4.6 Article

A 0.1% THD, 1-MΩ to 1-GΩ Tunable, Temperature-Compensated Transimpedance Amplifier Using a Multi-Element Pseudo-Resistor

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF SOLID-STATE CIRCUITS
Volume 53, Issue 7, Pages 1913-1923

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSSC.2018.2820701

Keywords

Current readout; linearization; process variation; pseudo-resistor (PR); robustness; transimpedance amplifier (TIA)

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SPP1601]
  2. Ministerium fuer Wissenschaft und Kunst Baden-Wuerttemberg

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In this paper, a transimpedance amplifier (TIA) is presented that utilizes a modified pseudo-resistor (PR) with improved robustness against temperature and process variations, enhanced linearity, and reduced parasitics. Using a biasing scheme named pseudo current mirror, the conventional dependence on absolute process parameters is reduced to a dependence on matching of alike devices. The linearity and noise performance as well as the immunity against process variations of the presented TIA are improved by the series connection of multiple PR elements. Moreover, it is shown how implementing the design in a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology reduces critical parasitics, which in turn enables the use of the multi-element PR in highspeed, high-gain, and low-distortion TIAs. A prototype realization in a 180-nm CMOS SOI technology achieves a tunability in transimpedance of three orders of magnitude from 1 G Omega down to 1 M Omega with corresponding bandwidths from 8 kHz to 2 MHz. By design, the contribution of shot noise is rendered negligible and the white noise floor of the prototype realization approaches the theoretical thermal noise limit, e.g., 5.5 fA/root Hz for a transimpedance of 1 G Omega and 140 fA/root Hz for 1 M Omega. Total harmonic distortion values of less than 0.1% are achieved for an input amplitude of 300 pA(p-p) for 1 G Omega, 4.0 nA(p-p) for 100 M Omega, and 40 nA(p-p) for 10 M Omega, and less than 1% is achieved for an input amplitude of 550 nA(p-p) for 1 M Omega. The presented TIA consumes an area of 0.07 mm(2) and dissipates a power of 9.3 mW for the opamp and a maximum power of 0.2 mW for the PR from a 1.8-V supply.

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