U.S. patent application number 14/538062 was filed with the patent office on 2017-07-06 for bidirectional integrated cmos switch.
This patent application is currently assigned to Telephonics Corporation. The applicant listed for this patent is Telephonics Corporation. Invention is credited to Harold Simmonds.
Application Number | 20170194957 14/538062 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 55913051 |
Filed Date | 2017-07-06 |
United States Patent
Application |
20170194957 |
Kind Code |
A9 |
Simmonds; Harold |
July 6, 2017 |
Bidirectional Integrated CMOS Switch
Abstract
A bidirectional integrated CMOS switch is provided which is
capable of switching voltages beyond the range of the supply and
ground potentials. The switch is composed of NMOS and PMOS
transistors as the switch conductor path, a diode bridge, and
control circuitry to turn the switch on and off by means of low
voltage logic, regardless of the voltages on the switch terminals.
The device and method of the invention enables the switching of
high voltage loads operating at arbitrary or floating voltages
relative to the low voltage power supply and ground, and provides
on/off control of the switch with ordinary low voltage logic
levels. The invention provides bidirectional switching without
conducting through the parasitic body diodes of the CMOS
devices.
Inventors: |
Simmonds; Harold;
(Stewartsville, NJ) |
|
Applicant: |
Name |
City |
State |
Country |
Type |
Telephonics Corporation |
Farmingdale |
NY |
US |
|
|
Assignee: |
Telephonics Corporation
Farmingdale
NY
|
Prior
Publication: |
|
Document Identifier |
Publication Date |
|
US 20160134280 A1 |
May 12, 2016 |
|
|
Family ID: |
55913051 |
Appl. No.: |
14/538062 |
Filed: |
November 11, 2014 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
|
|
61902910 |
Nov 12, 2013 |
|
|
|
Current U.S.
Class: |
1/1 |
Current CPC
Class: |
H02M 7/219 20130101;
H03K 17/0822 20130101; H02M 5/293 20130101; H03K 2217/0054
20130101; H03K 17/687 20130101 |
International
Class: |
H03K 17/687 20060101
H03K017/687 |
Claims
1. A bidirectional integrated CMOS switch comprising a NMOS/PMOS
pair; a diode bridge; and control circuitry wherein the control
circuitry turns the switch on and off using low voltage supplies
that are compatible with gate source voltages needed to turn on the
NMOS/PMOS pair and wherein the bodies of the control circuit
elements are isolated from one another on a silicon chip by means
of deep trench isolation using non-conductive materials to isolate
circuit elements from one another and wherein said circuit elements
reside in separate wells without parasitic substrate diode
structures.
2. The switch according to claim 1 where said circuit elements
includes one or more diodes and MOSFETS.
3. The switch according to claim 2 wherein the circuit elements
that reside in separate wells isolated from each other by
non-conductive material have non-conductive material under the body
of the circuit elements and around the sides, so there are no diode
connections to the P-substrate and there is no buried N layer
underneath the P body of the NMOS.
4. The switch according to claim 3 wherein diodes in the bridge are
also isolated in individual wells, so there are no parasitic
substrate diode structures associated with them.
5. The switch according to claim 4 wherein the switch is formed by
a high voltage Silicon-on-Insulator (herein "SOI") manufacturing
process.
6. The switch according to claim 4 wherein the diode bridge allows
current to flow in either direction between two terminals of the
switch without forward-biasing the parasitic body diodes of the
CMOS switching elements.
7. The switch according to claim 6 wherein the control circuit is
configured such that the gate source voltages of the isolated
control circuit elements are controlled regardless of the voltages
applied to switch terminals.
8. The switch according to claim 7 wherein the bodies of the PMOS
and NMOS devices are connected to their respective source nodes
instead of supply rails.
9. The switch according to claim 8 wherein there is a first
terminals and a second terminal which are the switch terminals and
wherein the voltages at said first and second terminals may be
positive or negative, said switch further comprising a plurality of
diodes that form a diode bridge which causes current to flow
through the switch in only one direction, from a first Node to a
second Node, regardless of the polarity of the voltages on the
first and second terminals.
10. The switch according to claim 9 further comprising first and
second high voltage NMOS and PMOS transistors configured as a
transmission gate, with parasitic body diodes oriented in the same
direction and opposing the direction of current flow through the
switch.
