Abstract

A power-efficient operational-transconductance-amplifier-capacitor (OTA-C) filter for biomedical applications is presented with detailed noise analysis. This filter consists of a cascade of biquadratic sections, each of which is configured via a serial-peripheral-interface circuit embedded with non-volatile memories to provide low pass or bandpass response. All filter parameters, including the gains, natural frequency, and quality factor, are orthogonally adjustable by programming charges on floating-gate bias transistors. The reconfigurable biquadratic section is composed of four power-efficient linearized OTAs. Each OTA consists of complementary hextuple-diffusor-quadruple-differential-pairs (HDQDPs) and a floating-gate common-mode feedback scheme. A developed computer algorithm for transistor dimension optimization is adopted to extend the input linear range of the HDQDP based on nonlinearity cancellation. A prototype chip is designed and fabricated in a $0.35~ \mu {\mathrm{ m}}$ CMOS process to demonstrate reconfigurability and performance of the proposed filter. Each biquadratic section occupies $0.12{\mathrm{ mm}}^{2}$ with a frequency tuning range more than five decades. Measured spurious-free dynamic ranges (SFDR) at the low pass and bandpass outputs from one of the biquadratic sections are 52.6 and 54.55 dB, respectively, when the natural frequency is programmed at 2 kHz with power consumption of 107.2 nW. A fourth-order Chebyshev low pass and an eighth-order Butterworth bandpass responses are implemented with characterized SFDRs of 50.43 and 48.3 dB, respectively.

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