49 research outputs found

    Reporte de formación complementaria en área de concentración en Diseño de Circuitos Integrados

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    El objetivo de este documento es presentar los proyectos realizados en el área de Diseño de Circuitos Electrónicos Analógicos que mayor impacto representaron para la formación académica del alumno en el área de concentración seleccionada. En la asignatura de Diseño de Circuitos Integrados Analógicos se trabajó el proyecto Amplificador CMOS con compensación de offset para aplicación en bloques SerDes. En la asignatura de Diseño Avanzado de Circuitos Integrados Analógicos se realizó el proyecto Filtro OTA-C Pasa Bajas con sintonización automática asistida por PLL. Finalmente, en la materia de Diseño de Circuitos Integrados Digitales se llevó a cabo el proyecto Transmisor de Datos Digitales con impedancia de salida, énfasis y modulación de amplitud configurable

    A high speed serializer/deserializer design

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    A Serializer/Deserializer (SerDes) is a circuit that converts parallel data into a serial stream and vice versa. It helps solve clock/data skew problems, simplifies data transmission, lowers the power consumption and reduces the chip cost. The goal of this project was to solve the challenges in high speed SerDes design, which included the low jitter design, wide bandwidth design and low power design. A quarter-rate multiplexer/demultiplexer (MUX/DEMUX) was implemented. This quarter-rate structure decreases the required clock frequency from one half to one quarter of the data rate. It is shown that this significantly relaxes the design of the VCO at high speed and achieves lower power consumption. A novel multi-phase LC-ring oscillator was developed to supply a low noise clock to the SerDes. This proposed VCO combined an LC-tank with a ring structure to achieve both wide tuning range (11%) and low phase noise (-110dBc/Hz at 1MHz offset). With this structure, a data rate of 36 Gb/s was realized with a measured peak-to-peak jitter of 10ps using 0.18microm SiGe BiCMOS technology. The power consumption is 3.6W with 3.4V power supply voltage. At a 60 Gb/s data rate the simulated peak-to-peak jitter was 4.8ps using 65nm CMOS technology. The power consumption is 92mW with 2V power supply voltage. A time-to-digital (TDC) calibration circuit was designed to compensate for the phase mismatches among the multiple phases of the PLL clock using a three dimensional fully depleted silicon on insulator (3D FDSOI) CMOS process. The 3D process separated the analog PLL portion from the digital calibration portion into different tiers. This eliminated the noise coupling through the common substrate in the 2D process. Mismatches caused by the vertical tier-to-tier interconnections and the temperature influence in the 3D process were attenuated by the proposed calibration circuit. The design strategy and circuits developed from this dissertation provide significant benefit to both wired and wireless applications

    System-level design and RF front-end implementation for a 3-10ghz multiband-ofdm ultrawideband receiver and built-in testing techniques for analog and rf integrated circuits

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    This work consists of two main parts: a) Design of a 3-10GHz UltraWideBand (UWB) Receiver and b) Built-In Testing Techniques (BIT) for Analog and RF circuits. The MultiBand OFDM (MB-OFDM) proposal for UWB communications has received significant attention for the implementation of very high data rate (up to 480Mb/s) wireless devices. A wideband LNA with a tunable notch filter, a downconversion quadrature mixer, and the overall radio system-level design are proposed for an 11-band 3.4-10.3GHz direct conversion receiver for MB-OFDM UWB implemented in a 0.25mm BiCMOS process. The packaged IC includes an RF front-end with interference rejection at 5.25GHz, a frequency synthesizer generating 11 carrier tones in quadrature with fast hopping, and a linear phase baseband section with 42dB of gain programmability. The receiver IC mounted on a FR-4 substrate provides a maximum gain of 67-78dB and NF of 5-10dB across all bands while consuming 114mA from a 2.5V supply. Two BIT techniques for analog and RF circuits are developed. The goal is to reduce the test cost by reducing the use of analog instrumentation. An integrated frequency response characterization system with a digital interface is proposed to test the magnitude and phase responses at different nodes of an analog circuit. A complete prototype in CMOS 0.35mm technology employs only 0.3mm2 of area. Its operation is demonstrated by performing frequency response measurements in a range of 1 to 130MHz on 2 analog filters integrated on the same chip. A very compact CMOS RF RMS Detector and a methodology for its use in the built-in measurement of the gain and 1dB compression point of RF circuits are proposed to address the problem of on-chip testing at RF frequencies. The proposed device generates a DC voltage proportional to the RMS voltage amplitude of an RF signal. A design in CMOS 0.35mm technology presents and input capacitance <15fF and occupies and area of 0.03mm2. The application of these two techniques in combination with a loop-back test architecture significantly enhances the testability of a wireless transceiver system

    A Low-Power Wireless Multichannel Microsystem for Reliable Neural Recording.

