Patent classifications
H03F2203/45521
Ratiometric biasing for high impedance capacitive sensing
A biasing circuit for a capacitive sensor includes a capacitive sensor element configured to produce a sensor voltage at a sense node, and a preamplifier connected to the sense node and configured to amplify the sensor voltage. The biasing circuit has an auxiliary amplifier connected between an output of the preamplifier and the sense node and configured to set a DC component of an input voltage for the preamplifier to a ratiometric DC bias voltage.
Amplifier, audio signal output method, and electronic device
The present technology relates to an amplifier, an audio signal output method, and an electronic device that can inhibit unintended sound output in a class D amplifier that changes a peak value of a PWM signal. The amplifier includes: a positive-side amplitude generating circuit configured to generate positive-side amplitude of an output PWM signal that is a PWM signal to be output outside an apparatus; a negative-side amplitude generating circuit configured to generate negative-side amplitude of the output PWM signal; and a feedback circuit configured to feed back a difference between the amplitude generated by the positive-side amplitude generating circuit and the amplitude generated by the negative-side amplitude generating circuit to the positive-side amplitude generating circuit and the negative-side amplitude generating circuit. The present technology is applicable, for example, to an amplifier or the like of an electronic device such as an audio player.
DC OFFSET CANCELLATION AND CROSSPOINT CONTROL CIRCUIT
A circuit and method in an amplifier circuit for filtering a DC offset in differential input signals and inserting a programmable adjustable crosspoint offset in differential output signals. An amplifier circuit includes a differential amplifier circuit configured to amplify differential input signals into differential output signal. The amplifier circuit further includes a feedback circuit coupled between the differential output signals and the differential input signals. The feedback circuit is configured to generate a programmably adjustable crosspoint offset in the differential output signal and a programmably adjustable cutoff frequency of the feedback circuit. An amplifier method includes amplifying differential input signals into differential output signals, generating a programmably adjustable crosspoint offset in the differential output signal, and generating a programmably adjustable cutoff frequency of a feedback circuit between the differential output signals and the differential input signals.
Methods of adjusting gain error in instrumentation amplifiers
A current feed-back instrumentation amplifier (CFIA) comprises a differential pair with degeneration for amplifying small differential voltages in the presence of large common-mode voltages. The CFIA includes input and feedback transconductors and a trimming circuit that trims the back-bias voltages of the transistors in each transconductor. The trimming circuit includes a plurality of selectable resistors disposed in the signal path of the tail current in each transconductor. Each of the plurality of selectable resistors has a switch coupled to it. When a switch is closed, only the resistors up to the respective switch are in the signal path of the bulk-to-source voltage of the differentially paired transistors. The resistor trimming circuit reduces the mismatch between transconductances of the respective differential pair transistors, in turn reducing mismatch of the overall transconductances of the transconductors, and thereby reducing the CFIA's gain error.
AMPLIFICATION CIRCUIT WITH READ/WRITE CIRCUIT
The invention relates to an amplification circuit (100), comprising: a VGA (2), an AGC loop (10) for automatically controlling the gain of the VGA (2), a switching circuit (14) for switching between an AGC mode, in which the gain of the VGA (2) is automatically controlled by an output signal of the AGC loop (10) and a manual gain control, MGC, mode, in which the gain of the VGA (2) can be manually controlled by an input signal, and a read/write circuit (30) with a contact (31) for connection to a peripheral system, wherein the read/write circuit (30) is configured, in the MGC mode, to provide the input signal from the contact (31) via a write-mode path (32) to the VGA (2), and, in the AGC mode, to provide the output signal of the AGC loop (10) via a read-mode path (33) on the contact (31).
AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT AND FILTER
An OTA circuit includes a first input stage that includes a first pair of transistors having sources coupled to a reference potential and converts a differential input voltage input to gates of the first pair of transistors into a first control current, a second input stage that includes a second pair of transistors having sources coupled to the reference potential and converts the differential input voltage input to gates of the second pair of transistors into a second control current, a first output circuit that generates one output current out of the differential output currents in accordance with the first control current, and a second output circuit that generates the other output current out of the differential output currents in accordance with the second control current.
Ratiometric Biasing for High Impedance Capacitive Sensing
A biasing circuit for a capacitive sensor includes a capacitive sensor element configured to produce a sensor voltage at a sense node, and a preamplifier connected to the sense node and configured to amplify the sensor voltage. The biasing circuit has an auxiliary amplifier connected between an output of the preamplifier and the sense node and configured to set a DC component of an input voltage for the preamplifier to a ratiometric DC bias voltage.
CAPACITIVE LOADING MODE MEASUREMENT CIRCUIT WITH COMPENSATION OF MEASUREMENT ERRORS DUE TO PARASITIC SENSOR IMPEDANCES
An impedance measurement circuit for determining a sense current of a guard-sense capacitive sensor operated in loading mode. The circuit includes a periodic signal voltage source for providing a periodic measurement voltage, a sense current measurement circuit, a differential amplifier that is configured to sense a complex voltage difference between the sense electrode and the guard electrode, a demodulator for obtaining, with reference to the periodic measurement voltage, an in-phase component and a quadrature component of the sensed complex voltage difference, and control loops for receiving the in-phase component and the quadrature component, respectively. An output signal of the first control loop and an output signal of the second control loop are usable to form a complex voltage that serves as a complex reference voltage for the sense current measurement circuit.
Methods of adjusting gain error in instrumentation amplifiers
A current feed-back instrumentation amplifier (CFIA) comprises a differential pair with degeneration for amplifying small differential voltages in the presence of large common-mode voltages. The CFIA includes input and feedback transconductors and a trimming circuit that trims the back-bias voltages of the transistors in each transconductor. The trimming circuit includes a plurality of selectable resistors disposed in the signal path of the tail current in each transconductor. Each of the plurality of selectable resistors has a switch coupled to it. When a switch is closed, only the resistors up to the respective switch are in the signal path of the bulk-to-source voltage of the differentially paired transistors. The resistor trimming circuit reduces the mismatch between transconductances of the respective differential pair transistors, in turn reducing mismatch of the overall transconductances of the transconductors, and thereby reducing the CFIA's gain error.
Dynamic Correction Of Gain Error In Current-Feedback Instrumentation Amplifiers
A current feed-back instrumentation amplifier (CFIA) comprises a differential pair with degeneration for amplifying small differential voltages in the presence of large common-mode voltages. The CFIA includes input and feedback transconductors and a chopping modulator circuit that continuously swaps tail current sources between the transconductors. This tail current swapping reduces the contribution to the CFIA's gain error caused by random mismatch between the tail currents of the input and feedback transconductors. The modulator circuit operates on a clock cycle to periodically swap the tail current sources. As a result, even if the tail currents are mismatched, on average the tail currents (transconductor gains) will approximately equal out, and the contribution of the tail current difference to the gain error is canceled out.