5 research outputs found

    On-Chip Analog Circuit Design Using Built-In Self-Test and an Integrated Multi-Dimensional Optimization Platform

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    Nowadays, the rapid development of system-on-chip (SoC) market introduces tremendous complexity into the integrated circuit (IC) design. Meanwhile, the IC fabrication process is scaling down to allow higher density of integration but makes the chips more sensitive to the process-voltage-temperature (PVT) variations. A successful IC product not only imposes great pressure on the IC designers, who have to handle wider variations and enforce more design margins, but also challenges the test procedure, leading to more check points and longer test time. To relax the designers’ burden and reduce the cost of testing, it is valuable to make the IC chips able to test and tune itself to some extent. In this dissertation, a fully integrated in-situ design validation and optimization (VO) hardware for analog circuits is proposed. It implements in-situ built-in self-test (BIST) techniques for analog circuits. Based on the data collected from BIST, the error between the measured and the desired performance of the target circuit is evaluated using a cost function. A digital multi-dimensional optimization engine is implemented to adaptively adjust the analog circuit parameters, seeking the minimum value of the cost function and achieving the desired performance. To verify this concept, study cases of a 2nd/4th active-RC band-pass filter (BPF) and a 2nd order Gm-C BPF, as well as all BIST and optimization blocks, are adopted on-chip. Apart from the VO system, several improved BIST techniques are also proposed in this dissertation. A single-tone sinusoidal waveform generator based on a finite-impulse-response (FIR) architecture, which utilizes an optimization algorithm to enhance its spur free dynamic range (SFDR), is proposed. It achieves an SFDR of 59 to 70 dBc from 150 to 850 MHz after the optimization procedure. A low-distortion current-steering two-tone sinusoidal signal synthesizer based on a mixing-FIR architecture is also proposed. The two-tone synthesizer extends the FIR architecture to two stages and implements an up-conversion mixer to generate the two tones, achieving better than -68 dBc IM3 below 480 MHz LO frequency without calibration. Moreover, an on-chip RF receiver linearity BIST methodology for continuous and discrete-time hybrid baseband chain is proposed. The proposed receiver chain implements a charge-domain FIR filter to notch the two excitation signals but expose the third order intermodulation (IM3) tones. It simplifies the linearity measurement procedure–using a power detector is enough to analyze the receiver’s linearity. Finally, a low cost fully digital built-in analog tester for linear-time-invariant (LTI) analog blocks is proposed. It adopts a time-to-digital converter (TDC) to measure the delays corresponded to a ramp excitation signal and is able to estimate the pole or zero locations of a low-pass LTI system

    Broadband Direct RF Digitization Receivers

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    Analog baseband circuits for WCDMA direct-conversion receivers

