
This circuit implements a Bandgap Voltage Reference (BGR) based on the Beta multiplier amplifier topology. The core of the circuit utilizes an Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA) implemented in a folded cascode configuration. The circuit is designed to generate a highly stable nominal output voltage ($V_{ref}$) of approximately 1.25 V.
To compensate for post-fabrication process variations and resistor mismatches, the architecture integrates a 3-bit digital trimming network controlled by three dedicated digital inputs ($V_A$, $V_B$, and $V_C$).
1): Turns the respective PMOS switch OFF, forcing the internal current to flow through that resistor segment. This adds resistance to the network, which subsequently increases the output voltage ($V_{ref}$).0): Turns the PMOS switch ON, shorting out that specific resistor segment. This removes resistance from the network, which subsequently decreases the output voltage ($V_{ref}$).This inverted 3-bit control provides 8 discrete tuning steps to fine-tune and calibrate the reference voltage back to its ideal value post-silicon.
To properly characterize and validate the performance of the bandgap reference, measurements must be taken at both of its available output nodes:
000 (minimum resistance, lowest $V_{ref}$) to 111 (maximum resistance, highest $V_{ref}$).To test and operate this analog macro, the following external hardware is required:
This circuit implements a Bandgap Voltage Reference (BGR) based on the Beta multiplier amplifier topology. The core of the circuit utilizes an Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA) implemented in a folded cascode configuration. The circuit is designed to generate a highly stable nominal output voltage ($V_{ref}$) of approximately 1.25 V.
To compensate for post-fabrication process variations and resistor mismatches, the architecture integrates a 3-bit digital trimming network controlled by three dedicated digital inputs ($V_A$, $V_B$, and $V_C$).
1): Turns the respective PMOS switch OFF, forcing the internal current to flow through that resistor segment. This adds resistance to the network, which subsequently increases the output voltage ($V_{ref}$).0): Turns the PMOS switch ON, shorting out that specific resistor segment. This removes resistance from the network, which subsequently decreases the output voltage ($V_{ref}$).The trimming network is binarily weighted to provide linear tuning steps, where $V_A$ represents the largest adjustment segment and $V_C$ represents the finest resolution step:
For the typical process corner (TT corner: $V_{DD} = 1.8\text{ V}$, $T = 27^\circ\text{C}$, nominal MOS and resistor models), the nominal calibration code is defined as (VA, VB, VC) = 001.
To properly characterize and validate the performance of the bandgap reference, measurements must be taken at both of its available output nodes:
000 (minimum resistance, lowest $V_{ref}$) to 111 (maximum resistance, highest $V_{ref}$).001 should yield a $V_{ref}$ close to the target 1.25 V. Adjust the code accordingly if process variations have shifted the uncalibrated output.To test and operate the following external hardware is required:
| # | Input | Output | Bidirectional |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | VA | ||
| 1 | VB | ||
| 2 | VC | ||
| 3 | |||
| 4 | |||
| 5 | |||
| 6 | |||
| 7 |
ua | PCB Pin | Internal index | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | B4 | 10 | vg |
| 1 | B5 | 11 | vref |