Miscellaneous active electrical nonlinear devices – circuits – and – Specific identifiable device – circuit – or system – With specific source of supply or bias voltage
Reexamination Certificate
2001-02-27
2002-05-07
Tran, Toan (Department: 2816)
Miscellaneous active electrical nonlinear devices, circuits, and
Specific identifiable device, circuit, or system
With specific source of supply or bias voltage
C323S315000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06384673
ABSTRACT:
The invention relates to a current mirror arrangement comprising
an input current path comprising a main current path of a first current mirror transistor and a transistor connected thereto in a cascode configuration and referred to as first cascode transistor,
an output current path comprising a main current path of a second current mirror transistor and a transistor connected thereto in a cascode configuration and referred to as second cascode transistor,
the current mirror transistors being interconnected in a current mirror configuration and their control terminals being connected to a first circuit point,
the connected control terminals of the cascode transistors being interconnected and being connected to an input terminal in the input current path of the current mirror arrangement,
the input terminal being constituted by a terminal of the main current path of the first cascode transistor remote from the first current mirror transistor, and an output terminal being constituted by a terminal of the main current path of the second cascode transistor remote from the second current mirror transistor,
a dimensioning of the current mirror and cascode transistors for a current in the input current path, which corresponds at least substantially to the n-fold value of the current in the output current path,
and a current splitting circuit for deriving a part of a current from the first circuit point in the output terminal.
Current mirror arrangements are used in transistor circuitry techniques for diverting, multiplying or changing reference currents by a defined factor. The deviation of the output current from the input current or from the desired multiple of the input current is dependent on different influences, of which the compensation of the control currents of the transistors or—in the case of bipolar transistors—the compensation of the Early voltages are very important. These influences can be counteracted preferably by a symmetrical configuration of the current mirror arrangements, but this is at the expense of the number of components to be used and the minimally required power supply voltage.
A current mirror comprising two bipolar transistors whose emitters are interconnected at one end and whose bases are interconnected at the other end is known from the article “Halbleiter-Schaltungstechnik” by U. Tietze and Ch. Schenk, 8
th
edition, Springer-Verlag, 1986, pp. 62 to 64. Moreover, the base and the collector of the input transistor are interconnected. In this simple current mirror arrangement, the current mirror ratio is distorted by the base currents of the two transistors flowing via the input.
When such a current mirror arrangement is augmented with a further transistor whose emitter is connected to the coupled bases of the current mirror transistors, whose base is connected to the input and the collector is connected to a reference potential, the error in the current mirror ratio with respect to the base current of the additional transistor is reduced. Particularly for current mirrors consisting of PNP transistors having comparably small current gains, this error may still be too large for given applications.
A current mirror known as Wilson current mirror, in which a further transistor is arranged in a cascode configuration in addition to the current mirror transistor in the output branch is also known from said article “Halbleiter-Schaltungstechnik”. The connected bases of the current mirror transistors are connected to this cascode branch and the control terminal of the cascode transistor is connected to the input branch. A considerable base current compensation for a mirror ratio of 1 can be achieved with this circuit. However, there are distortions due to the Early voltages. It is true that, due to the addition of a further transistor arranged as a diode in the input branch of the Wilson current mirror in such a way that this transistor is cascode arranged with respect to the current mirror transistor in the input branch, the influence of Early voltages on the current mirror transistors of the Wilson current mirror can be suppressed. Nevertheless, an exact compensation of the base currents and hence a flawless current ratio is obtained only for a value of at least substantially 1 of this current ratio.
A current mirror with an input branch and at least two output branches with PNP mirror transistors is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,627,732. Each of these current mirror transistors is arranged in a cascode configuration with a cascode transistor. In FIG. 4 of U.S. Pat. No. 5,627,732, the base currents of the current mirror transistors are collected and applied to a common emitter of a current distribution transistor denoted by the reference sign T
7
. This current distribution transistor is constituted as a multicollector transistor. The collected base currents of the current mirror transistors are equally distributed to the output terminals of the output branches of the current mirror. Due to such a distribution, however, no exact compensation of the base currents and hence the current mirror error is obtained. An error is left in the current mirror ratio between the output current paths and the input current path. To obviate this drawback, U.S. Pat. No. 5,627,732 proposes various circuits with reference to FIGS. 5, 6 and 8 in this document. Particularly FIG. 8 shows an arrangement which should ensure both an exact current mirror ratio and an independence of variations of the input current of the current mirror and should simultaneously generate current mirror ratios different from 1. However, this is at the expense of a proportionally large number of components.
It is an object of the invention to construct a current mirror arrangement of the type described in the opening paragraph in such a way that it has an exact current mirror ratio of more than 1 between an input current path and an output current path, and can be built with a small number of components and for a low power supply voltage.
According to the invention, in a current mirror arrangement of the type described in the opening paragraph, this object is solved in that
n is larger than 1,
the current splitting circuit is adapted to split up the current from the first circuit point directly to the output terminal and a reference point in a ratio of m:1, in which the relation m=1/(n−1) is at least substantially satisfied for m.
In the current mirror arrangement according to the invention, the current splitting circuit is connected to the control terminals of the current mirror transistors and the cascode transistors in such a way that symmetrical potential ratios are adjusted in the input current path and in the output current path during operation. In a construction of the transistors used in a bipolar circuit technique, the effects due to Early voltages are thereby reduced; errors caused thereby in the current mirror ratio do not occur. For the selected range of values of the factor n, for which the current in the input current path is larger than the current in the output current path, an error current caused by the currents in the control terminals of the cascode transistors is compensated by adding a predetermined part of the sum of the currents from the control terminals of the current mirror transistors to the current in the output terminal. The indicated relation between m and n applies exactly only to transistors having very large current gains. While taking finite values for the current gain B into account, the following equation is obtained for the relation between the factors m and n:
m=(B+1)/(B·(n−1)−1).
With the current mirror arrangement according to the invention, the desired current mirror ratio is precisely maintained without any deviations due to currents in the control terminals of the transistors. The current mirror arrangement according to the invention requires a very small number of components. The current mirror arrangement according to the invention can be operated at very small power supply voltages. Due to a small variation of the factor
Dick Burkhard
Janta Dieter
Tra Quan
Tran Toan
U.S. Philips Corporation
Waxler Aaron
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