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Single Stage Amplifier

Single Stage Amplifier. Common Source Amplifier Source Follower Common Drain. Common Source Amplifier. Resistive Load Diode Connected Current Source Load Triode Load Source Degeneration. CS with Resistive Load. CS with Resistive Load. W/L=35.6 um/0.6um. Small Input Signal.

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Single Stage Amplifier

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  1. Single Stage Amplifier

  2. Common Source Amplifier • Source Follower • Common Drain

  3. Common Source Amplifier • Resistive Load • Diode Connected • Current Source Load • Triode Load • Source Degeneration

  4. CS with Resistive Load

  5. CS with Resistive Load W/L=35.6 um/0.6um

  6. Small Input Signal Amplitude of input: 2 mV (peak to peak) Amplitude of output: 19.5 (peak to peak) Av=9.75

  7. Small Signal Operation

  8. Calculation of Small Signal Gain (Valid only for device in saturation region)

  9. Small Signal Model small signal analysis the intuitive approach

  10. Numerical Calculation • Small Signal Gain: • gm=2 mS • ro=1/gds=22.288 Kohms • RD=6 Kohms • AV=-gm(roRD/(ro+RD))=-9.454

  11. What if the magnitude of the input signal is increased? Distortion is observed when Vin swings high.

  12. Triode Region (1) Triode Region Reduction of transconductance in the triode region

  13. Triode Region (2) Disadvantage of resistively loaded CS: The DC level of Vout is tied to the AV. An increase of RD will increase AV, but at the price of pushing the transistor closer into the triode region.

  14. Diode Connected Load • Common Source • Diode Connected Load • NFET Implementation • PFET Implementation

  15. Diode Connected Load Useful when tightly controlled resistors are not available, or physically not realizable. Impedance: (Body Effect ignored.)

  16. Diode Connected Load With Body Effect

  17. Example M1: W/L=4.62 um/0.6um Bias Current: 100 uA gm2=8 mS gds2=35.43 uS gmbs2=100.6 uS RX=1,068 Ohms

  18. CS Stage with Diode Connected Load Not sensitive of bias current, e.g. gm Better linearity.

  19. Diode Connected Load (NFET) W/L_To=35.6 um/0.6um; W/L_T1=4.62 um/0.6um

  20. Amplitude of input: 2 mV (peak to peak) Amplitude of output: 4.447 mV (peak to peak) Av=2.22

  21. Design Issue • If the bias current is fixed and the dc Vout (VGS) is fixed, then (W/L) of the load is fixed. • It maybe difficult to increase Av.

  22. Diode Connected PFET with CS

  23. Plot Amplitude of input: 2 mV (peak to peak) Amplitude of output: 15.24 mV (peak to peak) Av=7.62

  24. Gain Calculation M1: W/L=6.00 um/0.6um Bias Current: 100 uA Current source: 75 uA gm=2 mS gm2=200 uS gds2=4.69 uS gds=44.8 uS Av=-8.013

  25. CS Stage with Current Source Load ro2 depends on L and ID of a transistor. |VDS2,min=VGS-Vth2| can be reduced by increasing the width of M2. Downside: the DC output voltage is not well-defined.

  26. Spice Example

  27. Amplitude of input: 2 mV (peak to peak) Amplitude of output: 62.92 mV (peak to peak) Av=-31.44

  28. Sensitivty Even a slight deviation in the gate voltage of PFET is enough to change the output voltage signficantly. E.g. Sensitivity of output voltage around 0.6 V.

  29. Calculation: W/L for T2: 24.06um/0.6um ro1=22.288 Kohm ro2=53.20 Kohm gm=2 mS Av=-31.41 Ideal Vout=0.6 V Vth2=-0.269 Vod=-0.213 Vb=717.64 mV

  30. CS Stage with Triode Load Disadvantage: Sensitivity to a precise Vb. Advantage: Vout, max=VDD

  31. CS Stage with Source Degeneration • Intuition • Small signal gain • Output resistance

  32. Intuition Vin↑, ID↑, VS↑ Δvin is dropped across RS, thus leading to a smoother variation of ID.

  33. Small Signal Gain If gmRS>>1, AV is approximately RD/RS ДID=ДVin/RS

  34. Effective Gm with Non-negligible body effect

  35. Gain By Inspection Interpretation: The resistance at the drain Divided by the resistance in the source path

  36. Determination of Gain by Inspection Example

  37. Output Resistance Homework: Derive the output resistance using the small equivalent circuit

  38. A More Intuitive Approach

  39. Analysis

  40. Norton Equivalent Circuit

  41. Gain of a Degenerated Current Source Conductance with body effect Output Resistance

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