11. The switch according to claim 10 wherein the diode bridge, the
first and second transistors form a conduction path for current
through the switch.
12. The switch according to claim 11 wherein the voltage at the
first node is always greater than or equal to the voltage at the
second node and body diodes of first and second transistors are
never forward biased.
13. The switch according to claim 12 wherein the circuit connects a
load to a floating high voltage source of arbitrary polarity and
the first and second terminals are connected to said floating high
voltage source and load
14. The switch according to claim 13 wherein the load is between
the second switch terminal and the floating high voltage source of
arbitrary polarity
15. The switch according to claim 13 wherein the load is between
the first switch terminal and the floating high voltage source of
arbitrary polarity.
16. The switch according to claim 11 wherein the load is connected
to a non-floating, high voltage source of arbitrary polarity with
an arbitrary offset voltage.
17. The switch according to claim 11 wherein the load is between
the second switch terminal and both the high voltage source of
arbitrary polarity and an offset voltage of arbitrary polarity.
18. The switch according to claim 11 wherein the load is between
the first switch terminal and the high voltage source of arbitrary
polarity.
19. The switch according to claim 12 wherein the first switch
terminal is connected to a first high voltage source of arbitrary
polarity and the load is connected to the second switch terminal
and a second source of high voltage of arbitrary polarity.
20. The switch according to claim 12 wherein the diode bridge is
separate from the remainder of the CMOS circuit.
21. The switch according to claim 12 wherein the first and second
transistors are discrete components separate from the rest of the
circuitry.
Description
[0001] The present invention claims priority on U.S. Provisional
Patent Application Ser. No. 61/902,910, filed Nov. 12, 2013, the
disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] CMOS is the dominant technology in almost all VLSI design.
CMOS circuits use a combination of p-channel (PMOS) and n-channel
(NMOS) metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs)
to implement logic gates and switches. The composition of a PMOS
transistor creates low resistance between its source and drain
contacts when a low gate voltage is applied and high resistance
when a high gate voltage is applied. On the other hand, the
composition of an NMOS transistor creates high resistance between
source and drain when a low gate voltage is applied and low
resistance when a high gate voltage is applied. A CMOS logic
inverter accomplishes current reduction by complementing every NMOS
transistor with a PMOS transistor and connecting both gates and
both drains together.
[0003] CMOS transmission gates, also known as CMOS analog switches
(herein "CMOS switch(es)") often form the interface between analog
signals and digital controllers. The internal construction of a
typical CMOS switch connects an NMOS in parallel with a PMOS to
enable signals to pass in either direction with equal ease. The
MOSFETs' sources are connected to each other and their drains are
connected to each other. The terminals of the switched conduction
path are the sources on one side and the drains on the other side.
The switch is controlled by the gate-source voltages of the NMOS
and PMOS devices. Whether the n- or p-channel device carries more
signal current depends on the ratio of input to output voltage.
Because the switch has no preferred direction for current flow, it
has no preferred input or output. The typical CMOS switch can only
be used if the terminal voltages are within the range of the supply
rails.
[0004] CMOS switches, especially when used in power applications,
often do not get the proper voltage values at their switch
terminals to open and close correctly because they are often
integrated on VLSI chips with dense digital and analog circuitry. A
CMOS device requires control of the gate-to-source voltage to keep
it within the maximum limits set by the process specifications
which are typically much lower than the maximum limits for drain to
source voltage. For example, a high-voltage CMOS switch device may
have a drain-source voltage rating of 100 volts, but the maximum
gate-source voltage may be only 5 volts. When the CMOS source
voltage is not within the range of the supply voltage, some means
must be provided to generate the gate voltage necessary to turn on
the device. It is also necessary to hold the gate-source voltage to
zero when the switch is in the off state. The standard practice in
the art is to use charge pumps or level shifters that are used to
provide the gate drive for CMOS switches in high voltage
applications. The use of charge pumps, level shifters, or similar
techniques typically do not provide gate voltage control
independent of the polarity of the switch terminal voltages
relative to each other and relative to the low voltage power supply
rails.
