Title :
Some circuit design techniques for low-voltage analog functional elements using squaring circuits
Author_Institution :
Mobile Commun. Div., NEC Corp., Yokohama, Japan
fDate :
7/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper describes some novel circuit design techniques for analog integrated circuits operable on low voltage. These techniques make use of squaring circuits as fundamental circuit elements, which can be constructed easily in monolithic form to avoid processing difficulties. The following three circuit design techniques: the transistor-size unbalance technique, the bias offset technique, and the multitail technique, are applied to realize squaring circuits for deriving the inherent exponential law characteristic from a bipolar junction transistor (BJT) and the inherent square-law characteristic from an MOS field-effect transistor (MOSFET). Furthermore, dc transfer characteristics of the fundamental differential pairs, squaring circuits, and some analog functional elements such as OTAs, quarter-square multipliers, and logarithmic IF amplifiers, are verified with transistor arrays and discrete components on a breadboard or implemented with LSI
Keywords :
MOS analogue integrated circuits; analogue processing circuits; bipolar analogue integrated circuits; differential amplifiers; large scale integration; LSI; bias offset technique; circuit design techniques; dc transfer characteristics; differential pairs; exponential law characteristic; fundamental circuit elements; logarithmic IF amplifiers; low-voltage analog functional elements; multitail technique; quarter-square multipliers; square-law characteristic; squaring circuits; transistor-size unbalance technique; Analog integrated circuits; Bipolar transistor circuits; Circuit synthesis; Differential amplifiers; FETs; Frequency; Integrated circuit modeling; Low voltage; MOSFET circuits; Rectifiers;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Fundamental Theory and Applications, IEEE Transactions on