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CMFB loopbandwidth (Read 11219 times)
raja.cedt
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CMFB loopbandwidth
Sep 30th, 2009, 3:43am
 
hi,
   can any body please explain on what basis cmfb loop bandwidth has to decide? is there any relation between op amp loop bandwidth and CMFB loop bandwidth?

Thanks,
rajasekhar.
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #1 - Oct 2nd, 2009, 10:08am
 
In a theoretical sense, the two can be totally uncorrelated. You could (in the world of math at least) design a system that has two different bandwidths, one for the op-amp and one for the CMFB system.

The practical reality is something else - the circuits are shared and exhibit BW characteristics that track each other.

Where the difference comes in is the setting of the op-amp gain/phase dominant pole, and the setting of the CMFB dominant pole.

Academic wisdom is that you set the CMFB BW as high as you can go to get good CMFB rejection over a wide frequency range. However in some applications, CMFB gets used to "keep the operating point centered" and can use a lower BW. Depends on your input signals and what you are trying to get done.

Jerry
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Mayank
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #2 - Oct 4th, 2009, 10:56am
 
hi,

CMFB Loop works in parallel with the opamp loop...Although CMFB loop shares the stages of the opamp...But you can design CMFB loop characterstics irrespective of the differential Loop through the extra CMFB Gain Stage.
  Normal CMFB Loop Bandwidth depends on expected imbalance/error in output common mode and common mode transients in your circuit. Ideally, CMFB BW should be as high as opamp BW, but general trend is to keep CMFB BW atleast 30 % of the OPAMP Gain BW.

Also, if you want to alter the CMFB bandwidth, you can always compensate it by placing passive R-C or just C compensation after the averaging node.

This is a generic post...Lemme know a bit more specifically about the application of your ckt.

regards,
Mayank.
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raja.cedt
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #3 - Oct 4th, 2009, 10:52pm
 
hi,
   thanks for your reply, but generally from what spec people used derive CMFB bandwidth...i think from supply profile and input signal frequency, is it true?

Thanks,
Rajasekhar.
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Mayank
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #4 - Oct 5th, 2009, 12:03am
 
Hi,
      Yeah, you are correct. As i said, CMFB BW is generally decided based on common mode transients in your ckt. Supply & Substrate Noise are the main contributors to CM transients.
         I am still not sure how it is connected to input signal freq. Maybe, [in connection to your query on diffamp] , mismatch in load transistors might generate a CM variation at o/p node which is a direct function of i/p signal freq. Is this interpretation correct ??


-- Mayank.
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raja.cedt
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #5 - Oct 5th, 2009, 8:54pm
 
hi Mayank,
                  output common mode should settle much faster than the signal, other wise you will see differential mode gain variation, This is how i understand. You can correct me if am wrong.

Thanks,
Rajasekhar.
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Mayank
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #6 - Oct 7th, 2009, 8:04am
 
Hi Raja,
             I thought over it for quite some time. The way I see it is that till the time your o/p CM Voltage is within your OCMR range of the OTA/Opamp, (which is defined by the limits for MOSes in o/p branch to be in saturation region), the variation in Differential Gain is negligible.
             Hence, your o/p CM can vary by a slight amount within your OCMR range for some time until it finally settles to the CM reference you have set up in your CMFB Loop.

The effect you are talking about will be visible only if CM transient variation violates OCMR of the OTA/opamp.

Always do a transient simulation by giving a Common Mode Step and see the CM transient Response of your circuit. CMFB BW of around 30% of Differential BW covers around 95 % settling of CM value at o/p.  

Plz. Tell me if the explanation is satisfactory/faulty.

thanx,
Mayank.
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #7 - Oct 11th, 2009, 11:42pm
 
CM variations can result in differential signals due the CM-to-DM gain of the amplifier (caused by mismatch).
Ideally, the CM bandwidth of the amplifier is therefore comparable to the DM bandwidth. However, a high CM bandwidth is often related to higher power consumption. This results in a trade-off between power consumption/circuit complexity and robustness of your amplifier against CM variations. The 30% Mayank claims seem to be arbitrarily ... I would rather suggest to evaluate this trade-offs for your particular design.

Cheers
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raja.cedt
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #8 - Oct 11th, 2009, 11:54pm
 
hi berthi,
              tx for your reply, actually that is the i am asking from starting onwards. I donno how to evaluate that.. i wanted to apply some bump in the supply and check weather it is effecting differential gain through common mode change at the output.

Thanks,
Rajasekhar.
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #9 - Oct 13th, 2009, 10:18pm
 
Hi Rajasekhar,

Most of the time I work with switched-capacitor CMFB. In this case I usually sweep the CMFB capacitor at the ouput of the OTA and plot it versus DM and CM bandwidth. With increasing capacitor, the CM bandwidth gets larger while the DM mode bandwidth is compromised. Unless the application is very critical concerning CMRR/PSRR I choose the capacitor so that I don't compromise to much of the DM bandwidth (10-20%) and still get reasonable CM bandwidth.

I guess such a procedure would also be possible for other CMFB circuits.
Other opinions are welcome!!!

Regards
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #10 - Oct 14th, 2009, 7:23pm
 
Hi,
    CMFB Loop Compensation can also be done by placing a capacitor to ground/vdd after the averaging node. This will modify CMFB BW while having minimal effect on  the Differential Mode BW.
    This way you can keep the CMFB S-C at OTA o/p less & still get good CMFB BW through this kind of compensation.

thanx,
Mayank.
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Berti
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #11 - Oct 14th, 2009, 10:40pm
 
Hi Mayank,

Please correct me if I am wrong, but placing a capacitor as you describe in you post indeed increases the phase margin as you kill the gain of the CMFB, but it doesn't improve the common-mode bandwidth. I think that this solution therefore gives you a very poor results.

By the way, I was not talking about stability/compensation in my previous post but just selecting the capacitor of the CMFB large enough to achieve sufficient common-mode bandwidth.

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Mayank
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #12 - Oct 15th, 2009, 12:14am
 
Hi,

Oh my Bad !! I thought we were moving on to compensation of CMFB Loop which should be independent of Diff. Loop. I didnt say it would increase CMFB BW, I wanted to say you could alter it without much effect on Diff Loop BW so as to make your CMFB Loop stable.

regards n sorry,
Mayank.
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #13 - Oct 24th, 2009, 10:19am
 
raja.cedt wrote on Sep 30th, 2009, 3:43am:
hi,
   can any body please explain on what basis cmfb loop bandwidth has to decide? is there any relation between op amp loop bandwidth and CMFB loop bandwidth?

Thanks,
rajasekhar.


No relationship for continuous-time filter, I think. Just be careful, sometimes, CMFB is also a two-pole system and you should care common-mode oscillation.
For switched filter, the settling of CMFB is also a concern, but settling time for CMFB is not directly related to its bandwidth. You have to figure it out by simulation.
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Re: CMFB loopbandwidth
Reply #14 - Oct 26th, 2009, 4:27am
 
Duncandu, I think your post is full of flaws:

Quote:
No relationship for continuous-time filter,  ....


Often the CMFB has some parts in common with the main Opamp. Hence, there is typically a relationship between CM and DM bandwidth.

Quote:
For switched filter, the settling of CMFB is also a concern, but settling time for CMFB is not directly related to its bandwidth.


What determines the settling time if not the bandwidth ????

Cheers
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