[0005] CMOS devices are prone to a parasitic effect known as the
parasitic diode of MOSFET, more commonly described as "the body
diode", which causes an unwanted flow/direction of current over the
body of the CMOS device, rather than the channel. The body diode is
a consequence of the high volume CMOS design. The body diode occurs
when a diode forms in the body, source and drain regions. When it
is forward biased, it becomes an alternative path for current to
flow and most of the current may pass to the body instead of
through the channel. When reversed biased, it will develop
capacitance due to the inherent nature of the diode. The formation
of a parasitic diode (herein "body diode") can cause a latch-up or
circuit failure.
[0006] Body diodes occur when using standard CMOS switches. The
body diode of the PMOS device will conduct if the voltage on either
the source or drain is greater than the positive supply voltage.
Likewise, the body diode of the NMOS device will conduct if the
voltage on either the source or Drain is less than the negative
supply voltage. This is the reason why a standard CMOS switch can
only be used if the source and drain terminal voltages are within
the range of the supply rails. In a non-isolated CMOS process, the
body of the NMOS device is connected to a common P-type silicon
substrate. The source and drain of the NMOS are N-type implants on
top of the P substrate. The body diodes are formed by the P-N
junctions from body-to-drain and body-to-source. The body of the
PMOS device is an N-well located on top of the common P-type
substrate. In a non-isolated process without SOI and trench
isolation, the P substrate is connected to the negative supply
rail. Thus, the body of the NMOS device is always connected to the
negative supply. The substrate underneath the N-well body of the
PMOS device is the same substrate, connected to the negative
supply. It is not possible to allow the voltage of the N-well body
of the PMOS device to drop below the negative supply voltage
without causing the substrate diode to conduct.
[0007] There are non-Silicon-On-Insulator processes that advertise
isolated devices using a deep Nwell or N buried layer (NBL) that
runs under the P-type body of the NMOS device and around the sides.
In that case, the body of the NMOS device can be connected to a
voltage other than the negative supply voltage, provided that the
deep N-well is always biased with a voltage greater than or equal
to the body voltage so as to avoid conduction through the P-N
junction diode formed by the P body and deep N-well. The deep
N-well also has to be biased at a voltage greater than or equal to
the negative supply rail to avoid conduction through the diode
formed by the P substrate and deep Nwell. The structure of the PMOS
device is typically the same as in a non-isolated process. All of
those parasitic paths place restrictions on the voltages that can
be applied to the deep N and to the CMOS body, drain and source
terminals. Hence, there is a need for a bidirectional integrated
CMOS switch capable of switching voltages beyond the range of
supply and ground potentials. Additionally, there is a need for a
means to prevent conduction through the parasitic body diodes of
the CMOS switch. The present invention enables switching high
voltage loads operating at arbitrary or floating voltages relative
to the low voltage power supply and ground, and provides on/off
control of the switch with ordinary low voltage logic levels. The
present invention can operate with high terminal voltages above and
below the supply rails, which standard CMOS transmission gates
cannot do. The present invention provides the proper gate voltages
necessary to operate the switch, regardless of the switch terminal
voltages. The present invention provides bidirectional switching
without conducting through the parasitic body diodes of the CMOS
devices. The present invention can be integrated on the same CMOS
chip as other circuitry, eliminating the need for separate TRIAL
switches, optocouplers, or other external devices. No charge pumps
or high voltage supplies are needed. The present invention provides
cost efficiencies because of its efficient integration with other
components and its lower failure rate.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART
[0008] Switches currently exist in the art that are designed to
operate beyond the supply rail voltages. One such device is the
MAX14777--Quad-Beyond-the-Rails -15V to +35V Analog Switch, offered
by Maxim Integrated Products Inc. This device is distinguished from
the present invention because the Maxim device uses charge pumps to
develop a secondary set of high voltage positive and negative
supply rails to accomplish the switching above and below the rails.
The specification for the MAX14777, available at
http://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/MAX14777.pdf discloses
that the device contains a total of three charge pumps to generate
bias voltages for the internal switches. Conversely, the present
invention eliminates the need to use charge pumps.
