transistor, improving the noise figure and gain over a range of operating frequencies for the distributed Darlington pair amplifier.