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发表于 2013-10-11 01:21:48
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本帖最后由 feynmancgz 于 2013-10-11 04:00 编辑
回复 53# JoyShockley
This post is so hot. I come to say something about my opinion on this.
I think actually, you and aqishisi are talking about totally different things.
The impedance at the folded node is high when the frequency is low ? Yes, of course.
Then the effect of Miller effect of the Cgd of the input transistors is huge, of course!
Does this miller has influence on the amplifier itself ? Yes, kind of. but it has huge effect on the previous circuit which drives this amplifier. This is what you want to say, right ?
Ok, Cgd is very small, its effect is really huge ? Yes, maybe, sometimes.
BUT, BUT,
The pole at the folded node is located at low frequency because of its high resistance calue? NO, I don't think so.
The pole depends both on the capacitance and resistance.
The capacitance at the output of this amplifier is normally large, say 5pf, the resistance at this node is also very large, so this pole is located at very very low frequency.
BUT how about the pole at the folded node ? The capacitance ? so small. The resistance ? about at the same level as ro, much smaller than gm*ro*ro at the output node. This pole is located at much high frequency compared to the pole at the output node.
When you calculate the impedance at some node, you always take all the capacitances and resistances into account. ok, ignore most of them properly.
So, when the impedance at the output node starts to decrease ? It's the time when the first pole starts to have effect, from then on, the impedance at the output will decrease with 20dB/dec. So, at the same time the impedance at the folded node also decrease very fast, also 20dB/dec at the beginning, then the speed of the decreasing will becomes slow. so when the pole related to the folded node wants to have effect on the circuit, it actually becomes larger. That's the reason everybody says the resistance looking into the source of M8 and M9 is only 1/gm.
The pole for each node will not change when the frequency goes high ? No, It changes. The only pole that will not change is the first pole, it is always there. That's the reason people call it "the dominant pole". It's really dominant, it has huge effect on the other poles. Does other poles have effect on the dominant pole ? Yes, they do. but their effects can be ignored.
Sum up, why the resistance looking into the source of M8 and M9 is only 1/gm ? The only reason is the we have capacitors at the output node, and it's huge. The resistance looking into the source of M8 and M9 is about ro ? Yes, it' true. you are right ! But it's only valid when the frequency is lower than the first pole, then it decreases.
Another thing I should tell you is that why the professors from Berkeley says we want to avoid miller effect ? Because it decreases the frequency of the pole at the output of the previous circuit. This pole may be the dominant pole for the previous circuit, maybe even becomes the dominant pole for the whole chain. |
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