A CMOS smart temperature sensor with a 3¿ inaccuracy of ±0.5°C from -50°C to 120°C

Journal Article (2005)
Author(s)

Michiel Pertijs (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

A Niederkorn (External organisation)

X Ma (External organisation)

B McKillop (External organisation)

A. Bakker (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Johan H. Huijsing (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Research Group
Electronic Instrumentation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/doi:10.1109/JSSC.2004.841013
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2005
Research Group
Electronic Instrumentation
Issue number
2
Volume number
40
Pages (from-to)
454-461

Abstract

A low-cost temperature sensor with on-chip sigma-delta ADC and digital bus interface was realized in a 0.5 /spl mu/m CMOS process. Substrate PNP transistors are used for temperature sensing and for generating the ADC's reference voltage. To obtain a high initial accuracy in the readout circuitry, chopper amplifiers and dynamic element matching are used. High linearity is obtained by using second-order curvature correction. With these measures, the sensor's temperature error is dominated by spread on the base-emitter voltage of the PNP transistors. This is trimmed after packaging by comparing the sensor's output with the die temperature measured using an extra on-chip calibration transistor. Compared to traditional calibration techniques, this procedure is much faster and therefore reduces production costs. The sensor is accurate to within /spl plusmn/0.5/spl deg/C (3/spl sigma/) from -50/spl deg/C to 120/spl deg/C.

No files available

Metadata only record. There are no files for this record.