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History of the High-Voltage Charge Pump

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Chapter 1 of Charge Pump Circuit Design, published by McGraw-Hill Professional
114 KB (14 pages)
ISBN: 007147045X
Published: June 27, 2006
 

Feng Pan and Tapan Samaddar

The quest for generating a high voltage supply from an available lower voltage supply has existed since the discovery of electricity. The invention of the "induction ring" by Michael Faraday, the British physicist and chemist, in 1831, began the process of generating high voltages from an available lower input voltage using transformers. The need for producing even higher voltages was accentuated by the requirements from physicists, using particle accelerators, to create high energy particles for studying subatomic physics. It was only during this time that Cockcroft and Walton invented a novel method for generating extremely high voltages using a unique connection of discrete diodes and capacitors—a technique that was later adopted by John F. Dickson for implementation on a modern integrated circuit. This chapter will start by examining the transformer and its shortcomings and then gradually lead to a discussion of Dickson's implementation of the charge pump.

Reproduced from the book Charge Pump Circuit Design. Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies. Reproduced by permission of The McGraw-Hill Companies. Written permission from The McGraw-Hill Companies is required for all other uses.

 
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