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    This thesis reports on the development of a reliable, single-chip, multichannel wireless biotelemetry microsystem intended for extracellular neural recording from awake, mobile, and small animal models. The inherently conflicting requirements of low power and reliability are addressed in the proposed microsystem at architectural and circuit levels. Through employing the preliminary microsystems in various in-vivo experiments, the system requirements for reliable neural recording are identified and addressed at architectural level through the analytical tool: signal path co-optimization. The 2.85mm×3.84mm, mixed-signal ASIC integrates a low-noise front-end, programmable digital controller, an RF modulator, and an RF power amplifier (PA) at the ISM band of 433MHz on a single-chip; and is fabricated using a 0.5µm double-poly triple-metal n-well standard CMOS process. The proposed microsystem, incorporating the ASIC, is a 9-channel (8-neural, 1-audio) user programmable reliable wireless neural telemetry microsystem with a weight of 2.2g (including two 1.5V batteries) and size of 2.2×1.1×0.5cm3. The electrical characteristics of this microsystem are extensively characterized via benchtop tests. The transmitter consumes 5mW and has a measured total input referred voltage noise of 4.74µVrms, 6.47µVrms, and 8.27µVrms at transmission distances of 3m, 10m, and 20m, respectively. The measured inter-channel crosstalk is less than 3.5% and battery life is about an hour. To compare the wireless neural telemetry systems, a figure of merit (FoM) is defined as the reciprocal of the power spent on broadcasting one channel over one meter distance. The proposed microsystem’s FoM is an order of magnitude larger compared to all other research and commercial systems. The proposed biotelemetry system has been successfully used in two in-vivo neural recording experiments: i) from a freely roaming South-American cockroach, and ii) from an awake and mobile rat.Ph.D.Electrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91542/1/aborna_1.pd

    Ultra-Low Power Wake Up Receiver For Medical Implant Communications Service Transceiver

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    This thesis explores the specific requirements and challenges for the design of a dedicated wake-up receiver for medical implant communication services equipped with a novel “uncertain-IF†architecture combined with a high – Q filtering MEMS resonator and a free running CMOS ring oscillator as the RF LO. The receiver prototype, implements an IBM 0.18μm mixed-signal 7ML RF CMOS technology and achieves a sensitivity of -62 dBm at 404MHz while consuming \u3c100 μW from a 1 V supply

    Broadband RF Front-End Design for Multi-Standard Receiver with High-Linearity and Low-Noise Techniques

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    Future wireless communication devices must support multiple standards and features on a single-chip. The trend towards software-defined radio requires flexible and efficient RF building blocks which justifies the adoption of broadband receiver front-ends in modern and future communication systems. The broadband receiver front-end significantly reduces cost, area, pins, and power, and can process several signal channels simultaneously. This research is mainly focused on the analysis and realization of the broadband receiver architecture and its various building blocks (LNA, Active Balun-LNA, Mixer, and trans-impedance amplifier) for multi-standard applications. In the design of the mobile DTV tuner, a direct-conversion receiver architecture is adopted achieving low power, low cost, and high dynamic-range for DVB-H standard. The tuner integrates a single-ended RF variable gain amplifier (RFVGA), a current-mode passive mixer, and a combination of continuous and discrete-time baseband filter with built-in anti-aliasing. The proposed RFVGA achieves high dynamic-range and gain-insensitive input impedance matching performance. The current-mode passive mixer achieves high gain, low noise, and high linearity with low power supplies. A wideband common-gate LNA is presented that overcomes the fundamental trade-off between power and noise match without compromising its stability. The proposed architecture can achieve the minimum noise figure over the previously reported feedback amplifiers in common-gate configuration. The proposed architecture achieves broadband impedance matching, low noise, large gain, enhanced linearity, and wide bandwidth concurrently by employing an efficient and reliable dual negative-feedback. For the wideband Inductorless Balun-LNA, active single-to-differential architecture has been proposed without using any passive inductor on-chip which occupies a lot of silicon area. The proposed Balun-LNA features lower power, wider bandwidth, and better gain and phase balance than previously reported architectures of the same kind. A surface acoustic wave (SAW)-less direct conversion receiver targeted for multistandard applications is proposed and fabricated with TSMC 0.13?m complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology. The target is to design a wideband SAW-less direct coversion receiver with a single low noise transconductor and current-mode passive mixer with trans-impedance amplifier utilizing feed-forward compensation. The innovations in the circuit and architecture improves the receiver dynamic range enabling highly linear direct-conversion CMOS front-end for a multi-standard receiver

