dB-linear voltage-to-current converter
US-9124230-B2 · Sep 1, 2015 · US
US9372495B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9372495-B2 |
| Application number | US-201514806336-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 22, 2015 |
| Priority date | Feb 2, 2009 |
| Publication date | Jun 21, 2016 |
| Grant date | Jun 21, 2016 |
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A dB-linear voltage-to-current (V/I) converter is amenable to implementation in CMOS technology. In a representative embodiment, the dB-linear V/I converter has a voltage scaler, a current multiplier, and an exponential current converter serially connected to one another. The voltage scaler supplies an input current to the current multiplier based on an input voltage. The current multiplier multiplies the input current and a current proportional to absolute temperature and supplies the resulting current to the exponential current converter. The exponential current converter has a differential MOSFET pair operating in a sub-threshold mode and generating an output current that is proportional to a temperature-independent, exponential function of the input voltage.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A current limiter comprising: a first reference-current source directly coupled to an output terminal, the first reference-current source configured to generate a first reference current; an amplifier having a first input, a second input, and an amplifier output, the second input and the amplifier output electrically connected via a feedback loop, the second input configured to receive an input current; a second reference-current source electrically coupled to the first input of the amplifier, the second reference-current source configured to generate a second reference current; and first and second current mirrors electrically coupled between the second input of the amplifier and the output terminal, the output terminal outputting a limited current such that the first reference current sets a lower limit and the second reference current sets an upper limit. 2. The current limiter of claim 1 wherein the limited current is substantially the same as the input current when the input current is between the first and second reference currents. 3. The current limiter of claim 1 wherein the limited current is substantially the same as the first reference current when the input current is less than the first reference current. 4. The current limiter of claim 1 wherein the limited current is substantially the same as the second reference current when the input current is greater than the second reference current. 5. The current limiter of claim 1 wherein the amplifier includes an operational amplifier. 6. An automatic gain circuit comprising the current limiter of claim 1 . 7. An exponential voltage-to-current converter comprising the current limiter of claim 1 . 8. A method comprising: generating a first reference current and a second reference current; receiving the first reference current at an output terminal configured to output a limited current; receiving the second reference current at a first input terminal of an amplifier; electrically coupling a second input and an amplifier output of the amplifier via a feedback loop; receiving an input current at the second input of the amplifier; electrically coupling first and second current mirrors between the second input of the amplifier and the output of the amplifier; and outputting the limited current such that the first reference current sets a lower limit and the second reference current sets an upper limit. 9. The method of claim 8 wherein the limited current is substantially the same as the input current when the input current is between the first and second reference currents. 10. The method of claim 8 wherein the limited current is substantially the same as the first reference current when the input current is less than the first reference current. 11. The method of claim 8 wherein the limited current is substantially the same as the second reference current when the input current is greater than the second reference current. 12. The method of claim 8 further comprising providing an output current from an exponential current converter as the input current. 13. An exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit comprising: an exponential current converter configured to generate an output current that is substantially temperature independent; and a current limiter configured to limit the output current, the current limiter including an amplifier having a first input, a second input, and an amplifier output, the second input and the amplifier output electrically connected via a feedback loop, the second input configured to receive the output current, a first reference-current source electrically coupled to the first input of the amplifier, the first reference-current source configured to generate a first reference current, and first and second current mirrors electrically coupled between the second input of the amplifier and an output terminal, the output terminal outputting the first reference current when the output current is greater than the first reference current. 14. The exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 13 wherein the current limiter further includes a second reference-current source configured to generate a second reference current, the second reference-current source electrically coupled to the output terminal, the output terminal outputting the second reference current when the output current is less than the second reference current. 15. The exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 13 further comprising a current multiplier configured to multiply a first current and a current proportional to absolute temperature to generate a second current. 16. The exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 15 further comprising a voltage scaler configured to receive an input voltage and apply the input voltage to a resistive load to generate the first current. 17. The exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 15 wherein the exponential current converter applies an exponential transfer function that is dependent on a thermal voltage to the second current to generate the output current. 18. The exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 17 wherein temperature dependence of the current proportional to absolute temperature counteracts temperature dependence of the thermal voltage to cause the output current to be proportional to a temperature-independent and exponential function of the first current over an operating range. 19. The exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 18 wherein on a scale of the output current, the operating range is at least 40 dB. 20. An automatic gain control circuit comprising the exponential voltage-to-current converter circuit of claim 13 .
in MOSFET amplifiers (H03F1/303, H03F1/305, H03F1/308 take precedence) · CPC title
the amplifier being protected to temperature influence · CPC title
the IC comprising one or more potentiometers · CPC title
the LC comprising an extra current source · CPC title
using IC blocks as the active amplifying circuit · CPC title
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