A novel CMOS atto-ampere current mirror (AACM) is proposed which reaches the minimum yet reported current range of 0.4 aA. Operation of this circuit is based on the source voltage modulation instead of the conventio...A novel CMOS atto-ampere current mirror (AACM) is proposed which reaches the minimum yet reported current range of 0.4 aA. Operation of this circuit is based on the source voltage modulation instead of the conventionally used gate voltage modulation which interestingly prevents usage of commonly required voltage shifting in those circuits. The proposed circuit has a simple structure prohibiting large chip area consumption which consumes extremely low power of 1.5 μW. It is thus the best choice for ultra low power low voltage (ULPLV) applications. By using a very simple frequency compensation technique, its bandwidth is widened to 15.8 kHz. Simulation results in SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation) 0.18 μm CMOS technology with Hspice are presented to demonstrate the validation of the proposed current mirror.展开更多
The spinning period for a free electron and the periods of spin and orbital motion of the electron in an atomic state have been calculated. We have shown that for a free electron the spinning period is: (Ts)free=1.9...The spinning period for a free electron and the periods of spin and orbital motion of the electron in an atomic state have been calculated. We have shown that for a free electron the spinning period is: (Ts)free=1.9×10-20s. But in the atomic case we show that, both the spin and the orbital periods depend on the quantum numbers n, ml, ms and the effective Landé-g factor, g* which is a function of the quantum number l of the atomic state given in Dirac notation. We have also calculated these periods for the ground state and some excited states—hydrogen and hydrogen-like atoms. For atomic states the approximate values of spinning period are and the related orbital periods are: (T0)atomic=(10-16-10-15)s. Therefore atto-second processes which are related to the pulse of 10-18 s will filter the orbital motion of the electron but will be long enough to detect the details of the spin motion, such as flip-flops.展开更多
文摘A novel CMOS atto-ampere current mirror (AACM) is proposed which reaches the minimum yet reported current range of 0.4 aA. Operation of this circuit is based on the source voltage modulation instead of the conventionally used gate voltage modulation which interestingly prevents usage of commonly required voltage shifting in those circuits. The proposed circuit has a simple structure prohibiting large chip area consumption which consumes extremely low power of 1.5 μW. It is thus the best choice for ultra low power low voltage (ULPLV) applications. By using a very simple frequency compensation technique, its bandwidth is widened to 15.8 kHz. Simulation results in SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation) 0.18 μm CMOS technology with Hspice are presented to demonstrate the validation of the proposed current mirror.
文摘The spinning period for a free electron and the periods of spin and orbital motion of the electron in an atomic state have been calculated. We have shown that for a free electron the spinning period is: (Ts)free=1.9×10-20s. But in the atomic case we show that, both the spin and the orbital periods depend on the quantum numbers n, ml, ms and the effective Landé-g factor, g* which is a function of the quantum number l of the atomic state given in Dirac notation. We have also calculated these periods for the ground state and some excited states—hydrogen and hydrogen-like atoms. For atomic states the approximate values of spinning period are and the related orbital periods are: (T0)atomic=(10-16-10-15)s. Therefore atto-second processes which are related to the pulse of 10-18 s will filter the orbital motion of the electron but will be long enough to detect the details of the spin motion, such as flip-flops.