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Diffamp

1. The document discusses the differential amplifier circuit, specifically the BJT differential pair. It describes how the circuit amplifies the difference between two input voltages but also has some common mode gain. 2. It analyzes the circuit qualitatively and quantitatively in various cases such as when the inputs are shorted together or one base is grounded. It derives equations for the emitter currents and differential voltage gain. 3. The circuit is broken down into two equivalent half circuits to analyze the small-signal operation, where the input is the differential signal divided by two to each side. The voltage gain is then the gain of each half circuit.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
239 views14 pages

Diffamp

1. The document discusses the differential amplifier circuit, specifically the BJT differential pair. It describes how the circuit amplifies the difference between two input voltages but also has some common mode gain. 2. It analyzes the circuit qualitatively and quantitatively in various cases such as when the inputs are shorted together or one base is grounded. It derives equations for the emitter currents and differential voltage gain. 3. The circuit is broken down into two equivalent half circuits to analyze the small-signal operation, where the input is the differential signal divided by two to each side. The voltage gain is then the gain of each half circuit.

Uploaded by

madzero
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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/ 14

1

The Differential Amplifier

Asst. Prof. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN, D. Eng.


Dept. of Teacher Training in Electrical Engineering,
Faculty of Technical Education
King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology North Bangkok
http://www.te.kmitnb.ac.th/msn
[email protected]

BJT Differential Pair

• Differential pair circuits are one of the most


VCC
widely used circuit building blocks. The
input stage of every op amp is a differential αI/2 αI/2
amplifier RC RC
• Basic Characteristics
– Two matched transistors with emitters VCC-αIRC/2 VCC-αIRC/2
shorted together and connected to a
current source
I/2 I/2
– Devices must always be in active mode
– Amplifies the difference between the
two input voltages, but there is also a vCM
common mode amplification in the non- I vCM - 0.7
ideal case

• Let’s first qualitatively understand how this


circuit works.
– NOTE: This qualitative analysis also
applies for MOSFET differential pair
circuits

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 2

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


2

Case 1

• Assume the inputs are shorted together to a common


VCC
voltage, vCM, called the common mode voltage
αI/2 αI/2
– equal currents flow through Q1 and Q2
– emitter voltages equal and at vCM-0.7 in order RC RC
for the devices to be in active mode
VCC-αIRC/2 VCC-αIRC/2
– collector currents are equal and so collector Q1 Q2
voltages are also equal for equal load resistors
– difference between collector voltages = 0 I/2 I/2

• What happens when we vary vCM?


vCM I vCM - 0.7
– As long as devices are in active mode, equal
currents flow through Q1 and Q2
– Note: current through Q1 and Q2 always add up
to I, current through the current source
– So, collector voltages do not change and
difference is still zero….
– Differential pair circuits thus reject common
mode signals

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 3

Case 2 & 3

VCC
• Q2 base grounded and Q1 base at +1 V
αI 0
– All current flows through Q1
RC RC
– No current flows through Q2
– Emitter voltage at 0.3V and Q2’s EBJ not FB VCC-αIRC
Q1 Q2
– vC1 = VCC-αIRC +1V
– vC2 = VCC I 0
VCC
0 αI
RC RC I 0.3V

• Q2 base grounded and Q1 base at -1 V


VCC VCC-αIRC
-1V Q1 Q2 – All current flows through Q2
0 I – No current flows through Q1
– Emitter voltage at -0.7V and Q1’s EBJ not FB
– vC2 = VCC-αIRC
I -0.7V – vC1 = VCC

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 4

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


3

Case 4

• Apply a small signal vi


– Causes a small positive ΔI to flow in Q1
– Requires small negative ΔI in Q2
• since IE1+IE2 = I
– Can be used as a linear amplifier for small
signals (ΔI is a function of vi)
• Differential pair responds to differences in the input
voltage
– Can entirely steer current from one side of the
diff pair to the other with a relatively small
voltage

• Let’s now take a quantitative look at the large-signal


operation of the differential pair

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 5

BJT Diff Pair – Large-Signal Operation

• First look at the emitter currents when the emitters are tied together

• Some manipulations can lead to the following equations

• and there is the constraint:

• Given the exponential relationship, small differences in vB1,2 can cause all of the
current to flow through one side

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 6

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


4

• Notice vB1-vB2 ~= 4VT enough to switch all of current from one side to the other
• For small-signal analysis, we are interested in the region we can approximate to
be linear
– small-signal condition: vB1-vB2 < VT/2

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 7

BJT Diff Pair – Small-Signal Operation

• Look at the small-signal operation: small


differential signal vd is applied

multiply top and


bottom by

– expand the exponential and keep the


first two terms

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 8

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


5

Differential Voltage Gain

• For small differential input signals, vd << 2VT, the collector currents are…

• We can now find the differential gain to be…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 9

BJT Diff Pair – Differential Half Circuit

• We can break apart the differential pair circuit into two half circuits – which then
looks like two common emitter circuits driven by +vd/2 and –vd/2

