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[Design Application]
Carefully Compare Pros And Cons To Correctly Choose An IC Voltage Reference
A designer must balance such factors as cost, size, precision, and power consumption when selecting a voltage reference.

Contributing Author  |   ED Online ID #5031  |   December 18, 2000


Because most of today's digital logic, mixed-signal, and analog circuits include a voltage reference, designers must understand how references operate and how to choose from among the available types. From the many specifications that characterize a voltage reference, it's important to know which are necessary for a given application, and why they fill the need.

The 1s and 0s of digital circuits, for example, are distinguished by thresholds that correspond to a logic high or logic low. Such applications don't require discrete-component zener or band-gap references. Instead, the 1s and 0s are determined by a "reference" consisting of the internal base-emitter voltage drop (VBE) of a bipolar transistor in TTL circuits, or by the gate-source voltage drop (VGS) of a MOSFET in CMOS circuits.

In a mixed-signal device, like the ubiquitous analog-to-digital converter (ADC) or digital-to-analog converter (DAC), the voltage reference can be included on the chip or provided externally. For purely analog circuits, such as a linear regulator, the output voltage is maintained at the desired level by comparing the known value of a built-in reference to the feedback or error signal.

A simple voltage detector can be made from a comparator and two inputs: one for the signal to be monitored, and the other for a voltage representing the trip point. This trip level can be set by a pair of resistors or by an internal/external voltage reference. A pair of resistors makes a simple reference, but the resulting voltage is at the mercy of the source driving the divider and of the stability of current drawn from the resistor-divider node. By contrast, a Maxim MAX917 voltage detector contains a comparator and an internal voltage reference.

Important voltage-reference specifications include, but aren't limited to:

  • Initial accuracy
  • Output-voltage temperature drift
  • Current source-and-sink capability
  • Quiescent current
  • Long-term stability
  • Output-voltage temperature hysteresis
  • Noise
  • Cost

The main types of voltage references are based on the zener diode, the buried-zener diode, and the bandgap device (Table 1). Each type can be configured as either a two-terminal shunt topology or as a three-terminal series topology. Zener diodes, or those diodes intended to operate in the reverse-bias region, require a series current-limiting resistor. Zeners typically aren't well suited for high-precision or low-power applications. The BZX84C2V7LT1 zener, for ex-ample, has a nominal VOUT of 2.7 V, but it varies from unit to unit, from 2.5 to 2.9 V, a tolerance of about ±7.5%.

An ideal voltage reference should have zero source impedance, letting it maintain a constant output voltage, regardless of the current it sinks or sources. Actual source impedance is never zero, but low levels in the milliohm range are possible. On the other hand, the BZX zener has an internal impedance of 100 Ω at 5 mA and 600 Ω at 1 mA. Nevertheless, zener diodes are very useful in voltage-clamping circuits. They can handle a wide range of clamp voltages (2 to 200 V) and a wide range of power, from several milliwatts to several watts.

The MAX6330, a shunt device with power-on-reset output, avoids some of the drawbacks of zeners (Fig. 1). It has a tight initial accuracy (within 1.5% or better) over the full IOUT range of 100 µA to 50 mA. As with all shunt devices, designers should consider the following factors when selecting a proper shunt resistor, RS:

  • Input voltage range (VIN)
  • Regulated voltage (VSHUNT)
  • Output current range (ILOAD)
  • Minimum shunt operating current (ISHUNT): always plan for the maximum load current plus ISHUNT

Designers should choose the highest nominal resistor value for RS that yields the lowest current consumption. The design safety has to accommodate the worst-case tolerance of the resistor used:

The following general power equation ensures an adequate power rating for the resistor:

A shunt topology always draws ILOADMAX + ISHUNT, whether or not a load is present. On the other hand, shunt references have an advantage. By properly sizing RS, the same shunt can operate from 10 to 100 VIN. Typical ISHUNT values are in the range of 10 to 60 µA.

The principle behind bandgap references is the summing of two VBE voltages. Because one voltage has a positive temperature coefficient (TC) and the other a negative TC, their sum at the output has a zero TC (Fig. 2). Of course, actual output TCs never equal exactly zero. IC design, packaging, and manufacturing-test capabilities all affect the output TC. With care, though, it's possible to attain reasonably low VOUT TCs between 5 and 100 ppm/°C.

The absence of an external resistor in a three-terminal bandgap or other series-mode voltage reference simplifies the design and minimizes power consumption. But it isn't possible to simply insert the reference on a board and forget about it. The surrounding circuitry might require special performance from the reference. A ±5% power supply and an 8-bit data-acquisition system, for instance, place much looser demands on the reference as opposed to a micropower system where current consumption must be as low as possible for each component. In such cases, a 2.5-V reference like the MAX6025 or MAX-6192 draws a supply current of only 35 µA maximum, which is virtually independent of IOUT.


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