BBrriigghhaamm YYoouunngg UUnniivveerrssiittyy BBYYUU SScchhoollaarrssAArrcchhiivvee Theses and Dissertations 2007-02-14 HHiigghh GGaaiinn LLooww PPoowweerr OOppeerraattiioonnaall AAmmpplliififieerr DDeessiiggnn aanndd CCoommppeennssaattiioonn TTeecchhnniiqquueess Lisha Li Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Commons BBYYUU SScchhoollaarrssAArrcchhiivvee CCiittaattiioonn Li, Lisha, "High Gain Low Power Operational Amplifier Design and Compensation Techniques" (2007). Theses and Dissertations. 1082. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1082 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. HIGH GAIN LOW POWER OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER DESIGN AND COMPENSATION TECHNIQUES by Lisha Li A dissertation submitted to the faculty of Brigham Young University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Brigham Young University April 2007 Copyright c 2007 Lisha Li (cid:13) All Rights Reserved BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY GRADUATE COMMITTEE APPROVAL of a dissertation submitted by Lisha Li This dissertation has been read by each member of the following graduate committee and by majority vote has been found to be satisfactory. Date Donald T. Comer, Chair Date David J. Comer Date Doran K. Wilde Date Richard L. Frost Date D. J. Lee BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY As chair of the candidate’s graduate committee, I have read the dissertation of Lisha Li in its final form and have found that (1) its format, citations, and bibliographical style are consistent and acceptable and fulfill university and department style require- ments; (2) its illustrative materials including figures, tables, and charts are in place; and (3) the final manuscript is satisfactory to the graduate committee and is ready for submission to the university library. Date Donald T. Comer Chair, Graduate Committee Accepted for the Department Michael J. Wirthlin Graduate Coordinator Accepted for the College Alan R. Parkinson Dean, Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology ABSTRACT HIGH GAIN LOW POWER OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER DESIGN AND COMPENSATION TECHNIQUES Lisha Li Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Doctor of Philosophy This dissertation discusses and compares the existing compensation methods for operational amplifiers. It explores a method to stabilize the op amps without sacrificing bandwidth to the same degree that commonly used methods do. A cre- ativedesignmethodologycombiningintuition,mathematicalanalysis,andmixedlevel simulation is explored for the new compensation scheme. The mixed level approach, associating system level simulation for most circuits along with device level simula- tion for some critical analog circuit paths, is presented to verify the behavior of new design concepts in an effective way. This approach also provides sufficient accuracy to predict the circuit performance realistically. The new feedforward compensation method overcomes the serious drawback of the widely used pole splitting method, which greatly narrows the bandwidth. It can improve the phase margin as well as optimize the bandwidth of the op amp. The proposed feedforward compensation method can be easily applied to the popular two gain stage op amp architectures with very little alteration.
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