Virtual Ground

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 10

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


6

Small-Signal Model of Diff Half Circuit

• We can then analyze the small-signal operation with the half circuit, but must
remember
– parameters rπ,gm, and ro are biased at I / 2
– input signal to the differential half circuit is vd/2

vc1
gmvπ
vd/2 rπ vπ ro RC

– voltage gain of the differential amplifier (output taken differentially) is equal


to the voltage gain of the half circuit

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 11

Common-Mode Gain

• When we drive the differential pair with a common-mode signal, vCM, the
incremental resistance of the bias current effects circuit operation and results in
some gain (assumed to be 0 when R was infinite)

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 12

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


7

Common Mode Rejection Ratio

• If the output is taken differentially, the output is zero since both sides move
together. However, if taken single-endedly, the common-mode gain is finite

• If we look at the differential gain on one side (single-ended), we get…

• Then, the common rejection ratio (CMRR) will be

– which is often expressed in dB

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 13

CM and Differential Gain Equation

• Input signals to a differential pair usually consists of two components: common


mode (vCM) and differential(vd)

• Thus, the differential output signal will be in general…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 14

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


8

MOS Diff Pair

• The same basic analysis can be applied to a MOS


differential pair

– and the differential input voltage is

– With some algebra…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 15

• We get full switching of the current when…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 16

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


9

Another Way to Analyze MOS Differential Pairs

• Let’s investigate another


technique for analyzing the RD RD RD RD
MOS differential pair
Vout1 X Y Vout2 Vout1 X Y Vout2
• For the differential pair circuit
on the left (driven by two
independent signals), compute V Vin2 Vin1
in1
the output using superposition
I I
– Start with Vin1, set Vin2=0
and first solve for X w.r.t.
Vin1
– Reduces to a degenerated
common-source amp
– neglecting channel-length RD
modulation and body- RD RD
effect, RS = 1/gm2 Vout1 X
Vout1 X Y Vout2
– so…
M1
M2 Vin1
Vin1 RS
RS

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 17

Cont’d

• Now, solve for Y w.r.t. Vin1


• Replace circuit within box with a Thevenin equivalent RD RD
– M1 is a source follower with VT=Vin1
Vout1 X Y Vout2
– RT=1/gm1
• The circuit reduces to a common-gate amplifier where… M1 M2

Vin1

• So, overall (assuming gm1 = gm2)

RD

by symmetry Y Vout2

RT

VT

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 18

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


10

Differential Pair with MOS loads

• Can use load resistors or MOS devices as loads


– Diode-connected nMOS loads = 1/gm load resistance
• Load resistance looking into the source
– Diode-connected pMOS loads = 1/gm load resistance
• Load resistance looking into diode connected drain
– pMOS current source loads = ro load resistance
• Has higher gain than diode-connected loads
– pMOS current mirror
• Differential input and single-ended output

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 19

Differential Pair with MOS Loads

Vb

Vout Vout

Vin Vin

I I

• Consider the above two MOS loads used in place of resistors


• Left:
– a diode connected pMOS has an effective resistance of 1/gmP

• Right:
– pMOS devices in saturation have effective resistance of roP

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 20

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


11

Active-Loaded CMOS Differential Amplifier

• A commonly used amplifier topology in CMOS technologies


• Output is taken single-endedly for a differential input
– with a vid/2 at the gate of M1, i1 flows M3 M4

i1
vo
– i1 is also mirrored through the M3-M4 current mirror i1
i2
– a –vid/2 at the gate of M2 causes i2 to also flow through M2
M1 M2
vid
• Given that ID= I / 2 (nominally)
I

• The voltage at the output then is given by…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 21

Differential Amp with Linearized Gain

• Use source generation to make the gain linear with respect to the
differential input and independent of gm
– Can build in two ways…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 22

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


12

• Assuming a virtual ground at node X, we can draw the following small-signal


half circuit.
gmvπ
vid vπ ro RD vο

is RS vS

– Assume ro is very large (simplifies the math)

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 23

Offsets in MOS Differential Pair

• There are 3 main sources of offset that affect the performance of MOS
differential pair circuits
– Mismatch in load resistors
– Mismatch in W/L of differential pair devices
– Mismatch in Vth of differential pair devices
• Let’s investigate each individually

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 24

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


13

Resistor Mismatch

• For the differential pair circuit shown, consider the case


where RD1 RD2
– Load resistors are mismatched by ΔRD
VO

– All other device parameters are perfectly matched


• With both inputs grounded, I1 = I2= I/2, but VO is not zero I1 I2
due to differences in the voltages across the load resistors
I

– It is common to find the input-referred offset which is


calculated as

– since Ad = gmRD

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 25

W/L Mismatch

• Now consider what happens when device sizes W/L are mismatched for the two
differential pair MOS devices M1 and M2

• This mismatch causes mismatch in the currents that flow through M1 and M2

– This mismatch results in VO

– So in the input referred offset is…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 26

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN


14

Vt Mismatch

• Lastly, consider mismatches in the threshold voltage

• Again, currents I1 and I2 will differ according to the following saturation current
equation

– For small ΔVt << 2(VGS-Vth)

– Again, using VOS=VO/Ad (Ad = gmRD and VO =2ΔIRD) we get…

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 27

Mismatch Summary

• The 3 sources of mismatch can be combined into one equation:

– arising from Vt, RD, and W/L mismatches


• Notice that offsets due to ΔRD and ΔW/L are functions of the overdrive
voltage VGS – Vt

224510 Advanced communication circuit design 28

Asst. Prof. Dr. MONTREE SIRIPRUCHYANUN

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