This paper presents an integrated power control system for photovoltaic systems based on maximum power point tracking (MPPT). The architecture presented in this paper is designed to extract more power from photovoltaic panels under different partial obscuring conditions. To control the MPPT block, the integrated system used the ripple correlation control algorithm (RCC), as well as a high-efficiency synchronous direct current (DC-DC) boost power converter. Using 180 nm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology, the proposed MPPT was designed, simulated, and layout in virtuoso cadence. The system is attached to a two-cell in series that generates a 5.2 V average output voltage, 656.6 mA average output current, and power efficiency of 95%. The final design occupies only 1.68 mm2.
A hybrid-mode low-drop out (LDO) voltage regulator with fast transient response performance for IoT applications is proposed in this paper. The proposed LDO regulator consist of two sections. First section is an analog regulator which includes a folded cascode operational amplifier to achieve good PSRR. Second section is current DAC and detectors whitch includes a cource current DAC, sink current DAC, undershoot detectors, and overshoot detectors. The current DAC and detectors are designed to obtain a low drop out and fast transient response. The proposed hybrid-mode LDO voltage regulator has been designed, simulated and layouted in Cadence using TSMC 90 nm CMOS technology. The input range of the LDO regulator is 1.2–2.0 V, and it can produces an output voltage of 1.2V. The LDO regulator achieves 58uA quiescent current, -69 PSRR @ 1 KHz noise frequency and an output voltage drop of around 60mV for a load current step of 100 mA. The final design occupies approximately 0.09 mm2.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.