31.3 nW, 0.5 V Bulk-Driven OTA for Biosignal Processing

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Kumngern, Montree
Kulej, Tomasz
Khateb, Fabian

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Mark

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IEEE
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Abstract

This paper presents a new extremely low-voltage low-power bulk-driven (BD) operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) realized for low frequency biosignal processing. The CMOS structure of the OTA utilizes bulk-driven and self-cascode techniques in the subthreshold region, supporting the operation with the supply voltage (V-DD) as the threshold voltage (V-TH) of a single MOS transistor, i.e., V-DD = V-TH = 0.5 V, while offering nano power consumption (31.3 nW for 15 nA nominal setting current). Using the extremely low-voltage and low-power OTA in biosignal processing enables extending the lifetime of applications that are powered by battery or energy harvesting sources. The OTA has a 54.7 dB low frequency gain, 6.18 kHz gain bandwidth and 75 degrees phase margin at 15 pF load capacitance. The proposed OTA has been used to realize a bandpass filter (BPF) with adjustable gain for electrocardiogram (ECG) signal processing. The higher cutoff frequency of the BPF is adjustable electronically by a setting current and the BPF's gain can be adjusted by capacitors value. The total harmonic distortion (THD) of the BPF is -53.56 dB, the input integrated input-referred voltage noise is 17.9 mu V-rms, the common mode rejection ratio (CMRR) is 75 dB and the power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) is 87.7 dB. The BPF was designed in the Cadence program using 0.18 mu m CMOS technology from TSMC. The simulation results agree with the presented theory.
This paper presents a new extremely low-voltage low-power bulk-driven (BD) operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) realized for low frequency biosignal processing. The CMOS structure of the OTA utilizes bulk-driven and self-cascode techniques in the subthreshold region, supporting the operation with the supply voltage (V-DD) as the threshold voltage (V-TH) of a single MOS transistor, i.e., V-DD = V-TH = 0.5 V, while offering nano power consumption (31.3 nW for 15 nA nominal setting current). Using the extremely low-voltage and low-power OTA in biosignal processing enables extending the lifetime of applications that are powered by battery or energy harvesting sources. The OTA has a 54.7 dB low frequency gain, 6.18 kHz gain bandwidth and 75 degrees phase margin at 15 pF load capacitance. The proposed OTA has been used to realize a bandpass filter (BPF) with adjustable gain for electrocardiogram (ECG) signal processing. The higher cutoff frequency of the BPF is adjustable electronically by a setting current and the BPF's gain can be adjusted by capacitors value. The total harmonic distortion (THD) of the BPF is -53.56 dB, the input integrated input-referred voltage noise is 17.9 mu V-rms, the common mode rejection ratio (CMRR) is 75 dB and the power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) is 87.7 dB. The BPF was designed in the Cadence program using 0.18 mu m CMOS technology from TSMC. The simulation results agree with the presented theory.

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IEEE Access. 2023, vol. 11, issue 1, p. 56516-56525.
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10132880

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Peer-reviewed

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en

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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