[0009] U.S. Pat. No. 8,461,905 discloses an adaptive bootstrap
circuit for controlling CMOS switches. It is distinguished from the
present invention as it (a) does not prevent conduction through the
parasitic body diodes of the CMOS device; (b) does not accommodate
switch drain and source voltages beyond the range of the supply
rails in the ON state; and (c) is primarily designed to provide an
off-state gate voltage on the CMOS devices that is above or below
the supply voltages by an amount equal to the saturation voltage of
a CMOS device.
[0010] U.S. Pat. No. 7,760,007 discloses a low voltage analog CMOS
switch. The circuitry described is designed to control the well
voltage of the PMOS device to enable the switch to conduct properly
for low voltages. It is distinguished from the present invention as
it does not disclose that it can accommodate switch terminal
voltages beyond the range of the supply voltages.
[0011] Application 2013/0194158 discloses a radio frequency switch
for a transmitter/receiver IO port with electrostatic discharge
protection. It is distinguished from the present invention as it
does not disclose that the switch can operate at terminal voltages
that extend beyond the supply rails.
[0012] Therefore, within the present invention is disclosed an
apparatus and method for a bidirectional integrated CMOS switch
that is novel in the art.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
[0013] Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to
provide a bidirectional integrated CMOS switch capable of switching
voltages beyond the range of the supply and ground potentials.
[0014] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that can switch high voltage
loads operating at arbitrary or floating voltages relative to the
low voltage power supply and ground.
[0015] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that can enable on/off control
of the switch with ordinary low voltage levels.
[0016] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that can operate with high
terminal voltages above and below the supply rails.
[0017] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that can provide the proper
gate voltages necessary to operate the switch, regardless of the
magnitude or polarity of the switch terminal voltages.
[0018] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that can provide bidirectional
switching without conducting through the parasitic body diode of
the CMOS device.
[0019] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that can be integrated on the
same CMOS chip as other circuitry, eliminating the need for
separate TRIAC switches, optocouplers, or other external
devices.
[0020] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that eliminates the need for
charge pumps or high voltage supplies.
[0021] Another object of the present invention is to provide a
bidirectional integrated CMOS switch that is more cost effective
and less prone to failure than what is currently available in the
industry.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0022] The present invention combines three functional elements:
(1) a NMOS/PMOS pair as the switched conduction path; (2) a diode
bridge; and (3) control circuitry to turn the switch on and off
using standard 5 v logic (or other low voltage supplies that are
compatible with the gate source voltages needed to turn on the
NMOS/PMOS pair), regardless of the voltages on the switch
terminals. The present invention makes use of a high voltage
Silicon-on-Insulator (herein "SOI") manufacturing process with deep
trench isolation, which provides circuit elements that are isolated
from one another on the same silicon chip. The SOI process provides
the capability to create circuitry using diodes and MOSFETS that
reside in separate wells isolated from each other by non-conductive
material, without parasitic substrate structures. An SOI process
with deep trench has non-conductive material under the bodies of
the CMOS devices and around the sides, so there are no diode
connections to the P-substrate and there is no buried N layer
underneath the P body of the NMOS. Except for the source-body and
drain-body diodes, all of the other parasitic diodes are
eliminated. The diodes in the bridge are also isolated in
individual wells, so there are no parasitic structures associated
with them. The SOI process assures that the diodes and MOSFETs
reside in separate wells isolated from each other by non-conductive
material, without parasitic substrate structures. The present
invention will also operate if a different process is used that can
provide similar isolation capability,
[0023] The diode bridge allows current to flow in either direction
between the two terminals of the switch without forward-biasing the
parasitic body diodes of the CMOS switching elements.
[0024] The control circuit is configured such that the gate-source
voltages of the isolated CMOS devices can be controlled regardless
of the voltages applied to the switch terminals. The only
limitation on the terminal voltages is the maximum operating
condition imposed by the process technology, which can be greater
than +/-100V for some processes.
[0025] A novelty of the present invention is the circuit
configuration that enables CMOS circuit elements to switch any load
within the limits of the process technology using ordinary
low-voltage logic inputs as control, without use of optocouplers,
TRIACs, or other such components that are not typically available
in a CMOS process. This makes it possible to integrate the switch
on a chip with other analog and digital circuitry, thus eliminating
the external switching components that are typically used in power
switching applications, such as motor controls. The present
invention eliminates the need for charge pumps, booster circuits
and level shifters that are often used to provide the gate drive
for CMOS switches in high voltage applications, and instead
provides gate voltage control independent of the magnitude or
polarity of the switch terminal voltages relative to each other and
relative to the low voltage power supply rails.
