ULTRASOUND TRANSMIT-RECEIVE SWITCH WITH COMBINED TRANSMIT-RECEIVE AND RETURN-TO-ZERO PATH
20240120962 · 2024-04-11
Inventors
- Aravind Miriyala (Bengaluru, IN)
- Ravikumar Pattipaka (Bengaluru, IN)
- Raja Sekhar KANAKAMEDALA (Bengaluru, IN)
- Sandeep Kesrimal Oswal (Bengaluru, IN)
Cpc classification
B06B1/023
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H03K17/002
ELECTRICITY
H04B11/00
ELECTRICITY
B06B1/0215
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B06B1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H04B11/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An ultrasound system includes a transmit-receive switch. The transmit-receive switch includes a combined transmit-receive and return-to-zero (RTZ) path. The combined transmit-receive and RTZ path includes a transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal. The second current terminal of the transistor is coupled to a ground node via a first switch and is coupled to a receive node via a second switch. The ultrasound system also includes a receiver front-end circuit coupled to the receive node.
Claims
1. Gate drive control circuitry comprising: a gate-on drive control circuit for comprising: a first transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a second transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a first diode with an anode coupled to the second current terminal of the first transistor and with a cathode coupled to the first current terminal of the second transistor; and a second diode with an anode coupled to a transmit node and with a cathode coupled to the first current terminal of the second transistor, and wherein a second current terminal of the second transistor is coupled to the control terminal of the second transistor.
2. The gate drive control circuitry of claim 1, wherein the gate-on drive control circuit further comprises: a third transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a third diode with an anode coupled to the second current terminal of the third transistor; a resistor with a first terminal and a second terminal, wherein the first terminal of the resistor is coupled a cathode of the third diode.
3. The gate drive control circuitry of claim 2, wherein the resistor is a first resistor, wherein the gate drive control circuitry further comprises a gate-off drive control circuit wherein the gate-off drive control circuit comprises: a fourth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the second current terminal of the fourth transistor is coupled to a negative transducer drive voltage terminal; a fifth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; and a second resistor with a first terminal coupled to the first current terminal of the fifth transistor and with a second terminal coupled to the control terminal of the fifth transistor and to the first current terminal of the fourth transistor.
4. The gate drive control circuitry of claim 3, further comprising a gate-on-off drive control circuit wherein the gate-on-off drive control circuit comprises: an sixth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the first current terminal of the sixth transistor is coupled to a voltage supply configured to provide a voltage below a transducer driver voltage level; and a seventh transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the second current terminal of the seventh transistor is coupled to a ground node.
5. A transmit and receive switch, comprising: a first transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the second current terminal of the first transistor is coupled to a ground via a first switch and is coupled to the receive node via a second switch; a second transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the first current terminal of the second transistor is coupled to transmit terminal, and wherein the second current terminal of the second transistor is coupled to the first current terminal of the first transistor; and a controller configured to provide control signals to the control terminal of the first transistor, the control terminal of the second transistor, the first switch, and the second switch based on a transmit mode, a receive mode, and a return-to-zero (RTZ) mode.
6. The transmit and receive switch of claim 5, wherein the controller is configured to use the transmit mode to change the transmit terminal from a neutral voltage level to a positive transducer driver voltage level, wherein the controller is configured to use the RTZ mode to change the transmit terminal from the positive transducer driver voltage to a neutral voltage level, wherein the controller is configured to use the transmit mode to change the transmit terminal from a neutral voltage level to a negative transducer driver voltage level, wherein the controller is configured to use the RTZ mode to change the transmit node from the negative transducer driver voltage to a neutral voltage level, and wherein the controller is configured to use the receive mode while the transmit terminal is at a neutral voltage level.
7. The transmit and receive switch of claim 5, wherein the controller comprises a gate-on drive control circuit for the second transistor, wherein the gate-on drive control circuit comprises: a third transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a first diode with an anode coupled to the second current terminal of the third transistor and with a cathode coupled to the control terminal of the second transistor; and a second diode with an anode coupled to a transmit node and with a cathode coupled to the control terminal of the second transistor.
