Twisted-pair driver with staggered differential drivers and glitch free binary to multi level transmit encoder
US5917340A · kind A · utility
Assignee
Inventors
Key dates
| Filing date | Oct 8, 1997 |
| Grant date | Jun 29, 1999 |
| Priority date | — |
| Expiry date | Oct 8, 2017 |
Classification
- Technology area (CPC H)Electricity
- CPC primaryH03K19/09425
- WIPO fieldBasic communication processes
- WIPO sectorElectrical engineering
Abstract
A twisted-pair current driver is implemented in CMOS. EMI from sharp changes in the current driven is reduced by gradually changing the current driven when the inputs change. The current driver is divided into N differential drivers, each driving one-Nth of the total switching current to the twisted pair. Delay lines delay when input changes are sent to each of the four differential drivers, staggering their response. Either binary or multi-level-transition (MLT-3) data can be transmitted. A binary-to-MLT converter uses a dummy flip-flop to match delays and eliminate encoding glitches. Either the binary or the MLT-3 encoded data is coupled to the inputs of the delay lines and the differential drivers. The mid-level for MLT-3 is driven when both the inputs are high, causing the differential drivers to split the current among the two differential outputs to the twisted pair. The amount of current switched by each differential driver is doubled for multi-level mode to allow receivers to observe the smaller, multiple steps.
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.