Abstract
This work examines the use of a forward body biasing (FBB) scheme to mitigate output conductance degradation due to short channel effects in ultra-low voltage (ULV) circuits with no additional power consumption. It is shown that FBB boosts the output resistance of a transistor such that the intrinsic gain reduction due to low-supply voltages can be compensated. This technique is then used to implement a low-noise amplifier (LNA) tailored for ultra-low power (ULP) and ULV applications. The proposed LNA uses common-gate (CG) NMOS transistors as input devices in a complementary current-reuse structure. Low-power input matching is achieved by employing an active shunt-feedback architecture while the current of the feedback stage is also reused by the input transistor. Moreover, a separate FBB scheme is exploited to tune the feedback coefficient. An inductive $g_m$ -boosting technique is used to increase the bandwidth of the LNA without additional power consumption. The proposed LNA is implemented in an IBM $0.13 \upmu \text{m}$ 1P8M CMOS technology and occupies $0.39 \text{mm}^2$ . The measured LNA has a 14 dB gain, 4 dB minimum noise figure, IIP3 of $-10 \text{dBm}$ , and 0.6–4.2 GHz bandwidth, while consuming only $500 \upmu$ A from a 0.5 V supply. The LNA operates with supplies as low as 0.4 V while maintaining good performance.
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