8. The transmit and receive switch of claim 5, wherein the controller comprises a gate-on drive control circuit for the second transistor, wherein the gate-on drive control circuit comprises: a third transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a fourth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a first diode with an anode coupled to the second current terminal of the third transistor and with a cathode coupled to the first current terminal of the fourth transistor; and a second diode with an anode coupled to a transmit node and with a cathode coupled to the first current terminal of the fourth transistor, and wherein a second current terminal of the fourth transistor is coupled to the control terminal of the second transistor.
9. The transmit and receive switch of claim 8, wherein the gate-on drive control circuit further comprises: a fifth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal; a third diode with an anode coupled to the second current terminal of the fifth transistor; a resistor with a first terminal and a second terminal, wherein the first terminal of the resistor is coupled a cathode of the third diode, and wherein the second terminal of the resistor is coupled to the control terminal of the second transistor.
10. The transmit and receive switch of claim 9, wherein the resistor is a first resistor, wherein the controller further comprises a gate-off drive control circuit for the second transistor, and wherein the gate-off drive control circuit comprises: a sixth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the second current terminal of the sixth transistor is coupled to a negative transducer drive voltage node; a seventh transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the first current terminal of the seventh transistor is coupled to the control terminal of the second transistor; and a second resistor with a first terminal coupled to the first current terminal of the seventh transistor and with a second terminal coupled to the control terminal of the seventh transistor and to the first current terminal of the sixth transistor.
11. The transmit and receive switch of claim 10, wherein the controller further comprises a gate-on-off drive control circuit for the first transistor, and wherein the gate-on-off drive control circuit comprises: an eighth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the first current terminal of the eighth transistor is coupled to a voltage supply configured to provide a voltage below a transducer driver voltage level; and a ninth transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, wherein the second current terminal of the ninth transistor is coupled to ground, and wherein control terminal of the first transistor is coupled to first current terminal of the ninth transistor and to the second current terminal of the eighth transistor.
12. A transmit and receive switch, comprising: a first transistor with a source terminal, a drain terminal, and a gate terminal, wherein the source terminal of the first transistor is coupled to ground via a first switch and is coupled to a receive terminal via a second switch; a second transistor with a source terminal, a drain terminal, and a gate terminal, wherein the source terminal of the second transistor is coupled to a transmit terminal, and wherein the drain terminal of the second transistor is coupled to the drain terminal of the first transistor.
13. The transmit and receive switch of claim 12, wherein the first and second transistor are configured to handle voltage of 75V or more, and wherein the first and second switches are configured to handle voltages of 5V or less.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007] For a detailed description of various examples, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0016] Disclosed herein are transmit-receive switch topologies and related systems and methods, where the disclosed transmit-receive switch topologies involve a combined transmit-receive and return-to-zero (RTZ) path. In some examples, the combined transmit-receive and RTZ path includes a first transistor with a first current terminal, a second current terminal, and a control terminal, where the second current terminal of the first transistor is coupled to a ground node via a first switch and is coupled to a receive node via a second switch. In addition, the combined transmit-receive and RTZ path includes a second transistor with a control terminal, a first current terminal, and second current terminal, where second current terminal of the second transistor is coupled to the first current terminal of the first transistor. Also, the first current terminal of the second transistor is coupled to a transmit node. To direct different operations of the transmit-receive switch, a controller is configured to provide control signals to the control terminal of the first transistor, the control terminal of the second transistor, the first switch, and the second switch, where the control signals are based on a transmit mode, a receive mode, and an RTZ mode.
[0017] In some examples, the disclosed transmit-receive switch devices, systems, and methods are used in an ultrasound scenario. In such case, the transmit-receive switch directs operations of the combined transmit-receive and RTZ path to cause the transmit node to transition from a neutral voltage level to a positive transducer driver voltage level, to transition from the positive transducer driver voltage level to the neutral voltage level (an RTZ transition), to transition from the neutral voltage level to a negative transducer driver voltage level, and to transition from the negative transducer driver voltage level to the neutral voltage level (another RTZ transition). As desired, when the transmit node is at the neutral voltage, the transmit-receive switch also directs the combined transmit-receive and RTZ path to couple the transmit node to a receive node.
