H03F2203/45504

Trans-impedance amplifier for ultrasound device and related apparatus and methods

A variable current trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) for an ultrasound device is described. The TIA may be coupled to an ultrasonic transducer to amplify an output signal of the ultrasonic transducer representing an ultrasound signal received by the ultrasonic transducer. During acquisition of the ultrasound signal by the ultrasonic transducer, one or more current sources in the TIA may be varied.

Continuous time linear equalization circuit with programmable gains
10924307 · 2021-02-16 · ·

A continuous time linear equalization (CTLE) circuit is disclosed. The CTLE circuit includes an input port, an output port, a first differential transistor pair coupled to the input port and the output port and a second differential transistor pair. The CTLE circuit further includes a first degenerative impedance circuit coupled between the first differential transistor pair and ground. The first degenerative impedance includes switchable components to vary impedance of the first degenerative impedance circuit. The CTLE circuit also includes a second degenerative impedance circuit coupled between the second differential transistor pair and ground. The second degenerative impedance includes switchable components to vary impedance of the second degenerative impedance circuit, wherein the resistive part of the impedance of the first degenerative impedance circuit is equal to the impedance of the second degenerative impedance circuit.

Trans-impedance amplifier for ultrasound device and related apparatus and methods

A variable current trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) for an ultrasound device is described. The TIA may be coupled to an ultrasonic transducer to amplify an output signal of the ultrasonic transducer representing an ultrasound signal received by the ultrasonic transducer. During acquisition of the ultrasound signal by the ultrasonic transducer, one or more current sources in the TIA may be varied.

PROGRAMMABLE GAIN AMPLIFIER
20240106403 · 2024-03-28 ·

A programmable gain amplifier that comprises: a transconductance amplifier, a switch leakage compensation circuit and a transimpedance amplifier. The transconductance amplifier provides a transconductance amplifier current signal and includes a switchable resistance network. The switch leakage compensation circuit provides a compensation current signal and comprises a switchable compensation resistance network. The transimpedance amplifier provides the output voltage signal based on the difference between the transconductance amplifier current signal and the compensation current signal. The switchable compensation resistance network comprises a plurality of branches in parallel with each other, wherein each branch includes: a gain-mimicking switch that has a corresponding gain-setting switch in the switchable resistance network; and a leakage-current-conducting switch in series with the gain-mimicking switch. The leakage-current-conducting switch is openable and closable in accordance with the complement of a switch control signal that is used to control the gain-mimicking switch in the same branch.

Amplifier

An amplifier includes an amplifier circuit and a gain adjusting circuit. The amplifier circuit has a design gain and a real gain and is configured to output an output signal according to an input signal and the real gain. The gain adjusting circuit is coupled to the amplifier circuit and is configured to receive the input signal to compare a voltage of the input signal with a first reference voltage, wherein when the voltage of the input signal exceeds the first reference voltage, the gain adjusting circuit increases the real gain of the amplifier circuit, so that the real gain approach the design gain.

TRANS-IMPEDANCE AMPLIFIER FOR ULTRASOUND DEVICE AND RELATED APPARATUS AND METHODS

A variable current trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) for an ultrasound device is described. The TIA may be coupled to an ultrasonic transducer to amplify an output signal of the ultrasonic transducer representing an ultrasound signal received by the ultrasonic transducer. During acquisition of the ultrasound signal by the ultrasonic transducer, one or more current sources in the TIA may be varied.

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.

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.

Transconductance amplifier and phase shifter

A transconductance amplifier is provided with: a cross-coupled differential pair (31) having one set of differential pair transistors in which signals whose polarities are opposite to each other are inputted to gates thereof, drains of one of the differential pair transistors being connected to drains of another one of the differential pair transistors, and a control circuit (32) comprised of logical circuits, for outputting a binary signal to the common source of each of the differential pair transistors on the basis of an output-level control signal and a polarity control signal which are inputted thereto.

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.