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A Low-Cost 70Mbps Optical Detector Design For Optocoupler Application | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

A Low-Cost 70Mbps Optical Detector Design For Optocoupler Application


Abstract:

A high-speed, low-cost and compact optical detector in 0.18μm high voltage BCD CMOS technology is presented. The detector consists of a finger-type HVNW/NBL/Psub photodio...Show More

Abstract:

A high-speed, low-cost and compact optical detector in 0.18μm high voltage BCD CMOS technology is presented. The detector consists of a finger-type HVNW/NBL/Psub photodiode and a common-gate transimpedance amplifier (CG-TIA). Experiment results show that the responsivity of photodiode reaches 0.357A/W for infrared. The CG-TIA with low input impedance alleviates parasitic capacitance effect and hence the operating speed is boosted. The measured results show data rate reaches 70Mbps and the minimum light pulse width is 40ns is detectable. The chip occupies 124,800μm2 (including PADs) and consumes 200uA under 3V supply voltage.
Date of Conference: 11-14 November 2019
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 09 January 2020
ISBN Information:
Conference Location: Bangkok, Thailand

I. Introduction

Optical detectors, or optical sensors, are electronic devices used to sense the specific ambient light, such as infrared, and widely used in many applications, like as medical instrumentation, position and proximity sensors, smoke detector etc. Optical detector presented in this paper is designed for optocoupler application, which is known as optical isolators. They are used to realize communication between two isolated systems through emission and reception of light. The transmitter end may operate in a crucial environment, such as voltage surge induced by lighting, electrostatic discharge or ultra-high supply voltage. In order to prevent entire communication or data transfer system from damage of large voltage spike, optocouplers are useful devices to exchange signals but remain electrically isolated. They are widely used in applications such as automotive signal isolation interface, automotive sensor/control and optical communication. Most of the existing high speed optocouplers can only operate at data rates up to 10Mb/s. A few exceptions can reach speeds of 40Mb/s but at the penalty of power consumption and optical sensitivity [1]. A traditional TIA (Transimpedance Amplifier) depicted as Fig. 1 consists of an operational amplifier with gain A and a large feedback resistor RF to turn weak photocurrent signal into sufficient large voltage. The parasitic capacitances on node Vx and large input impedance of TIA lower the bandwidth. To achieve high speed operation, the bandwidth of OP and photocurrent must be enlarged and make the chip consume more power.

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References

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