[0026] In the present invention, the bodies of the PMOS and NMOS
devices are connected to their respective source nodes instead of
the supply rails. Since there are no parasitic diodes to the
substrate, the body connections can be to any voltage that does not
cause the body diodes to become forward biased. For each device,
the source is connected to the body so that the body voltage is
equal to the source voltage and the source-body diode cannot
conduct. The diode bridge guarantees that current can only flow in
a direction opposite to the direction that would turn on the
drain-body diodes. Hence, the only possible conduction path is
through the CMOS device channel when it is turned on by applying
the proper gate voltage. When the gate is biased so as to turn off
the channel, there are no conduction paths through the switch.
There is only a small amount of current to the source nodes due to
the control network structures connected across the gate-to-source
of each of the two CMOS switch devices.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] FIG. 1 is a schematic of the invention's preferred
embodiment.
[0028] FIG. 2 shows the use of the invention connecting a load to a
floating high voltage source of arbitrary polarity.
[0029] FIG. 3 shows an alternate embodiment of the use of the
invention connecting a load to a floating high voltage source of
arbitrary polarity.
[0030] FIG. 4 shows the use of the invention connecting a load to a
non-floating high voltage source of arbitrary polarity with an
arbitrary offset voltage.
[0031] FIG. 5 shows an alternate embodiment of use of the invention
connecting a load to a non-floating high voltage source of
arbitrary polarity with an arbitrary offset voltage.
[0032] FIG. 6 shows the use of the invention connecting a load
between two arbitrary voltage sources.
[0033] FIG. 7 shows an example of an alternative embodiment where
the diode bridge is implemented as one component or a set of
components separate from the rest of the components of the
circuit.
[0034] FIG. 8 shows an example of an alternative embodiment in
which the CMOS switch elements corresponding to M0 or M1 are
external to the integrated circuit.
[0035] FIG. 9 shows an alternative embodiment in which M0, M1, D0,
D1, D2 and D3 are implemented as components separate from the
remainder of the circuit.
[0036] FIG. 10 shows a further alternative embodiment in which
diodes are placed in the low voltage supply and ground paths.
[0037] FIG. 11 shows a still further embodiment in which switched
current sources are used to limit gate bias currents.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0038] FIG. 1 illustrates an embodiment of the invention. All of
the elements in the diagram are high voltage isolated devices.
Terminals A and B are the switch terminals. The voltages at
Terminals A and B may be any value, positive or negative, within
the limits of the process technology. Diodes D0, D1, D2 and D3 form
a diode bridge which causes current to flow through the switch in
only one direction, from Node C to Node D, regardless of the
polarity of the voltages on terminals A and B. M0 and M1 are high
voltage NMOS and PMOS transistors configured as a transmission
gate, with parasitic body diodes oriented in the same direction,
opposing the direction of current flow through the switch. The
diode bridge, M0 and M1 form the conduction path for current
through the switch. Due to the diode bridge, the voltage at node C
is always greater than or equal to the voltage at node D.
Consequently, the body diodes of M0 and M1 are never forward
biased.
[0039] PMOS device M2, diode D4, resistor R1 and the clamp
connected from gate to source across NMOS device M0 form the
primary ON/OFF control for M0. When the gate of M2 is pulled low,
M2 is turned on and the current flows through M2, D4, and R1 to
pull up the gate of M0. The CLAMP limits the gate-to-source voltage
of M0, protecting it from excessive voltage, even when the source
voltage at node D is a large negative value. Resistor R1 limits the
current to a low value to minimize bias current flow to node D. In
an alternative embodiment, a switched current source may be used to
limit current. Diode D4 prevents current flow to the 5V supply when
the voltage at node D is greater than 5V.
[0040] When the gate of M2 is pulled high, M2 is turned off. The
gate-source voltage of M0 is discharged through the CLAMP and the
gate-source voltage of M0 drops to zero, turning M0 off In the off
state, devices M3 and M5 are turned on to hold the gate-source
voltage of M0 at zero, to prevent it from being turned on by charge
that may be capacitively coupled to the gate from transients on the
drain and source nodes.
