I'm probably showing my age calling it a "bandgap reference" - they just seem to be called voltage references these days.
Originally they were only available in 1.2V, (the bandgap voltage of silicon) but now there are versions for any voltage you might fancy.
The basic premise is to take two semiconductor junctions and make sure that the current through one is ten times the current through the other. Because of the exponential relationship between I and V it follows that if I2/I1 = 10 then V1-V2 = 60mV.
There's a good explanation in Horowitz & Hill and also on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandgap_voltage_reference
Originally they were only available in 1.2V, (the bandgap voltage of silicon) but now there are versions for any voltage you might fancy.
The basic premise is to take two semiconductor junctions and make sure that the current through one is ten times the current through the other. Because of the exponential relationship between I and V it follows that if I2/I1 = 10 then V1-V2 = 60mV.
There's a good explanation in Horowitz & Hill and also on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandgap_voltage_reference








