학술논문

A 34-mV Startup Ring Oscillator Using Stacked Body Bias Inverters for Extremely Low-Voltage Thermoelectric Energy Harvesting
Document Type
Conference
Source
2020 18th IEEE International New Circuits and Systems Conference (NEWCAS) Circuits and Systems Conference (NEWCAS), 2020 18th IEEE International New. :38-41 Jun, 2020
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Signal Processing and Analysis
Inverters
Energy harvesting
MOSFET
Voltage control
Ring oscillators
Silicon
Startup oscillator
Ring oscillator
Inverter
Power management circuit
Thermoelectric generator
Language
Abstract
A ring oscillator (ROSC) for extremely low-voltage thermoelectric energy generators is presented. The ROSC is composed of dedicated low-voltage stacked body bias inverters (SBBIs) that are based on the conventional self-bias inverter (SBI) and stacked inverter (SI). The proposed SBBI employs the advantages of both SBI and SI to oscillate at extremely low supply voltage $(V_{\mathrm{D}\mathrm{D}})$. The voltage gain $\vert A_{\mathrm{I}\mathrm{N}\mathrm{V}}\vert$ of our proposed SBBI is improved and enhanced by controlling main inverter's supply $(V_{\mathrm{D}\mathrm{D}}$ and Gnd) and body-bias voltages, by using stacked and feedback inverters. Simulated results using a standard 0.18 $\mu \mathrm{m}$ CMOS process with deep N-well option showed that our proposed ROSC could oscillate at extremely low $V_{\mathrm{D}\mathrm{D}}$ of 34 mV and generate a clock pulse with a 88% voltage swing from an input $V_{\mathrm{D}\mathrm{D}}$ of 50 mV.