Author_Institution :
Div. of Mobile Commun., NEC Corp., Yokohama, Japan
Abstract :
A circuit structure having two cross-coupled, emitter-coupled pairs is proposed as a fundamental analog function element for multiplying two electrical input quantities; the input voltage difference and the tail current difference. The simplest form is well-known as “the Gilbert multiplier cell.” In this circuit, the tail current difference is the differential output current of an emitter-coupled pair, nearly proportional to the differential input voltage. Therefore, if the tail current difference is the differential output current of a squaring circuit, nearly proportional to the square of the differential input voltage, a squaring multiplier is obtained and ran be used for radio communication applications as a frequency mixer with a local oscillator frequency doubler. If the tail current difference is the differential output current of a multiplier then a tripler, capable of multiplying three electrical input quantities, is obtained. The folded technique, for low voltage operation, and the multi-tanh technique, for input voltage range expansion, are employed
Keywords :
BIMOS integrated circuits; analogue processing circuits; linear integrated circuits; mixers (circuits); multiplying circuits; Gilbert multiplier cell; analog function element; circuit design techniques; cross-coupled emitter-coupled pairs; differential output current; folded technique; frequency mixer; input voltage difference; input voltage range expansion; local oscillator frequency doubler; low voltage operation; multi-tanh technique; radiocommunication applications; squaring multiplier; tail current difference; tripler; Bipolar transistors; Circuit synthesis; Filters; Frequency; Integrated circuit synthesis; Large scale integration; Solid state circuits; Tail; Transconductance; Voltage;