Joachim Joos
Bosch
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Publication
Featured researches published by Joachim Joos.
european solid state circuits conference | 2014
Achim Seidel; Marco Salvatore Costa; Joachim Joos; Bernhard Wicht
Bootstrap circuits are mainly used for supplying a gate driver circuit to provide the gate overdrive voltage for a high-side NMOS transistor. The required charge has to be provided by a bootstrap capacitor which is often too large for integration if an acceptable voltage dip at the capacitor has to be guaranteed. Three options of an area efficient bootstrap circuit for a high side driver with an output stage of two NMOS transistors are proposed. The key idea is that the main bootstrap capacitor is supported by a second bootstrap capacitor, which is charged to a higher voltage and connected when the gate driver turns on. A high voltage swing at the second capacitor leads to a high charge allocation. Both bootstrap capacitors require up to 70% less area compared to a conventional bootstrap circuit. This enables compact power management systems with fewer discrete components and smaller die size. A calculation guideline for optimum bootstrap capacitor sizing is given. The circuit was manufactured in a 180nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology as part of a high-voltage gate driver. Measurements confirm the benefit of high-voltage charge storing. The fully integrated bootstrap circuit including two stacked 75.8pF and 18.9pF capacitors results in a voltage dip lower than 1V. This matches well with the theory of the calculation guideline.
applied power electronics conference | 2015
Achim Seidel; Marco Salvatore Costa; Joachim Joos; Bernhard Wicht
Galvanic isolated gate drivers require a control signal as well as energy transmission from the control side (low-side) to the driver side (high-side). An additional backward signal transmission is preferred for error signals, status information, etc. This is often realized by means of several transformers or opto-couplers. Decreasing the number of isolation elements results in lower cost and a higher degree of miniaturization. This work presents a gate driver with bidirectional signal transmission and energy transfer via one single transformer. The key concept proposed in this paper is to combine bootstrapping to deliver the main gate charge for the driven power switch with additional energy transfer via the signal transformer. This paper also presents a very efficient combination of energy transfer to two high-side supply rails with back channel amplitude modulation. This way an isolated gate driver can be implemented that allows 100% pulse-width modulation (PWM) duty cycle at low complexity and system cost. The proposed high-side driver IC with integrated power supply, modulation and demodulation circuits was manufactured in a 180nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology. Measurements confirm the concept of bidirectional signal transmission with a 1MBit/s amplitude modulation, 10/20MHz frequency modulation and a maximum power transmission of 14mW via the transformer.
IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2015
Achim Seidel; Marco Salvatore Costa; Joachim Joos; Bernhard Wicht
For area reasons, NMOS transistors are preferred over PMOS for the pull-up path in gate drivers. Bootstrapping has to ensure sufficient NMOS gate overdrive. Especially in high-current gate drivers with large transistors, the bootstrap capacitor is too large for integration. This paper proposes three options of fully integrated bootstrap circuits. The key idea is that the main bootstrap capacitor is supported by a second bootstrap capacitor, which is charged to a higher voltage and ensures high charge allocation when the driver turns on. A capacitor sizing guideline and the overall driver implementation including a suitable charge pump for permanent driver activation is provided. A linear regulator is used for bootstrap supply and it also compensates the voltage drop of the bootstrap diode. Measurements from a testchip in 180 nm high-voltage BiCMOS confirm the benefit of high-voltage charge storing. The fully integrated bootstrap circuit with two stacked 75.8 pF and 18.9 pF capacitors results in an expected voltage dip of lower than 1 V. Both bootstrap capacitors require 70% less area compared to a conventional bootstrap circuit. Besides drivers, the proposed bootstrap can also be directly applied to power stages to achieve fully integrated switched mode power supplies or class-D output stages.
Archive | 2010
Holger Heinisch; Joachim Joos; Thomas Jacke; Christian Foerster
Archive | 2014
Joachim Joos; Werner Schiemann; Martin Haug
Archive | 2011
Thomas Jacke; Christian Foerster; Holger Heinisch; Joachim Joos
Archive | 2011
Marc Eschenhagen; Rasmus Rettig; Franziska Kalb; Michael Merkle; Werner Schiemann; Joachim Joos
Archive | 2010
Thomas Jacke; Christian Foerster; Holger Heinisch; Joachim Joos
Archive | 2016
Lin Zhang; Werner Schiemann; Joachim Joos
Archive | 2016
Joachim Joos; Werner Schiemann