H03F2203/45596

AMPLIFIER OFFSET CANCELLATION USING AMPLIFIER SUPPLY VOLTAGE

In accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure, a method for power supply rejection for an amplifier may include generating a correction signal by multiplying a quantity indicative of a power supply voltage of the amplifier by a transfer function defining a response from the power supply voltage of the amplifier to an output signal of the amplifier and subtracting the correction signal from a signal within a signal path of a circuit comprising the amplifier.

Ground intermediation for inter-domain buffer stages

Techniques are described for ground-intermediating buffering that can effectively use the reference grounds of the circuit domains on either side of a buffer stage to generate one or more intermediated grounds for one or more signal buffers. For example, one of the reference grounds has a first amount of ground noise, the other of the reference grounds has a second amount of ground noise that is greater than or less than the first amount, and the intermediated grounds are generated to have respective amounts of ground noise that are between the first and second amounts. The ground intermediating buffer can perform signal buffering with respect to the intermediated ground(s), thereby reducing ground noise coupling across the circuit domains through both the signal and ground paths of the buffer stage.

High-efficiency amplifying device and method for controlling power supply thereof

An amplifying device includes a power amplifying unit, a power supply unit for providing the power amplifying unit with a positive power supply and a negative power supply, and a mode control unit for controlling a working mode of the power supply unit. The positive power supply and the negative power supply of the amplifying device are able to vary with an output signal thereof, which reduces the power consumption of the outputted transistors of the amplifying device, thereby improving the efficiency of the amplifying device.

Amplifier

An amplifier that amplifies a differential signal includes first and second input terminals for receiving two input signals; first and second diodes each including an anode and a cathode, the anodes being electrically connected to the first and second input terminals; first and second bias current sources being respectively electrically connected to the cathodes of the first and second diodes; an operational amplifier connected to the cathode of the first diode and the cathode of the second diode and configured to amplify a differential signal between signals generated at the cathodes of the first and second diodes; a capacitive element being electrically connected between an input and an output of the operational amplifier; and a differential amplifier provided between the operational amplifier and the first and second input terminals and configured to amplify the two input signals. The first and second bias current sources include a current mirror circuit.

Power Amplifier Self-Heating Compensation Circuit

Temperature compensation circuits and methods for adjusting one or more circuit parameters of a power amplifier (PA) to maintain approximately constant Gain versus time during pulsed operation sufficient to substantially offset self-heating of the PA. Some embodiments compensate for PA Gain droop due to self-heating using a Sample and Hold (S&H) circuit. The S&H circuit samples and holds an initial temperature of the PA at commencement of a pulse. Thereafter, the S&H circuit generates a continuous measurement that corresponds to the temperature of the PA during the remainder of the pulse. A Gain Control signal is generated that is a function of the difference between the initial temperature and the operating temperature of the PA as the PA self-heats for the duration of the pulse. The Gain Control signal is applied to one or more adjustable or tunable circuits within a PA to offset the Gain droop of the PA.

Power amplifier self-heating compensation circuit

Temperature compensation circuits and methods for adjusting one or more circuit parameters of a power amplifier (PA) to maintain approximately constant Gain versus time during pulsed operation sufficient to substantially offset self-heating of the PA. Some embodiments compensate for PA Gain droop due to self-heating using a Sample and Hold (S&H) circuit. The S&H circuit samples and holds an initial temperature of the PA at commencement of a pulse. Thereafter, the S&H circuit generates a continuous measurement that corresponds to the temperature of the PA during the remainder of the pulse. A Gain Control signal is generated that is a function of the difference between the initial temperature and the operating temperature of the PA as the PA self-heats for the duration of the pulse. The Gain Control signal is applied to one or more adjustable or tunable circuits within a PA to offset the Gain droop of the PA.

BUFFER FOR VOLTAGE CONTROLLED OSCILLATOR (VCO) OR OTHER APPLICATIONS
20240243744 · 2024-07-18 ·

An apparatus, including: a buffer configured to receive an input differential signal and generate an output signal based on the input differential signal, wherein the buffer includes a first buffer stage including: a first field effect transistor (FET); a second FET coupled in series with the first FET between a first voltage rail and a second voltage rail; a third FET; a fourth FET coupled in series with the third FET between the first voltage rail and the second voltage rail, wherein the first and third FETs include gates coupled together, and wherein the second and fourth FETs include gates configured to receive positive and negative components of the input differential signal; and a first capacitor coupled between a drain of the second FET and the gates of the first and third FETs.

Amplifier offset cancellation using amplifier supply voltage

In accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure, a method for power supply rejection for an amplifier may include generating a correction signal by multiplying a quantity indicative of a power supply voltage of the amplifier by a transfer function defining a response from the power supply voltage of the amplifier to an output signal of the amplifier and subtracting the correction signal from a signal within a signal path of a circuit comprising the amplifier.

AMPLIFIER OFFSET CANCELLATION USING AMPLIFIER SUPPLY VOLTAGE

In accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure, a method for power supply rejection for an amplifier may include generating a correction signal by multiplying a quantity indicative of a power supply voltage of the amplifier by a transfer function defining a response from the power supply voltage of the amplifier to an output signal of the amplifier and subtracting the correction signal from a signal within a signal path of a circuit comprising the amplifier.

AMPLIFIER
20180316323 · 2018-11-01 · ·

An amplifier that amplifies a differential signal includes first and second input terminals for receiving two input signals; first and second diodes each including anode and cathode, the anodes being electrically connected to the first and second input terminals; first and second bias current sources being respectively electrically connected to the cathodes of the first and second diodes; an operational amplifier connected to the cathode of the first diode and the cathode of the second diode and configured to amplify a differential signal between signals generated at the cathodes of the first and second diodes; a capacitive element being electrically connected between an input and an output of the operational amplifier; and a differential amplifier provided between the operational amplifier and the first and second input terminals and configured to amplify the two input signals. The first and second bias current sources include a current mirror circuit.