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Tetsuro ITAKURA Hironori MINAMIZAKI
This paper examines the design considerations for an opamp to be used in a low-power consumption LCD driver IC: (1) slew rate enhancement suitable for a rail-to-rail input stage; (2) improved phase compensation with reduced compensation capacitance; and (3) limitation of instantaneous current consumption. The experimental results support our opamp design approach and indicate the feasibility of a 10 µA quiescent current opamp.
Tetsuro ITAKURA Hironori MINAMIZAKI
An LCD Driver IC includes more than 300 buffer amplifiers on a single chip. The phase compensation capacitors (on-chip Miller capacitors) for the amplifiers are more than 1000 pF and occupy a large chip area. This paper describes a two-gain-stage amplifier in which an on-chip Miller capacitor is not used for phase compensation in an LCD Driver IC. In the proposed amplifier, phase compensation is achieved only by a newly introduced zero, which is formed by the load capacitance and a phase compensation resistor connected between the output of the amplifier and the capacitive load. Designs of the phase compensation resistor and the amplifier before compensation are discussed, considering a typical load capacitance range. The test chip was fabricated. The newly introduced zero successfully stabilized the amplifier. The chip area for the amplifier was reduced by 30-40%, compared with our previously reported one. The current consumption of the amplifier was only 5 µA. The experimental results of the fabricated test chip support that the proposed amplifier is suitable to an LCD driver IC with a smaller chip area.
Tetsuro ITAKURA Takeshi SHIMA Shigeru YAMADA Hironori MINAMIZAKI
This paper describes a segment driver IC for high-quality liquid-crystal-displays (LCDs). Major design issues in the segment driver IC are a wide signal bandwidth and excessive output-offset variation both within a chip and between chips. After clarifying the trade-off relation between the signal bandwidth and the output-offset variation originated from conventional sample-and-hold (S/H) circuits, two wide-band S/H circuits with low output-offset variation have been introduced. The basic ideas for the proposed S/H circuits are to improve timing of the sampling pulses applied to MOS analog switches and to prevent channel charge injection onto a storage capacitor when the switches turn off. The inter-chip offset-cancellation technique has been also introduced by using an additional S/H circuit. Two test chips were implemented using the above S/H circuits for demonstration purposes. The intra-chip output-offset standard deviation of 9.5 mVrms with a 3dB bandwidth of 50 MHz was achieved. The inter-chip output-offset standard deviation was reduced to 5.1 mVrms by using the inter-chip offset-cancellation technique. The evaluation of picture quality of an LCD using the chips shows the applicability of the proposed approaches to displays used for multimedia applications.