Charge pump high output resistance

Status
Not open for further replies.

Avala Lokesh

Newbie level 5
Joined
Feb 21, 2015
Messages
8
Helped
0
Reputation
0
Reaction score
0
Trophy points
1
Location
Dallas, Texas
Visit site
Activity points
60
Hi all,
I designed a charge pump(dickson) with input 750mV and output 2V. It has a very high output impedance. Whenevr I connect any other circuit like a VCO the charge pump voltage doesnt even reach 500mV . Any solutions on how chargepump is used in systems?

Thanks in advance.
Lokesh
 

You need to adapt clock, charge pump current capability and capacitances to the output load.
 

You need to adapt clock, charge pump current capability and capacitances to the output load.

Thanks for the reply.
And could you explain a bit more how I can do that.....I tried diffenrent chargepumps but same results....is there any additional componenets to be added after chargepump?

Lokesh
 

Suppose you want 10 mA output at 2V.
Then your charge pump must draw average 27 mA at 750mV input. (Add some more to make up for losses.)

The internal waveforms might peak at 50 or 100 mA. Therefore your circuitry must have a low enough internal resistance to admit that much current. This includes your 750mV power supply.

You must turn on all transistors/mosfets, enough so they admit sufficient current.

In addition, select capacitor values which are large enough, so they do not lose much voltage during the discharge part of the cycle. It also may help if you try a faster operating frequency. The two behaviors are inter-related.
 

When you draw current from Cout of chargepump : Vout=kvin-Rout*Iout
& Rout of charge pump is inversely related to f,Cpump,Cout.
So try to increase these parameters to get your required Vout.
 

All you have for current is input CVf. C is series reduced.
V, you've already picked. More C or more f or less load.
 

In your case, you need to put more CP stages in parallel.
Could you past your circuit? it might help to see what causes this issue.
 

hello all,
Have doubt in calculation of converter power efficiency in 4 phase charge pump, do we have to consider current from clocks also as input current (As clocks charges Pump-capacitor)?
 

CMOS Four phase chargepump Design

Hi,
Am designing a four phase chargepump, but efficiency of whole system is degraded because of drivers, as drivers which drive capacitance of 20pF of each stage (Total stages N=4) they consume more than 80% of power consumption, Is there any way to decrease this driver consumption?
 

I am also facing the same problem with my basic Dickson charge pump. The output resistance is equal to N/C*f. To reduce output resistance I tried to increase or f by a large factor but there is not any noticeable improvement. Any suggestions will be much appreciated.
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Similar threads

Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more…