Patents by Inventor Steven L. Holmes

Steven L. Holmes has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7176765
    Abstract: An on-chip oscillator generates a substantially temperature-independent clock signal by compensating for temperature-induced changes in its RC time constant and in a range between trigger voltages. A resistor with a positive temperature coefficient determines the range between trigger voltages, which increases with increasing temperature. A comparator response time contributes to a delay period that occurs after a trigger voltage is passed and before the charging or discharging of a capacitor is reversed. After the delay period, a remainder period elapses before another trigger voltage is passed. As temperature increases, the delay period is decreased by increasing a bias current supplied to the comparator. The bias current is programmably adjusted such that the sum of the delay period and the remainder period remains substantially constant over a large temperature range.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 9, 2005
    Date of Patent: February 13, 2007
    Assignee: ZiLOG, Inc.
    Inventors: Jaynie A. Shorb, Steven L. Holmes
  • Patent number: 7148672
    Abstract: A bandgap reference circuit (BGRC) that is suitable for low-supply voltage applications outputs an adjustable reference voltage. In an operational mode, main currents flow through diodes and are controlled by a main current generator such that a positive temperature coefficient of a voltage across a resistor compensates for a negative temperature coefficient of a voltage across the diodes. The difference of the voltages across the diodes increases with temperature and is used to generate the main currents having positive temperature coefficients. The BGRC ensures sufficient current flow through the diodes during startup. In a startup mode, a startup current generator outputs startup currents that combine with the main currents and prevent the BGRC from operating at incorrect operating points that would otherwise be stable when insufficient current flows through the diodes. The startup currents are generated when the voltage drop across the resistor is less than a predetermined voltage offset.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 16, 2005
    Date of Patent: December 12, 2006
    Assignee: ZiLOG, Inc.
    Inventor: Steven L. Holmes
  • Patent number: 7102452
    Abstract: An on-chip oscillator generates a substantially temperature-independent clock signal by compensating for temperature-induced changes in its RC time constant and in a range between trigger voltages. A resistor with a positive temperature coefficient determines the range between trigger voltages, which increases with increasing temperature. A comparator response time is part of a delay period that occurs after a trigger voltage is passed and before the charging or discharging of a capacitor is reversed. After the delay period, a remainder period elapses before the other trigger voltage is passed. As temperature increases, the oscillator increases current supplied to a comparator to decrease the response time. Moreover, as temperature increases, the oscillator increases a charge/discharge current so that the capacitor charges and discharges faster as the range between trigger voltages increases.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 31, 2004
    Date of Patent: September 5, 2006
    Assignee: ZiLOG, Inc.
    Inventor: Steven L. Holmes
  • Patent number: 6255902
    Abstract: An amplifier circuit with small die size and low power consumption is described. The design allows a number of switch amplifier circuits to be placed on a single chip. Each of the amplifiers contains a comparator for greater amplification, with a designed-in offset, a small pull-down current, and a diode. The comparators are biased with low current values and the need for large resistors is eliminated. Several such devices can be placed on a chip along with an edge triggered shift register to store the logic levels generated from the switch inputs. The offset, either built-in or externally supplied, sets one comparator input to an offset voltage. The switch is connected to the other input, with the diode and pull-down in parallel between this input and ground or other reference level: When the switch is open, the pull-down takes the input to ground; when the switch is closed, the diode voltage drop holds the input to a voltage above the offset.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 23, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 3, 2001
    Assignee: Zilog, Inc.
    Inventors: Troy N. Gilliland, Steven L. Holmes