Hello friends
In the example on the fundamentals of microelectronics by razavi, there is a examples that i do not understand,
the example says if Iin increases Vx tends to rise but why is that? it is mosfet there is no gate resistance.
Also example says when Id2 falls it allows the Vx to rise i dont get it also
can you help me about that.
thanks in advance
so Vx rise because of the drain resistor of M2 right? i guess i can understand that but when it comes to current source i mean when Id2 decreases how Vx rise i can not understand that part, in my opinon Vx also decreases because of Id2 * (RoM2)
Positive current Iin is required to establish negative loop gain over M1 and M2. Due to dominant pole at node Vx we expect a stable operating point rather than a "repeating" waveform.
I understand the doubts in post #1 so
that you are missing a load resistor for Iin and thus don't know how to calculate Vx. The circuit would even work with infinite load resistance due to the negative feedback topology, but in practice a current source has a finite output resistance of e.g. several Mohm.
thank you all of your replies friends i guess i get the point,
when we increase Iin Vx rises becaus of the ro of the M2,....,
Vout falls so that Vgs of M2 falls Id2 falls therefore according to the equation below(design of analog cmos ic by behzad razavi) ro2 rises and Vx rises (Iin*ro2).
i hope the inferences i make, makes sense.