[0018] In at least some examples of the disclosed transmit-receive switch topologies, switching between a transmit mode and a receive mode is sufficiently fast to support near field imaging of ultrasound equipment. Also, in some examples, transitions (e.g., neutral-to-high, high-to-neutral, neutral-to-low, low-to-neutral, transmit mode to receive mode) related to the combined transmit-receive and RTZ path topologies comply with a minimal artifact criterion. With the disclosed transmit-receive switch topologies, the size of the transmit-receive switch is strategically reduced to lower cost and the footprint. To provide a better understanding, various transmit-receive switch options and controller options are described using the figures as follows.
[0019]
[0020] In the system 100, a transmit-receive (T/R) switch 106 is positioned between a transmit node 116 and a receive node 118, where signals at the transmit node 116 at a given time are due to the operations of the TX circuit 102 and/or the transducer 104. In operation, the T/R switch 106 selectively passes whatever signal is at the transmit node 116 to the receive node 118. More specifically, in the disclosed examples, the T/R switch 106 includes a combined T/R and RTZ path 108 to selective pass whatever signals is at the transmit node 116 to the receive node 118. Also, the combined T/R and RTZ path 108 is used to ground a positive or negative signal (e.g., a positive or negative transducer driver voltage level) provided by the TX circuit 102 before the receive node 106 is coupled to the transmit node (to quiet the signal at the transmit node 116 before receive operations begin).
[0021] In system 100, transmit operations are performed while the T/R switch 106 is turned off with regard to coupling the transmit node 116 and the receive node 118. Example transmit operations involve the TX circuit 102 providing a positive transducer driver signal followed by a negative transducer driver signal, or vice versa. Even through the T/R switch 106 is turned off with regard to coupling the transmit node 116 and the receive node 118, the combined T/R and RTZ path 108 enables the T/R switch 106 to perform RTZ operations to ground the transmit node 116 as desired (e.g., after a positive transducer driver signal or after a negative transducer driver signal).
[0022] In system 100, receive operations are performed while the T/R switch 106 is turned on with regard to coupling the transmit node 116 and the receive node 118. During receive operations, an ultrasound or receiver (RX) analog front-end circuit (AFE) 110 performs operations such as signal filtering, signal amplification, and analog-to-digital conversion. To perform such operations, the RX AFE 110 includes a filter circuit, an amplifier circuit, and an analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The digitized signals output from the RX AFE are provided to a digital signal processor (DSP) 112 configured to perform signal processing on the digitized signals (e.g., comparing echo signal data with baseline data). In system 100, the operations of the DSP 112 result in image data (e.g., a 2D or 3D image of a subject's internal organs), where the image data is presented on a display 114.
[0023]
[0024] In some examples, a transmit phase 202 (e.g., an ultrasound transmit phase) includes at least part of the PHV level 206, the second neutral voltage level 208, and at least part of the NHV level 210. Later, a receive phase 214 begins after the transmit phase 202 ends, wherein the receive phase 214 occurs after a T/R switch is turned on (to couple the transmit node 116 and the receive node 118). As shown, the receive phase 214 begins after a third neutral voltage level 212 has started (when the transmit node 116 has settled after the transmit phase 202). For example, in an ultrasound scenario, the receive phase 214 is used to monitor and interpret echoes resulting from the transmit phase 202.