[0041] Device M0 can be turned on when the voltage at node D is far
enough below the +5V supply rail to develop a forward bias on D4
and sufficient gate-source voltage is present on M0 to turn it on.
In normal operation, M0 can be turned on whenever the voltage at
node D is approximately +3.5V or less. Since the diode bridge
causes the voltage at node C to be greater than or equal to the
voltage at node D, turning on M0 will always form a conduction path
through the switch under these conditions. When the voltage at node
D is too high to turn on M0, the conduction path will be through
M1.
[0042] NMOS device M7, diode D7, resistor R4 and the CLAMP
connected from gate to source across PMOS device M1 form the
primary ON/OFF control for M1. When the gate of M7 is pulled high,
M7 is turned on and current flows through M7, D7 and R4 to pull
down the gate of M1. The CLAMP limits the gate-to-source voltage of
M1, protecting it from excessive voltage, even when the source
voltage at node C is a large positive value. Resistor R4 limits the
current to a low value to minimize bias current flow to node C. In
an alternative embodiment, a switched current source may be used to
limit current. Diode D7 prevents current flow to ground when the
voltage at node C is negative.
[0043] When the gate of M7 is pulled low, M7 is turned off. The
gate-source-voltage of M1 is discharged through the CLAMP and the
gate-source-voltage of M1 drops to zero, turning M1 off. In the off
state, devices M8 and M10 are turned on to hold the gate-source
voltage of M1 at zero, to prevent M1 from being turned on by charge
that may be coupled to the gate from transients on the drain and
source nodes through parasitic capacitance.
[0044] Device M1 can be turned on when the voltage at node C is far
enough above ground to develop a forward bias on D7 and sufficient
gate-source voltage exists on M1 so that M1 can be turned on. In
normal operation, M1 can be turned on whenever the voltage at node
C is approximately +1.5V or greater. Since the diode bridge causes
the voltage at node C to be greater than or equal to the voltage at
node D, turning on M1 will always form a conduction path through
the switch under these conditions.
[0045] For voltages between approximately +1.5V and +3.5V there is
an overlap in the conduction conditions for M0 and M1 and both
devices can be turned on. Together, devices M0 and M1 provide
on-state conduction across a large range of voltages on nodes C and
D, from large negative to large positive values, limited only by
the maximum drain-source voltage ratings of the devices. To conduct
current through the switch, the absolute value of the voltage
difference between terminals A and B must be sufficient to
forward-bias the diodes in the diode bridge. All PMOS and NMOS
devices are isolated with the body connections shorted to the
source voltages. All of the CLAMP elements in FIG. 1 are used to
limit gate-source voltages and to provide a discharge path for gate
charge when the associated bias sources are turned off. A variety
of well-known techniques may be used to construct the CLAMP
elements, such as circuits using series diodes, zener diodes,
MOSFETs, resistors, or other devices available in the process
technology. All of the resistors are large value resistors for the
purpose of limiting current. In other embodiments of the present
invention, any or all of the resistors may be replaced by switched
current sources.
[0046] The inverter (INV) shown in FIG. 1 may be replaced by a
different function such as controlling the NMOS and PMOS gates by a
function other than direct inversion or to provide independent
control of the NMOS and PMOS gates. In this embodiment nodes E and
F could be interchanged so that F is connected to the inverter
input and E is connected to the inverter output. That would invert
the input logic signal function such that H=OFF and L=ON.
[0047] Example 1 (FIG. 2) shows a circuit for connecting a load to
a floating high voltage source of arbitrary polarity. There is a
low voltage on/off control logic. The low voltage maybe about 5
volts. The switch of FIG. 1 with the A and B terminals are
connected to the floating high voltage sources of arbitrary
polarity and a load as shown in FIG. 2.
[0048] Example 2 (FIG. 3) is similar to FIG. 2 except as to the
location of the load. In FIG. 2 the load is between switch B and
the floating high voltage source of arbitrary polarity, while in
FIG. 3 it is between switch A and the floating high voltage source
of arbitrary polarity.
