Patent classifications
H03F2200/297
CLASS D AMPLIFIER
A class D amplifier output stage including an input for receiving an input signal, an output for providing an output signal to a load, serially coupled upper and lower switching devices configured to provide an output signal to the output, a driver circuit configured to receive the input signal, and to derive therefrom first and second drive signals for driving the upper and lower switching devices alternately from a conducting state into a non-conducting state and vice versa, such that the conducting state periods of the upper switching device with respect to those of the lower switching device are mutually exclusive and separated by dead time intervals during which both upper and lower output transistors are non-conducting. To reduce distortion and more particularly, total harmonic distortion (THD), the amplifier output stage includes a substantially linear circuit configured to provide a bidirectional current sink for residual currents from the load occurring during at least part of each dead time interval.
LINEARIZED DYNAMIC AMPLIFIER
A differential amplifier includes a positive leg, a negative leg, and biasing circuitry. The positive leg includes at least one positive leg transistor, a first positive leg degeneration capacitor, and positive leg degeneration capacitor biasing circuitry configured to bias the first degeneration capacitor during a reset period. The negative leg includes at least one negative leg transistor, a negative leg degeneration capacitor, and negative leg degeneration capacitor biasing circuitry configured to bias the negative leg degeneration capacitor during the reset period. The biasing circuitry biases current of both the at least one positive leg transistor and the at least one negative leg transistor based on capacitance of the first positive leg degeneration capacitor, capacitance of the first negative leg degeneration capacitor, and a sampling time during an amplification period. The differential amplifier may be a stage amplifier in an Analog to Digital Converter (ADC).
POWER AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT, RADIO-FREQUENCY CIRCUIT, AND COMMUNICATION DEVICE
A higher-speed operation of a power amplifier circuit is achieved. A power amplifier circuit includes multi-stage amplifier units, an ET terminal, and an APT terminal. The multi-stage amplifier units include a final-stage amplifier unit. The final-stage amplifier unit includes a first amplifier element and a second amplifier element that are connected in parallel with each other. The first amplifier element is connected to the ET terminal. The second amplifier element is connected to the APT terminal.
FULLY INTEGRATED LOW-NOISE AMPLIFIER
A low-noise amplifier device includes an inductive input element, an amplifier circuit, an inductive output element and an inductive degeneration element. The amplifier device is formed in and on a semiconductor substrate. The semiconductor substrate supports metallization levels of a back end of line structure. The metal lines of the inductive input element, inductive output element and inductive degeneration element are formed within one or more of the metallization levels. The inductive input element has a spiral shape and the an amplifier circuit, an inductive output element and an inductive degeneration element are located within the spiral shape.
AMPLIFIER CIRCUITRY
This application relates to circuitry for monitoring for instability of an amplifier. The amplifier (100) has a first signal path between an amplifier input (IN.sub.N) and an amplifier output (V.sub.OUT) and a feedback path from the output to form a feedback loop with at least part of the first signal path. A comparator (212) has a first input configured to receive a first signal (IN.sub.N) derived from a first amplifier node which is part of said feedback loop and a second input configured to receive a second signal (IN.sub.P) derived from a second amplifier node which varies with the signal at the amplifier input but does not form part of said feedback loop. The comparator is configured to compare the first signal to the second signal and generate a comparison signal (COMP), wherein in the event of amplifier instability the comparison signal comprises a characteristic indicative of amplifier instability.
Operation amplification circuit and over-current protection method therefor
Disclosed is an operation amplification circuit and an over-current protection method therefor. The operation amplification circuit comprises: a control unit, configured to generate an output control signal according to an input signal and an output signal; an output unit, configured to generate an output current under control of the output control signal, wherein the output unit comprises an output capacitor which is charged or discharged by the output current to generate the output signal; an over-current protection unit, obtaining a temperature control current according to an operating temperature of the operation amplification circuit, wherein when the operating temperature is greater than or equal to a predetermined temperature, the temperature control current is positively correlated with the operating temperature, and the over-current protection unit adjusts the output control signal according to the temperature control current to limit the output current.
Cascode amplifier bias circuits
Bias circuits and methods for silicon-based amplifier architectures that are tolerant of supply and bias voltage variations, bias current variations, and transistor stack height, and compensate for poor output resistance characteristics. Embodiments include power amplifiers and low-noise amplifiers that utilize a cascode reference circuit to bias the final stages of a cascode amplifier under the control of a closed loop bias control circuit. The closed loop bias control circuit ensures that the current in the cascode reference circuit is approximately equal to a selected multiple of a known current value by adjusting the gate bias voltage to the final stage of the cascode amplifier. The final current through the cascode amplifier is a multiple of the current in the cascode reference circuit, based on a device scaling factor representing the relative sizes of the transistor devices in the cascode amplifier and in the cascode reference circuit.
Amplifier circuitry
This application relates to circuitry for monitoring for instability of an amplifier. The amplifier (100) has a first signal path between an amplifier input (IN.sub.N) and an amplifier output (V.sub.OUT) and a feedback path from the output to form a feedback loop with at least part of the first signal path. A comparator (212) has a first input configured to receive a first signal (IN.sub.N) derived from a first amplifier node which is part of said feedback loop and a second input configured to receive a second signal (IN.sub.P) derived from a second amplifier node which varies with the signal at the amplifier input but does not form part of said feedback loop. The comparator is configured to compare the first signal to the second signal and generate a comparison signal (COMP), wherein in the event of amplifier instability the comparison signal comprises a characteristic indicative of amplifier instability.
Output pole-compensated operational amplifier
A circuit includes a first transconductance stage having an output. The circuit further includes an output transconductance stage, and a first source-degenerated transistor having a first control input and first and second current terminals. The first control input is coupled to the output of the first transconductance stage. The circuit also includes a second transistor having a second control input and third and fourth current terminals. The third current terminal is coupled to the second current terminal and to the output transconductance stage.
Power amplifier
A power amplifier includes a power splitter that splits a first signal into a second signal and a third signal, a first amplifier that amplifies the second signal within an area where the first signal has a power level greater than or equal to a first level and that outputs a fourth signal, a second amplifier that amplifies the third signal within an area where the first signal has a power level greater than or equal to a second level higher than the first level and that outputs a fifth signal, an output unit that outputs an amplified signal of the first signal, a first and a second LC parallel resonant circuit, and a choke inductor having an end to which a power supply voltage is supplied and another end connected to a node of the first and second LC parallel resonant circuits.