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EECE488: Analog CMOS Integrated Circuit Design Set 4 Differential Amplifiers

This document discusses differential amplifiers and provides an overview of their operation and advantages. It begins by describing how differential amplifiers were originally developed in vacuum tube circuits and how they offer benefits like noise immunity, linearity, and higher signal swing compared to single-ended circuits. Key concepts discussed include differential and single-ended signals, common-mode rejection, and using the half-circuit model to analyze differential pairs. Examples are provided to calculate the small-signal differential gain of a differential pair circuit.

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Kuroko Tetsuya
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
46 views

EECE488: Analog CMOS Integrated Circuit Design Set 4 Differential Amplifiers

This document discusses differential amplifiers and provides an overview of their operation and advantages. It begins by describing how differential amplifiers were originally developed in vacuum tube circuits and how they offer benefits like noise immunity, linearity, and higher signal swing compared to single-ended circuits. Key concepts discussed include differential and single-ended signals, common-mode rejection, and using the half-circuit model to analyze differential pairs. Examples are provided to calculate the small-signal differential gain of a differential pair circuit.

Uploaded by

Kuroko Tetsuya
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 19

EECE488: Analog CMOS Integrated Circuit Design

Set 4

Differential Amplifiers

Shahriar Mirabbasi
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of British Columbia
[email protected]

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 1

Overview
• The “differential amplifier” is one of the most important circuit
inventions.

• Their invention dates back to vacuum tube era (1930s).

• Alan Dower Blumlein (a British Electronics Engineer, 1903-


1942) is regarded as the inventor of the vacuum-tube version of
differential pair.

• Differential operation offers many useful properties and is widely


used in analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 2

1
Single-ended and Differential Signals

• A “single-ended” signal is a signal that is measured with


respect to a fixed potential (typically ground).
• “Differential signal” is generally referred to a signal that
is measured as a difference between two nodes that have
equal but opposite-phase signal excursions around a
fixed potential (the fixed potential is called common-mode
(CM) level).

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 3

Board Notes (Differential Amplifiers)

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 4

2
Why Differential?

• Better immunity to environmental noise

• Improved linearity

• Higher signal swing compared to single-ended

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 5

Higher Immunity to Noise Coupling

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 6

3
Supply Noise Reduction

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 7

Board Notes (Improved Linearity)

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 8

4
Basic Differential Pair

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 9

Basic Differential Pair

• Problem: Sensitive to input common-mode (CM) level


– Bias current of the transistors M1 and M2 changes as the
input CM level changes

– gm of the devices as well as output CM level change

• Can we think of a solution?

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 10

5
Differential Pair

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 11

Common-Mode Response

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 12

6
Common-Mode Input versus Output Swing

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 13

Board Notes (“Half-Circuit” Concept)

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 14

7
Board Notes (“Half-Circuit” Concept)

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 15

Example
• Using the half-circuit concept, calculate the small-signal
differential gain of the following circuit (for two cases of λ=0 and
λ≠0).

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 16

8
Example
• Using the half-circuit concept, calculate the small-signal
differential gain of the following circuit (for two cases of λ=0 and
λ≠0).

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 17

Example
• Sketch the small-signal gain of a differential pair as a function of
its input common-mode level.

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 18

9
Analysis of Differential Amplifier

2I D
Vin1 − Vin 2 = VGS1 − VGS 2 , VGS = + VTH
W
µ nCox
L

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 19

Analysis of Differential Amplifier

2 I D1 2I D 2
Vin1 − Vin 2 = −
W W
µ nCox µ nCox
L L

(Vin1 − Vin 2 )2 = 2
W
( I D1 + I D 2 − 2 I D1 I D 2 )
µ nCox
L
µ nCox (Vin1 − Vin 2 )2 − I SS = −2 I D1 I D 2
1 W
2 L

( µ nCox ) 2 (Vin1 − Vin 2 ) + I SS − I SS µ nCox (Vin1 − Vin 2 ) = 4 I D1 I D 2


1 W 4 2 W 2

4 L L
SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 20

10
Analysis of Differential Amplifier

Using:
4 I D1 I D 2 = ( I D1 + I D 2 ) 2 − ( I D1 − I D 2 ) 2 = I SS
2
− ( I D1 − I D 2 ) 2

and

( µ n Cox ) 2 (Vin1 − Vin 2 ) + I SS − I SS µ nCox (Vin1 − Vin 2 )2


1 W W
4 I D1 I D 2 =
4 2

4 L L
We have:
1 W 4 I SS
I D1 − I D 2 = µ nCox (Vin1 − Vin 2 ) − (Vin1 − Vin 2 ) 2
2 L W
µ nCox
L
SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 21

Analysis of Differential Amplifier

1 W 4 I SS
id = µ nCox vid − vid
2

2 L W
µ nCox
L
4 I SS
− v2
∂id 1 W µ nCoxW / L id
= Gm = µ nCox
∂vid 2 L 4 I SS
− v2
µ nCoxW / L id

vid vid

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 22

11
Analysis of Differential Amplifier

• For small vid:

∂id W
Gm = = µ nCox I SS = g m1 = g m1
∂vid L

• We have:

Vout1 − Vout 2 = RD ( I D1 − I D 2 ) = RD Gm (Vin1 − Vin 2 )

Vout1 − Vout 2
= g m1 RD
Vin1 − Vin 2
SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 23

Differential Gain

Vout1 − Vout 2
Av (diff ) = = gm RD
Vin1 − Vin2
g
Av ( Single − Ended ) = m RD
2
SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 24

12
Differential Pair as a CS and CD-CG Amplifier
gm RD
Av = −
1+ gm RS
gm
=− RD , (S.E.)
2
= gm RD , (diff )

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 25

Common-Mode Response

Vout
Av =
Vin,CM
RD / 2
=−
1/(2gm ) + RSS

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 26

13
Board Notes

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 27

Example
• In the following circuit assume that RSS=500Ω and W/L=25/0.5,
µnCox=50µA/V2, VTH =0.6, λ=γ=0 and VDD=3V.

a) What is the required input CM for which RSS sustains 0.5V?


b) Calculate RD for a differential gain of 5V/V.
c) What happens at the output if the input CM level is 50mV
higher than the value calculated in part (a)?

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 28

14
Board Notes

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 29

Common-Mode Response

∆VX gm
=− R
∆Vin,CM 1+ 2gm RSS D
∆VY gm
=− (RD + ∆RD )
∆Vin,CM 1+ 2gm RSS

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 30

15
Common-Mode Response

VX − VY gm1 − gm 2
=− RD
Vin,CM (gm1 + gm 2 )RSS + 1

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 31

Common-Mode Response

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 32

16
Differential Pair with MOS Loads

Av = −gmN (gmP
−1
|| roN || roP )

≈−
gmN Av = −gmN (roN || roP )
gmP

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 33

MOS Loads

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 34

17
MOS Loads

Av ≈ gm 1[(gm 3 ro3 ro1 ) || (gm 5ro5 ro7 )]

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 35

Gilbert Cell

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 36

18
Gilbert Cell

SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 37

Gilbert Cell

VOUT = kVin Vcont


SM EECE488 Set 4 - Differential Amplifiers 38

19

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