[0049] In Example 3 (FIG. 4) the load is connected to a
non-floating, high voltage source of arbitrary polarity with an
arbitrary offset voltage. As in FIGS. 2 and 3 there is a low
voltage on/off control logic connected to the circuit of FIG. 1.
There is a low voltage supply typically about 5 volts. The load is
between switch B and both the high voltage source of arbitrary
polarity and an offset voltage of arbitrary polarity.
[0050] In Example 4 (FIG. 5) the load is between the switch A and
the high voltage source of arbitrary polarity.
[0051] FIG. 6, Example 5, of the present invention has switch A
connected to a first high voltage source of arbitrary polarity. The
load is connected to switch B and a second source of high voltage
of arbitrary polarity.
[0052] FIG. 7 shows an alternate embodiment of the present
invention where the diode bridge is separate from the remainder of
the CMOS circuit. In this example the diode bridge is implemented
as a separate component or set of components from the remainder of
the circuit. In this example nodes A, B, C and D correspond to
nodes A, B, C & D in FIG. 1. Diodes D0, D1, D2 and D3
correspond to diodes D0, D1, D2 and D3 in FIG. 1.
[0053] FIG. 8 is an example of an embodiment in which M0 and M1 are
implemented as discrete components separate from the rest of the
circuitry.
[0054] An example of an embodiment in which M0, M1, D0, D1, D2 and
D3 are implemented as components separate from the remainder of the
circuit is shown in FIG. 9. Nodes A, B, C and D correspond to nodes
A, B, C and D in FIG. 1. M0, M1, D0, D1, D2 and D3 correspond to
devices M0, M1, D0, D1, D2 and D3 as shown in FIG. 1, implemented
as discrete components.
[0055] FIG. 10 is an example where the diodes have been removed
from the bias current sources and instead placed in series with the
5V and ground supply connections, either as integrated components
on the chip or as external discrete components. In applications
using a fabrication process that doesn't provide on-chip diodes,
this approach could be used in combination with a separate off-chip
diode bridge. Since the purpose of the diodes in the bias current
paths is to prevent reverse current to the supply terminals, the
result is the same whether they are at the supply inputs or in the
bias current sources. Likewise, it is possible to move any of the
circuit elements off-chip and substitute external discrete
components, as long as they are properly connected to the chip.
This also applies to the embodiment shown in FIG. 9 above.
[0056] In addition, FIG. 10 is an example of an embodiment in which
diodes represented by Dpos and Dss in the diagram are placed in the
low voltage supply and ground paths, either as integrated or
discrete components, thus eliminating the need for diodes in the
individual bias current sources. In this embodiment the Dpos may be
on-chip or off-chip, i.e. integrated or discrete. Similarly, Dss
may also be on-chip or off-chip, i.e. integrated or discrete.
[0057] FIG. 11 is an example of an embodiment in which switched
current sources are used to limit gate bias currents. In FIG. 11
the gate control currents may be limited by means other than
resistors, such as current mirrors or other types of limited
current sources. The gate control currents may be supplied by
switched current sources without the need for current limiting
resistors in these embodiments,
[0058] Although 5 volts is shown in the figures, one skilled in the
art will appreciate that there can be embodiments in which the gate
control operates with a supply voltage other than 5 volts. There is
standard logic that uses 3.3 volts, for example, or a less common
logic supply voltage may be used. The supply voltage does not
matter, as long as the proper bias voltages can be generated to
turn the switch on and off. The present invention may also include
embodiments where the nodes shown as ground and +5V are connected
to voltages other than ground and +5V, as long as the voltage
difference between the supply rails is of sufficient magnitude and
polarity to control the switch. Provided the connected input logic
levels are consistent with the applied supply voltages, the circuit
would remain unchanged. The ground terminal does not necessarily
have to be connected to zero volts. It is the difference between
ground and the supply rail that matters.
[0059] In another embodiment one or more of the CMOS elements are
replaced by bipolar transistors or other types of switching
elements, such as opto-couplers, DMOS, JFETS, relays, etc.
[0060] What has been described is a novel bidirectional integrated
CMOS switch capable of switching voltages beyond the range of
supply and ground potentials. The application and embodiments
described herein are given as an examples of the useful nature of
the invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the
invention.
* * * * *
References