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[Keyword] current comparator(3hit)

1-3hit
  • High-Speed Low Input Impedance CMOS Current Comparator

    Varakorn KASEMSUWAN  Surachet KHUCHAROENSIN  

     
    PAPER-Analog Signal Processing

      Vol:
    E88-A No:6
      Page(s):
    1549-1553

    A simple high-speed low input impedance CMOS current comparator is presented. The circuit uses improved Wilson current-mirror to perform subtraction. Negative feedback is employed to reduce the input impedance of the circuit. HSPICE is used to verify the circuit performance with standard 0.5 µm CMOS technology. Simulation results demonstrate propagation delay of 1.02 ns, average power consumption of 0.9 mW, and input impedance of 137 Ω for 0.1 µA input current at the supply voltage of 3 V.

  • Current Mode Circuits for Fast and Accurate Optical Level Monitoring with Wide Dynamic Range

    Johan BAUWELINCK  Dieter VERHULST  Peter OSSIEUR  Xing-Zhi QIU  Jan VANDEWEGE  Benoit DE VOS  

     
    PAPER-Devices/Circuits for Communications

      Vol:
    E87-B No:9
      Page(s):
    2641-2647

    This paper presents a new approach based on current mode circuits for fast and accurate optical level monitoring with wide dynamic range of a gigabit burst-mode laser driver chip. Our proposed solution overcomes the drawbacks that voltage mode implementations show at higher bit rates or in other technologies. The main speed-limiting factor of the level monitoring circuitry is the parasitic capacitance of the back facet monitor photodiode. We propose the use of an active-input current mirror to reduce the impact of this parasitic capacitance. The mirror produces two copies of the photo current, one to be used for the "0" level measurement and another for the "1" level measurement. The mirrored currents are compared to two reference currents by two current comparators. Every reference current needs only one calibration at room temperature. A pattern detection block scans the incoming data for patterns of sufficiently long consecutive 0's or 1's. At the end of such a pattern a valid measurement is present at the output of one of the current comparators. Based on these measurements the digital Automatic Power Control (APC) will adjust the bias (IBIAS) and modulation current (IMOD) setting of the laser driver. Tests show that the chip can stabilize and track the launched optical power with a tolerance of less than 1 dB. In these tests the pattern detection was programmed to sample the current comparators after 5 bytes (32 ns at 1.25 Gbps) of consecutive 1's and 0's. Automatic power control on such short strings of data has not been demonstrated before. Although this laser transmitter was developed for FSAN GPON applications at a speed of 1.25 Gbps upstream, the design concept is generic and can be applied for developing a wide range of burst mode laser transmitters. This chip was developed in a 0.35 µm SiGe BiCMOS process.

  • Neuron-MOS Current Mirror Circuit and Its Application to Multi-Valued Logic

    Jing SHEN  Koichi TANNO  Okihiko ISHIZUKA  Zheng TANG  

     
    PAPER-Circuits

      Vol:
    E82-D No:5
      Page(s):
    940-948

    A neuron-MOS transistor (νMOS) is applied to current-mode multi-valued logic (MVL) circuits. First, a novel low-voltage and low-power νMOS current mirror is presented. Then, a threshold detector and a quaternary T-gate using the proposed νMOS current mirrors are proposed. The minimum output voltage of the νMOS current mirror is decreased by VT (threshold voltage), compared with the conventional double cascode current mirror. The νMOS threshold detector is built on a νMOS current comparator originally composed of νMOS current mirrors. It has a high output swing and sharp transfer characteristics. The gradient of the proposed comparator output in the transfer region can be increased 6.3-fold compared with that in the conventional comparator. Along with improved operation of the novel current comparator, the discriminative ability of the proposed νMOS threshold detector is also increased. The performances of the proposed circuits are validated by HSPICE with Motorola 1.5 µm CMOS device parameters. Furthermore, the operation of a νMOS current mirror is also confirmed through experiments on test chips fabricated by VDEC*. The active area of the proposed νMOS current mirror is 63 µm 51 µm.