Patent classifications
H03F2203/45698
LOCAL COMMON MODE FEEDBACK RESISTOR-BASED AMPLIFIER WITH OVERSHOOT MITIGATION
An amplifier may include multiple transistors with two transistors having their gates tied together via a common connection. The amplifier may utilize a local common mode feedback resistor as part of the amplifier. The local common mode feedback resistor may be coupled between the common connection and respective terminals of two transistors of multiple transistors. The local common mode feedback resistor may include a group of resistors coupled in series. The local common mode feedback resistor may also include a metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) resistor coupled in parallel with one or more of the first group of resistors. In the local common mode feedback, the first MOS resistor provides different levels of resistance to different process corners to reduce overshoot when the amplifier is enabled.
CURRENT SENSE CIRCUIT HAVING A TEMPERATURE COMPENSATED RESPONSE
A package for a current sense circuit may include a lead-frame having a shunt resistance configured to generate a shunt voltage, which can be used to measure a current through the lead-frame. The shunt resistance associated with the lead-frame may be highly variable with temperature, which can cause errors in the current measurement. Accordingly, a current sense circuit can include an amplifier with an input resistor having a composite temperature coefficient configured to match a lead-frame temperature coefficient so that an output of the amplifier is compensated to remove variations in the shunt resistance of the lead-frame due to temperature.
Virtual resistive load in feedback loop driving a piezoelectric actuator
A virtual resistive load feedback circuit for driving a piezoelectric actuator is provided that accounts for a hysteresis error and drift within the movement of the actuator. The circuit may include a voltage divider and charge divider. A voltage monitor signal corresponding to a voltage of a driver signal and a current monitor signal corresponding to a current provided to the amplifier are combined by an operational amplifier and include electrical characteristics of the actuator such that the circuit approximates a virtual load across the actuator. A feedback portion of the operational amplifier may include a resistor and capacitor connected in parallel to provide the voltage and charge divide functions. The use of the virtual resistive circuit allows for the piezoelectric actuator to be ground referenced, with no external components connected directly to the actuator while gaining the feedback effect to counter the hysteresis and drifts errors of the actuator.
GROUP III NITRIDE BASED DEPLETION MODE DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIERS AND RELATED RF TRANSISTOR AMPLIFIER CIRCUITS
An RF transistor amplifier circuit comprises a Group III nitride based RF transistor amplifier having a gate terminal, a Group III nitride based self-bias circuit that includes a first Group III nitride based depletion mode high electron mobility transistor, the Group III nitride based self-bias circuit configured to generate a bias voltage, and a Group III nitride based depletion mode differential amplifier that is configured to generate an inverted bias voltage from the bias voltage and to apply the inverted bias voltage to the gate terminal of the Group III nitride based RF transistor amplifier. The Group III nitride based RF transistor amplifier, the Group III nitride based self-bias circuit and the Group III nitride based depletion mode differential amplifier are all implemented in a single die.
Amplifier for music signal and method of outputting waveform of music signal
An amplifier and a method of outputting a waveform of a music signal capable of outputting a waveform of a music signal exceeding a power supply voltage is provided. An amplifier includes a power supply, an input terminal for a music signal, an amplifying circuit which amplifies the music signal using the power supply, and a jumping-up circuit which is connected to an output end of the amplifying circuit and outputs a waveform exceeding a voltage value of the power supply.
TRANSCONDUCTANCE TUNING IN PHOTON COUNTING
A circuit arrangement is provided which includes an array of stages for photon counting current to voltage conversion. Each stage includes a tunable operational transconductance amplifier and a feedback network forming a feedback loop of the operational transconductance amplifier. Each stage is configured to provide an output signal as a function of an input signal that is provided to the amplifier input of the operational transconductance amplifier, wherein the input signal comprises one or more current pulses and the output signal comprises one or more voltage pulses. With the tunable operational transconductance amplifier the transconductance of a stage can be tuned so that differences in peaking time and gain are avoided. Furthermore, an imaging device and a method for operating a circuit arrangement are provided.
SHAPER CIRCUIT, PHOTON COUNTING CIRCUIT AND X-RAY APPARATUS
A shaper circuit includes a first amplifier including an input and an output, the input being configured to receive an input signal, which includes one or more current pulses, a feedback component coupled to the output and to the input of the first amplifier thereby forming a feedback loop of the first amplifier, and an RC component coupled to the output of the first amplifier and to a reference potential terminal. Therein the shaper circuit is configured to provide an output signal as a function of the input signal, the output signal including one or more voltage pulses, and the RC component is configured to largely cancel a low frequency pole of the feedback loop of the first amplifier.
Apparatus for integrated offset voltage for photodiode current amplifier
An example apparatus includes: a first voltage source, a first amplifier having a noninverting input adapted to be coupled to a photodiode anode and coupled to the first voltage source, an inverting input adapted to be coupled to a photodiode cathode, and an output, a first resistor coupled to the first amplifier inverting input and to the first amplifier output, a first capacitor coupled to the inverting input of the first amplifier and the first amplifier output, and a second voltage source different from the first voltage source. There is a second amplifier having a noninverting input, an inverting input and an output. The noninverting input is coupled to the output of the first amplifier, the inverting input is coupled to the second voltage source, and there is a second resistor coupled to the inverting input and the output of the second amplifier.
AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT USING VOLTAGE-TO-CURRENT CONVERSION TO ACHIEVE UNITY FEEDBACK FACTOR AND INPUT COMMON-MODE REJECTION FOR LINEAR AMPLIFIER AND ASSOCIATED ENVELOPE TRACKING SUPPLY MODULATOR USING THE SAME
An amplifier circuit includes a voltage-to-current conversion circuit and a current-to-voltage conversion circuit. The voltage-to-current conversion circuit generates a current signal according to an input voltage signal, and includes an operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) used to output the current signal at an output port of the OTA. The current-to-voltage conversion circuit generates an output voltage signal according to the current signal, and includes a linear amplifier (LA), wherein an input port of the LA is coupled to the output port of the OTA, and the output voltage signal is derived from an output signal at an output port of the LA.
Highly linear input and output rail-to-rail amplifier
An amplifier includes input transconductors that receive an input signal, the input signal having a voltage swing. A supply side current mirror generates a gate voltage as a function of input signal voltage and current sources that provide a bias current of the input transconductors as a function of the gate voltage to maintain a constant bias current across the voltage swing of the input signal. Resistors average source voltages of the transconductance-cancelling transconductors to provide an average source voltage and apply the average source voltage to wells of input devices of the transconductance-cancelling transconductors to reduce back bias effect. The input devices are laid out in a same well and have a common centroid to cancel out process mismatches. A first I-DAC trims an offset of first transconductors, and a second I-DAC trims an offset of second transconductors to attain low offsets across a rail-to-rail input common mode range.