A Gm-Id Based Methodology For CMOS Analog Design
A Gm-Id Based Methodology For CMOS Analog Design
A Gm-Id Based Methodology For CMOS Analog Design
9, SEPTEMBER 1996
1314
Abstract-A new design methodology based on a unified treatment of all the regions of operation of the MOS transistor
is proposed. It is intended for the design of CMOS analog
circuits and especially suited for low power circuits where the
moderate inversion region often is used because it provides a
good compromise between speed and power consumption. The
synthesis procedure is based on the relation between the ratio
of the transconductance over dc drain current g m / I D and the
normalized current Io /(W / L ) .The g m /ID indeed is a universal
characteristic of all the transistors belonging to a same process. It
may be derived from experimental measurements and fitted with
simple analytical models. The method was applied successfully to
the design of a silicon-on-insulator(SOI) micropower operational
transconductance amplifier (OTA).
1. INTRODUCTION
fT=Ec,.
1 Sm
(2)
1315
35
I BVDD
30
25
10
5
0
Fig. 2.
10.
10-l~
10.
10
lo4
ID/(W/L) (A)
Fig. 1. Calculated (applying the model proposed in [7]) and measured
g m / I D versus I D / ( W / L ) curves for nMOS and PMOS thin-film SO1
fully-depleted transistors and nMOS and PMOS bulk transistors (Calculated
SOI: solid line, measured SOI: circles (nMOS), squares @MOS), calculated
bulk: dashed line).
111. APPLICATION
TO THE SYNTHESIS OF A
SILICON-ON-INSULATOR
MICROPOWER
CMOS OTA
The proposed methodology was applied to the synthesis
of the cascoded OTA [12] shown in Fig. 2 . We assume that
the total supply current (Itot)
is known a priori and equal
to 2 PA. Furthermore, we assume that the load capacitor
( C L )is equal to 10 pF and the supply voltage (VDD)equal
to 3 V. The design procedure is illustrated here aiming at
the best performances in terms of: dc open loop gain (Ao),
transition frequency ( f ~ ) phase
,
margin ( P M ) , and slew
rate ( S R ) .However, it can straightforwardly be modified to
take into account other performance aspects (like noise or
common mode rejection) that may be relevant to the particular
application, as long as they are directly related to the unified
g m / I D versus In relationship, i.e., to the current and smallsignal parameters. For large-signal related performance aspects
such as signal swing, an I D - V, or g m / I o - V, relationship
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TABLE I
OTA TRANSISTORS
DIMENSIONS
A0
T2
156
57.6
1 Ti- I 1 1
0.26
SR
.f
(w/L)
Transistor
Lengths
T6I
Early
CL
T9
7 1 1 2 )
18z.5
9.5
1.58
I T10 I 657.5 1
T11
94
0.52
3
3
243.3
34.6
1317
TABLE I1
CALCULATED,
SIMULATED,
AND MEASURED
RESULTSOF THE MICROPOWER
so1 OTA
CIRCUIT
Notes
Test version of the OTA with bonding PADS at the sources of the cascode transistors.
TABLE 111
COMPARISON
OF RESULTS
OF g m / I o BASEDSYNTHESIS
WITH CONVENTIONAL
STRONG
INVERSION
AND WEAKINVERSION
SYNTHESIS
I
1
I
I
69.3
243.3
ZW.L(P~~)
4900
W/L cascoden
WLcascode~
I
I
6.47
17.3
1359
I
I
6.47
17.3
1359
I
I
93.5
241.7
6185
I
I
93.5
241.7
I
I
6185
1318
TABLE IV
SO1 AND BULKLOW-POWER
OTA PERFORMANCE
2.9
72.9
2628
PM ()
CW.L (pm21
2
72.0
4900
COMPARISON
2.9
79.0
84.0
2881
1808
35
21
30
19
h
17
3
15
2s
g
&
13
11
9
2
2 20
i15
10
9
5
7
,
IOOK
,,
,,
1M
,
, ,
1OM
n
IOOK
1OM
fl(W
Fig. 4. Current consumption ratio and dc open loop gain difference between
the bulk and SO1 OTA versus transition frequency with phase margin of 60
degrees and CI; = 10 pF.
Fig. 5. Input pair g m / I D and current consumption versus transition frequency for SO1 (solid line) and Bulk (dashed line) CMOS OTA.
nMOS and PMOS junction capacitances per unit area C,, and
C,,, and the nMOS and PMOS sidewall capacitances per unit
and C,sw,. In our SO1 technology (resp. Bulk)
length C,,,,
n = 1.1(1.5), C,, = 0.06 fF/pm2 (0.18 fF/pm2), C,, = 0.06
fF/pm2 (0.4 fF/pm2), C,,,,
= 0.05 @/pm (0.4 fF/pm),
Cjswp
= 0.05 @/pm (0.5 fF/pm). All other technology data
are supposed the same for both technologies: the gate oxide
thickness (tax = 30 nm), the effective mobility [p, = 500
e-4
m 2 /(V.s), p, = 190 e-4m2/(V.s)], the drain and source
region extensions ( X , = X , = 8pm) which multiplied by
the transistor width give an estimation of the drain and source
areas, the source-gate and drain-gate overlap (ovn = ovp =
0.15pm) and the Early voltages (VA, = VA, = 20 V @ 3
pm length). The current mirror factor B is equal to two in
both implementations.
v. ADVANTAGES
OF THE SILICON-ON-INSULATOR
Table IV compares the performance of one bulk and three
TECHNOLOGY
FOR LOW POWER ANALOGCIRCUITS
SO1 implementations of the OTA. The four designs were opIn this section we first compare the designed SO1 OTA timized to achieve the same transition frequency, considering
performance with the achievable performance of a similar bulk the same transistor lengths to simplify the comparison. SO11
implementation. Then the current consumption and gain as is the OTA designed in Section I11 with the aim to maximize
a function of the transition frequency are compared for the the gain. This design has therefore the maximum values of
( g m / I o ) l and ( g m / I ~ ) acompatible with the required phase
considered OTA architecture in SO1 and bulk technologies.
This section will demonstrate the usefulness of the pro- margin. The SO12 design sought to trade-off a slight decrease
posed design methodology for the quick comparison of the in gain by a decrease in the OTA die area. We defined, for the
performances of SO1 versus bulk CMOS processes. We only sake of comparison, the objective of having approximately the
need to introduce the technological data differences between same die area as the bulk implementation. The decrease in area
both technologies, i.e., mainly the n factor, the bottom-plate is obtained with a slight decrease in ( g m / I o ) l and ( g m / I D ) 2 .
1319
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