[0025]
[0026] As shown, the first current terminal of M2 is coupled to a transmit node 116A (an example of the transmit node 116 in
[0027] The control signals for M1, M2, S1, and S2 are provided by the controller 308, and depend on whether the combined transmit-receive and RTZ path 108A is being operated in a transmit mode, an RTZ mode, or a receive mode. In
[0028] In the example of
[0029]
[0030]
[0031] The controller circuit 500 includes additional components compared to the controller circuit 400 or circuit 502. As shown, the controller circuit 500 also includes two additional transistors (M4 and M5), each with a respective first current terminal, second current terminal, and control terminal. More specifically, the first current terminal of M5 is coupled to a power supply node 512 configured to provide a low-voltage power supply (e.g., 5V or less). In some examples, M5 is sized to operate with currents that are much less than a transducer drive current (e.g., if the transducer driver current is 2 amps, then M5 is sized for a current of 100 mA). The control terminal of M5 is coupled to a node 510 configured to provide an M2 turn on signal. Meanwhile, the second current terminal of M5 is coupled to the anode of a third diode (D3) sized to handle a high-voltage level (e.g., 150V). The cathode of D3 is coupled to first side of a resistor (R1), where the second side of R1 is coupled to a second current terminal of M4. As shown, the first current terminal of M4 is coupled to a node 506 between D1 and D2. Also, the control terminal of M4 is coupled to a node 504 between D3 and R1. In some examples, M4 is sized to operate with currents that are much less than a transducer drive current (e.g., if the transducer driver current is 2 amps, then M4 is sized for a current of 100 mA). For the controller circuit 500, a node 512 between the second side of R1 and the second current terminal of M4 provides CTRL_2. In other words, when an M2 turn on signal is applied to the control terminals of M3 and M5, the node 512 corresponding to CTRL_2 is at a logical 1, resulting in M2 being turned on. With the controller circuit 500, the gate control is isolated from D2.
[0032] In some examples, a TX_OUT signal (e.g., to drive the transducer 104) is between +100V and ?100V and switches quickly. In order to turn M2 on, a floating bias of 5V is applied to CTRL_2 with reference to TX_OUT. In one example of the controller circuit 400, M2 is turned on by placing a 5V zener diode (e.g., D2) between CTRL_2 and TX_OUT. Also, current is pumped into CTRL_2 when a transmit-receive switch needs to be turned on. In such case, the 5V Zener diode (e.g., D2) breaks down and limits Vgs to the zener voltage. Because the zener diode (e.g., D2) may take certain amount of time to recover from zener breakdown region, a constraint on the turn off time exists. To avoid this constraint, an alternative CTRL_2 turn on controller circuit such as the controller circuit 500 added one NMOS LV switch (e.g., M4) to isolate CTRL_2 from TX_OUT+the Zener reverse break down voltage (e.g., 5V).
[0033]
[0034] In some examples, CTRL_2 is shorted to the transmit node 116A (shorted to TX_OUT) in order to turn off M2. As represented in the controller circuit 600, this is done by placing a low-voltage PMOS switch (e.g., M7) between CTRL_2 and the transmit node 116A (TX_OUT). Also, a floating bias of 5V is generated with reference to CTRL_2 and is applied to the gate of the PMOS switch (e.g., M7).
[0035]
[0036]
[0037] With the disclosed transmit-receive switch topologies, transmit-receiver switch and RTZ components are combined to improve area efficiency compared to other transmit-receive switch topologies. Also, the disclosed transmit-receive switch topologies provide fast switching to support near field imaging. In some examples, the turn on time for the disclosed transmit-receive switch topologies is less than 100 ns. In some examples, the fast turn on or turn off times are achieved using the controller circuits 400, 500, 600, and/or 700 described herein in
[0038] Certain terms have been used throughout this description and claims to refer to particular system components. As one skilled in the art will appreciate, different parties may refer to a component by different names. This document does not intend to distinguish between components that differ only in name but not in their respective functions or structures. In this disclosure and claims, the terms including and comprising are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean including, but not limited to . . . . Also, the term couple or couples is intended to mean either an indirect or direct wired or wireless connection. Thus, if a first device couples to a second device, that connection may be through a direct connection or through an indirect connection via other devices and connections. The recitation based on is intended to mean based at least in part on. Therefore, if X is based on Y, X may be a function of Y and any number of other factors.
[0039] The above discussion is meant to be illustrative of the principles and various embodiments of the present invention. Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.