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    Building Blocks Of Analog Vlsi Systems : Voltage References

    Posted By: ELK1nG
    Building Blocks Of Analog Vlsi Systems : Voltage References

    Building Blocks Of Analog Vlsi Systems : Voltage References
    Published 9/2024
    MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
    Language: English | Size: 1.21 GB | Duration: 4h 42m

    Analog Electronics, Analog IC Design, VLSI, Voltage References, Current References

    What you'll learn

    Understand and design temperature varying circuits (PTAT/CTAT) from scratch

    Understand and design voltage references (which are fundamental blocks in Analog VLSI systems) from scratch

    Analyze Process, Supply, Temperature (PVT) and other variations in circuits

    Understand different architectures of voltage references used in industry and academia

    Requirements

    Fundamentals of Analog Electronic Circuits

    Description

    The course is about designing the fundamental block of all the analog systems, which is the voltage reference. Voltage references (Vref ) are ubiquitous building blocks in most electronic circuits and systems. They are used to generate process, supply and temperature (PVT) invariant voltages in various analog modules such as Analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog (D/A) converters, voltage regulators,relaxation oscillators, sensor interfaces, DRAMS, flash memories, power-on-reset (PoR) circuits and radio-frequency (RF) communication devices. Due to the development of power-aware applications like the emerging Internet-of-Things (IoT), designing voltage references with low power consumptionwill be of paramount importance since they are typically always-on to ensure robust performance of theaforementioned modules. The IoT nodes also demand other stringent requirements like working at low supply voltages and low area occupancy for the voltage references apart from low power consumption. The state-of-the-art comprises of many such low-power voltage references, each having their own advantages and limitations. A compact understanding and comparison of all the low-power references will lay a good foundation to design or choose a voltage reference for this new and emerging application space.What You'll Learn from this Course:1) Learn what are PVT/Mismatch variations and how they translate to electrical parameters.2) Define voltage reference w.r.t variations and have a look at a sample specification sheet.3) Design PTAT and CTAT elements of voltage reference and analyze process variations.4) Understand different architectures of voltage references and analyze the effect of PVT in each architecture.5) Understand how to choose an architecture based on spec sheet and consider other trade-offs.

    Overview

    Section 1: Introduction

    Lecture 1 Introduction

    Section 2: Definitions and metrics related to voltage references

    Lecture 2 Definition of voltage reference

    Lecture 3 PVT variations - Process variations

    Lecture 4 Supply Variations

    Lecture 5 Temperature Variations

    Lecture 6 Specifications of Voltage Reference Summarized

    Section 3: Temperature Compensation

    Lecture 7 Mathematical combinations of generating PTAT/CTAT/Ref parameters

    Lecture 8 Generating PTAT voltage from diodes

    Lecture 9 PTAT and CTAT voltages from BJTs

    Lecture 10 PTAT and CTAT voltages from MOSFETs

    Section 4: Design of PTAT voltage generating circuits from scratch

    Lecture 11 Delta VBE based approach

    Lecture 12 Delta VGS based approach

    Lecture 13 VGS based approach

    Section 5: Design of CTAT voltage generating circuits from scratch

    Lecture 14 VBE based approach

    Lecture 15 VGS based approach

    Lecture 16 Delta VGS based approach

    Section 6: Design of voltage references from scratch

    Lecture 17 Type 1 Static Voltage References

    Lecture 18 Trimming Circuits

    Lecture 19 Start-up Circuits

    Lecture 20 Sub-bandgap references

    Lecture 21 Type 1 Dynamic Voltage References

    Lecture 22 Type 2 Voltage References

    Lecture 23 Type 3 Voltage References

    Section 7: Summary

    Lecture 24 Final Design Considerations and Summary

    Freshers in VLSI industry who want to start designing analog systems from scratch,Job employees who are assigned a project on voltage/current reference and looking for supporting materials,Students who are looking for internships or jobs can design voltage/current references after this course and add them in their resumes to boost their chances of acceptance,Engineers who are looking to transition to analog circuit design and know the basics can start with this course,Any electronics enthusiast who has a passion for learning new circuits can also try this course