Figure 4.3 shows a current mirror loaded by resistance RL at the output. The corresponding small signal equivalent diagram is also shown in the Figure.
Figure 4.3: a) MOS current mirror with load, and b) the
corresponding small signal equivalent diagram.
In this Section the high frequency properties are analysed. Therefore, channel length modulation is disregarded. The following assumptions will be used in the analysis:
The output related pole, p2, is usually not considered as belonging to the current mirror. Rather, the output capacitance, cbd2, is considered among all other parasitic capacitances on the output node. According to Equation (4.16), this capacitance is inversely proportional to the square of VIN-VT. Therefore, a `large' effective gate voltage may be selected, if the capacitance on the output node is considered critical.
The real limiting factor of the current mirror is the pole p1.
determines the 3dB-frequency of the current mirror.
According to Equation (4.22), the 3dB-frequency is the
unity-gain frequency of M1 given by Equation (3.22),
divided typically by a factor 2+B. As discussed in Section 3.4,
is maximised using minimum channel lengths and `large'
effective gate voltages, VGS-VT. From Figure 3.6,
3dB-frequencies around 1GHz may be obtained using B=1 and minimum
channel lengths in a
process.
The discussion recommends `large' effective gate voltages, VIN-VT. However, this does not come for free. According to Equation (4.4), the effective gate voltage is identical to the minimal useful voltage over the current mirror output. Therefore, a `large' effective gate voltage limits the voltage swing at the current mirror output.