Title :
A DC-DC charge pump design based on voltage doublers
Author :
Starzyk, Janusz A. ; Jan, Ying-Wei ; Qiu, Fengjing
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Ohio Univ., Athens, OH, USA
fDate :
3/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A novel organization of switched capacitor charge pump circuits based on voltage doubler structures is presented in this paper. Each voltage doubler takes a dc input and outputs a doubled dc voltage. By cascading n voltage doublers the output voltage increases up to 2n times. A two-phase voltage doubler and a multiphase voltage doubler (MPVD) structures are discussed and design considerations are presented. A simulator working in the Q-V realm was used for simplified circuit level simulation. In order to evaluate the power delivered by a charge pump, a resistive load is attached to the output of the charge pump and an equivalent capacitance is evaluated. A comparison of the voltage doubler circuits with Dickson charge pump and Makowski´s voltage multiplier is presented in terms of the area requirements, the voltage gain, and the power level. This paper also identifies optimum loading conditions for different configurations of the charge pumps. Design guidelines for the desired voltage and power levels are discussed. A two-stage MPVD was fabricated using MOSIS 2.0-μm CMOS technology. It was designed with internal frequency regulation to reduce power consumption under no load condition
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; cascade networks; switched capacitor networks; voltage multipliers; 2.0 micron; CMOS technology; DC-DC charge pump design; Dickson charge pump; Makowski voltage multiplier; cascade network; circuit simulation; equivalent capacitance; multiphase voltage doubler; resistive load; switched capacitor circuit; two-phase voltage doubler; voltage doubler; CMOS technology; Capacitance; Charge pumps; Circuit simulation; Energy consumption; Frequency control; Guidelines; Switched capacitor circuits; Switching circuits; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Fundamental Theory and Applications, IEEE Transactions on