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    This thesis describes the design and implementation of analog baseband circuits for low-power single-chip WCDMA direct-conversion receivers. The reference radio system throughout the thesis is UTRA/FDD. The analog baseband circuit consists of two similar channels, which contain analog channel-select filters, programmable-gain amplifiers, and circuits that remove DC offsets. The direct-conversion architecture is described and the UTRA/FDD system characteristics are summarized. The UTRA/FDD specifications define the performance requirement for the whole receiver. Therefore, the specifications for the analog baseband circuit are obtained from the receiver requirements through calculations performed by hand. When the power dissipation of an UTRA/FDD direct-conversion receiver is minimized, the design parameters of an all-pole analog channel-select filter and the following Nyquist rate analog-to-digital converter must be considered simultaneously. In this thesis, it is shown that minimum power consumption is achieved with a fifth-order lowpass filter and a 15.36-MS/s Nyquist rate converter that has a 7- or 8-bit resolution. A fifth-order Chebyshev prototype with a passband ripple of 0.01 dB and a −3-dB frequency of 1.92-MHz is adopted in this thesis. The error-vector-magnitude can be significantly reduced by using a first-order 1.4-MHz allpass filter. The selected filter prototype fulfills all selectivity requirements in the analog domain. In this thesis, all the filter implementations use the opamp-RC technique to achieve insensitivity to parasitic capacitances and a high dynamic range. The adopted technique is analyzed in detail. The effect of the finite opamp unity-gain bandwidth on the filter frequency response can be compensated for by using passive methods. Compensation schemes that also track the process and temperature variations have been developed. The opamp-RC technique enables the implementation of low-voltage filters. The design and simulation results of a 1.5-V 2-MHz lowpass filter are discussed. The developed biasing scheme does not use any additional current to achieve the low-voltage operation, unlike the filter topology published previously elsewhere. Methods for removing DC offsets in UTRA/FDD direct-conversion receivers are presented. The minimum areas for cascaded AC couplings and DC-feedback loops are calculated. The distortion of the frequency response of a lowpass filter caused by a DC-feedback loop connected over the filter is calculated and a method for compensating for the distortion is developed. The time constant of an AC coupling can be increased using time-constant multipliers. This enables the implementation of AC couplings with a small silicon area. Novel time-constant multipliers suitable for systems that have a continuous reception, such as UTRA/FDD, are presented. The proposed time-constant multipliers only require one additional amplifier. In an UTRA/FDD direct-conversion receiver, the reception is continuous. In a low-power receiver, the programmable baseband gain must be changed during reception. This may produce large, slowly decaying transients that degrade the receiver performance. The thesis shows that AC-coupling networks and DC-feedback loops can be used to implement programmable-gain amplifiers, which do not produce significant transients when the gain is altered. The principles of operation, the design, and the practical implementation issues of these amplifiers are discussed. New PGA topologies suitable for continuously receiving systems have been developed. The behavior of these circuits in the presence of strong out-of-channel signals is analyzed. The interface between the downconversion mixers and the analog baseband circuit is discussed. The effect of the interface on the receiver noise figure and the trimming of mixer IIP2 are analyzed. The design and implementation of analog baseband circuits and channel-select filters for UTRA/FDD direct-conversion receivers are discussed in five application cases. The first case presents the analog baseband circuit for a chip-set receiver. A channel-select filter that has an improved dynamic range with a smaller supply current is presented next. The third and fifth application cases describe embedded analog baseband circuits for single-chip receivers. In the fifth case, the dual-mode analog baseband circuit of a quad-mode receiver designed for GSM900, DCS1800, PCS1900, and UTRA/FDD cellular systems is described. A new, highly linear low-power transconductor is presented in the fourth application case. The fourth application case also describes a channel-select filter. The filter achieves +99-dBV out-of-channel IIP2, +45-dBV out-of-channel IIP3 and 23-μVRMS input-referred noise with 2.6-mA current from a 2.7-V supply. In the fifth application case, a corresponding performance is achieved in UTRA/FDD mode. The out-of-channel IIP2 values of approximately +100 dBV achieved in this work are the best reported so far. This is also the case with the figure of merits for the analog channel-select filter and analog baseband circuit described in the fourth and fifth application cases, respectively. For equal power dissipation, bandwidth, and filter order, these circuits achieve approximately 10 dB and 15 dB higher spurious-free dynamic ranges, respectively, when compared to implementations that are published elsewhere and have the second best figure of merits.reviewe

    In Situ Automatic Analog Circuit Calibration and Optimization

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    As semiconductor technology scales down, the variations of active/passive device characteristics after fabrication are getting more and more significant. As a result, many circuits need more accuracy margin to meet minimum accuracy specifications over huge process-voltage-temperature (PVT) variations. Although, overdesigning a circuit is sometimes not a feasible option because of excessive accuracy margin that requires high power consumption and large area. Consequently, calibration/tuning circuits that can automatically detect and compensate the variations have been researched for analog circuits to make better trade-offs among accuracy, power consumption, and area. The first part of this dissertation shows that a newly proposed in situ calibration circuit for a current reference can relax the sharp trade-off between the temperature coefficient accuracy and the power consumption of the current reference. Prototype chips fabricated in a 180 nm CMOS technology generate 1 nA and achieve an average temperature coefficient of 289 ppm/°C and an average line sensitivity of 1.4 %/V with no help from a multiple-temperature trimming. Compared with other state-of-the-art current references that do not need a multiple-temperature trimming, the proposed circuit consumes at least 74% less power, while maintaining similar or higher accuracy. The second part of this dissertation proves that a newly proposed multidimensional in situ analog circuit optimization platform can optimize a Tow-Thomas bandpass biquad. Unlike conventional calibration/tuning approaches, which only handle one or two frequency-domain characteristics, the proposed platform optimizes the power consumption, frequency-, and time-domain characteristics of the biquad to make a better trade-off between the accuracy and the power consumption of the biquad. Simulation results show that this platform reduces the gain-bandwidth product of op-amps in the biquad by 80% while reducing the standard deviations of frequency- and time-domain characteristics by 82%. Measurement results of a prototype chip fabricated in a 180 nm CMOS technology also show that this platform can save maximum 71% of the power consumption of the biquad while the biquad maintains its frequency-domain characteristics: Q, ωO and the gain at ωO

    Photodetectors

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    In this book some recent advances in development of photodetectors and photodetection systems for specific applications are included. In the first section of the book nine different types of photodetectors and their characteristics are presented. Next, some theoretical aspects and simulations are discussed. The last eight chapters are devoted to the development of photodetection systems for imaging, particle size analysis, transfers of time, measurement of vibrations, magnetic field, polarization of light, and particle energy. The book is addressed to students, engineers, and researchers working in the field of photonics and advanced technologies
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