Patent classifications
H03F1/086
Amplitude control with signal swapping
A circuit includes a first signal swapper including a first terminal coupled to a first current source, a second terminal coupled to a second current source, a third terminal coupled to a first current terminal of a first transistor, and a fourth terminal coupled to a third current terminal of a second transistor. The first signal swapper couples the first and second terminals to the third and fourth terminals responsive to a first control signal. First and second switches couple to a gate of the first transistor. The first switch receives the input oscillation signal and the second switch receives a first reference voltage. Third and fourth switches couple to a gate of the second transistor. The third switch receives the input oscillation signal and the fourth switch receives the first reference voltage. A second signal swapper couples to the first signal swapper and to the first and second transistors.
Amplifier circuit that amplifies differential signal and optical module that includes amplifier circuit
An amplifier circuit includes: an amplifier; and a bias circuit that controls an operation point of the amplifier. The amplifier includes: a load resistor; a differential transistor pair electrically coupled to the load resistor; and a tail transistor electrically coupled to the differential transistor pair. The bias circuit includes: a voltage generator circuit that generates a reference voltage corresponding to a sum of a threshold voltage of a transistor in the differential transistor pair and a saturation drain voltage of the tail transistor; and a current generator circuit that generates a reference current that is proportional to a difference between a power supply voltage of the amplifier circuit and the reference voltage by using a reference resistor. The current generator circuit is electrically coupled to the amplifier such that a tail current that flows through the tail transistor is proportional to the reference current.
RECONFIGURABLE OPTICAL RECEIVERS FOR EXTENDED MAXIMUM INPUT SIGNALS
In optical receivers, extending the transimpedance amplifier's (TIA) dynamic range is a key to increasing the receiver's dynamic range, and therefore increase the channel capacity. Ideally, the TIA requires controllable gain, whereby the receiver can modify the characteristics of the TIA and/or the VGA to process high power incoming signals with a defined maximum distortion, and low power incoming signals with a defined maximum noise. A solution to the problem is to provide TIA's with reconfigurable feedback resistors, which are adjustable based on the level of power, e.g. current, generated by the photodetector, and variable load resistors, which are adjustable based on the change in impedance caused by the change in the feedback resistor.
LARGE INPUT CURRENT DETECTION AND FAST RESPONSE OPTICAL RECEIVER
A clamp circuit can control a clamp transistor such that a change in a photodiode current detection voltage signal in an optical receiver circuit can control the clamp transistor to change state when a difference of a clamp voltage and the photodiode current detection voltage signal exceeds a threshold voltage of the clamp transistor. Using a feedback loop, the clamp circuit can accurately clamp a current when the photodiode current is larger than a detect current threshold.
CMOS wideband RF amplifier with gain roll-off compensation for external parasitics
The present disclosure relates to an integrated wideband Radio Frequency (RF) amplifier, based on a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology. In an embodiment the amplifier addresses the shortcomings of conventional wideband amplifiers and is based on a distributed amplifier (DA) topology which typically exhibit severe performance degradation when externally loaded with parasitic circuit elements. In an embodiment of the present invention a buffer amplifier at the output of a conventional DA is able to compensate the impact of parasitic elements. The disclosed circuit can be implemented by fabricating the wideband RF amplifier integrated circuit (IC) on a 130 nm CMOS technology or other comparable CMOS technologies.
TRANSIMPEDANCE AMPLIFIERS WITH FEEDFORWARD CURRENT
Transimpedance amplifiers with feedforward current are provided herein. In certain embodiments, an amplifier system includes a transimpedance amplifier that amplifies an input current received at an input to generate an output voltage at an output. The amplifier system further includes a controllable current source that is coupled to the output of the transimpedance amplifier, and operable to provide a feedforward current that changes in relation to the input current of the transimpedance amplifier. By providing a feedforward current in this manner, gain and speed performance of the transimpedance amplifier is enhanced.
Noise-canceling transimpedance amplifier (TIA) systems
One embodiment describes a transimpedance amplifier (TIA) system. The system includes an inverter TIA stage interconnecting an input node and an output node and configured to invert an input signal at the input node to provide a first inverted signal component at the output node. The system also includes a noise-canceling inverter stage arranged in parallel with the inverter stage and being configured to invert the input signal to provide a second inverted signal component and to invert noise from the input node. Thus, the first and second inverted signal components constructively combine at the output node and the noise is substantially mitigated at the output node.
Operational amplifier circuit capable of improving linearity relation between loading current and input voltage difference
An operational amplifier circuit is provided. The operational amplifier circuit includes a differential input stage circuit and a loading stage circuit. The differential input stage circuit includes an input circuit, a voltage maintaining circuit, and a current source. The input circuit includes a first input transistor and a second input transistor, for receiving a first and a second input signals, respectively. The voltage maintaining circuit includes a first branch circuit and a second branch circuit. The first branch circuit is coupled to the first input transistor for receiving the first input signal, and the second branch circuit is coupled to the second input transistor for receiving the second input signal. The current source is coupled to the first input transistor and the second input transistor. The loading stage circuit is coupled to the voltage maintaining circuit.
Auto-zero technique for opamps with a source-follower output stage based on replica referencing
An electronic circuit comprises an input stage, a gain stage operatively coupled to the input stage, a primary output stage operatively coupled to the gain stage, a replica output stage operatively coupled to the gain stage in parallel to the primary output stage, and a clock circuit. The clock circuit operates the electronic circuit in multiple phases including a sampling phase to disconnect the primary output stage and the replica output stage from the gain stage to obtain an offset voltage, an active phase to reconnect the primary output stage to apply the offset voltage to reduce an offset at the primary output stage, and an intermediate phase to first reconnect the replica output stage to the gain stage prior to the active phase.
Degenerated transimpedance amplifier with wire-bonded photodiode for reducing group delay distortion
An integrated circuit includes a degeneration network configured to improve group delay across one or more variations, wherein the degeneration network includes a transimpedance amplifier with one or more degeneration inductors. The transimpedance amplifier further includes one or more transistors, and the one or more degeneration inductors are connected after at least one emitter of the one or more transistors.