Showing posts with label bulk-driven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bulk-driven. Show all posts

Sep 17, 2021

[paper] EKV Model for Bulk-Driven Circuit Design Using gmb/ID Method

Lukas Nagy, Daniel Arbet, Martin Kovac, Miroslav Potocny, Robert Ondica and Viera Stopjakova
EKV Model for Bulk-Driven Circuit Design Using gmb/ID Method
IEEE AFRICON; 13-15 September 2021; Arusha (TZ)
 
Institute of Electronics and Photonics; Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology; Slovak University of Technology; Bratislava (SK)

Abstract: The paper addresses a development and application of EKV MOS transistor compact model with focus on the ultra low-voltage / ultra low-power analog integrated circuit (IC) design employing bulk-driven (BD) technique. The presented contribution can be viewed as an extension of standard EKV model application and as a contribution to ultra low-voltage IC design techniques. The paper compares the measured and extracted small-signal parameters of standalone transistor samples fabricated in 130 nm CMOS technology and the simulation results obtained using the proposed bulk-driven EKV v2.63 model and foundry-provided BSIM model v3.3. The transistor samples were analyzed with power supply of VDD = 0.4 V The paper also discusses the implementation of 3D graphs as a result of introducing another degree of freedom into the essential MOS transistor characteristics, while maintaining the ease of using the design hand-calculation with the original gm/ID approach.

Fig: Bulk-Driven TEF vs Inversion Coefficient – gmb/ID

Acknowledgment: This work has been supported in part by the Slovak Research and Development Agency under grant APVV 19-0392, the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport of the Slovak Republic under grants VEGA 1/0731/20 and VEGA 1/0760/21, and ECSEL JU under project PROGRESSUS (Agr. No. 876868)

Sep 18, 2017

[paper] Design techniques for low-voltage analog integrated circuits

Matej Rakus, Viera Stopjakova, Daniel Arbet
Institute of Electronics and Photonics, Faculty of Electrical Engineering
and Information Technology Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, Slovakia,
Journal of ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING, Vol.68 (2017), No.4, 245–255
DOI: 10.1515/jee-2017–0036

ABSTRACT: In this paper, a review and analysis of different design techniques for (ultra) low-voltage integrated circuits (IC) are performed. This analysis shows that the most suitable design methods for low-voltage analog IC design in a standard CMOS process include techniques using bulk-driven MOS transistors, dynamic threshold MOS transistors and MOS transistors operating in weak or moderate inversion regions. The main advantage of such techniques is that there is no need for any modification of standard CMOS structure or process. Basic circuit building blocks like differential amplifiers or current mirrors designed using these approaches are able to operate with the power supply voltage of 600 mV (or even lower), which is the key feature towards integrated systems for modern portable applications.
Fig: Parameter gm/ID versus the normalized drain current. MOS transistor operates in weak inversion (WI) for ic < 0.1. Strong inversion (SI) is for ic < 10. Everything in between belongs to the moderate inversion (MI) with center in ic = 1