    Energy-Efficient Wireless Circuits and Systems for Internet of Things

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    As the demand of ultra-low power (ULP) systems for internet of thing (IoT) applications has been increasing, large efforts on evolving a new computing class is actively ongoing. The evolution of the new computing class, however, faced challenges due to hard constraints on the RF systems. Significant efforts on reducing power of power-hungry wireless radios have been done. The ULP radios, however, are mostly not standard compliant which poses a challenge to wide spread adoption. Being compliant with the WiFi network protocol can maximize an ULP radio’s potential of utilization, however, this standard demands excessive power consumption of over 10mW, that is hardly compatible with in ULP systems even with heavy duty-cycling. Also, lots of efforts to minimize off-chip components in ULP IoT device have been done, however, still not enough for practical usage without a clean external reference, therefore, this limits scaling on cost and form-factor of the new computer class of IoT applications. This research is motivated by those challenges on the RF systems, and each work focuses on radio designs for IoT applications in various aspects. First, the research covers several endeavors for relieving energy constraints on RF systems by utilizing existing network protocols that eventually meets both low-active power, and widespread adoption. This includes novel approaches on 802.11 communication with articulate iterations on low-power RF systems. The research presents three prototypes as power-efficient WiFi wake-up receivers, which bridges the gap between industry standard radios and ULP IoT radios. The proposed WiFi wake-up receivers operate with low power consumption and remain compatible with the WiFi protocol by using back-channel communication. Back-channel communication embeds a signal into a WiFi compliant transmission changing the firmware in the access point, or more specifically just the data in the payload of the WiFi packet. With a specific sequence of data in the packet, the transmitter can output a signal that mimics a modulation that is more conducive for ULP receivers, such as OOK and FSK. In this work, low power mixer-first receivers, and the first fully integrated ultra-low voltage receiver are presented, that are compatible with WiFi through back-channel communication. Another main contribution of this work is in relieving the integration challenge of IoT devices by removing the need for external, or off-chip crystals and antennas. This enables a small form-factor on the order of mm3-scale, useful for medical research and ubiquitous sensing applications. A crystal-less small form factor fully integrated 60GHz transceiver with on-chip 12-channel frequency reference, and good peak gain dual-mode on-chip antenna is presented.PHDElectrical and Computer EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162975/1/jaeim_1.pd

    High linearity analog and mixed-signal integrated circuit design

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    Linearity is one of the most important specifications in electrical circuits.;In Chapter 1, a ladder-based transconductance networks has been adopted first time to build a low distortion analog filters for low frequency applications. This new technique eliminated the limitation of the application with the traditional passive resistors for low frequency applications. Based on the understanding of this relationship, a strategy for designing high linear analog continuous-time filters has been developed. According to our strategy, a prototype analog integrated filter has been designed and fabricated with AMI05 0.5 um standard CMOS process. Experimental results proved this technique has the ability to provide excellent linearity with very limited active area.;In Chapter 2, the relationships between the transconductance networks and major circuit specifications have been explored. The analysis reveals the trade off between the silicon area saved by the transconductance networks and the some other important specifications such as linearity, noise level and the process variations of the overall circuit. Experimental results of discrete component circuit matched very well with our analytical outcomes to predict the change of linearity and noise performance associated with different transconductance networks.;The Chapter 3 contains the analysis and mathematical proves of the optimum passive area allocations for several most popular analog active filters. Because the total area is now manageable by the technique introduced in the Chapter 1, the further reduce of the total area will be very important and useful for efficient utilizing the silicon area, especially with the today\u27s fast growing area efficiency of the highly density digital circuits. This study presents the mathematical conclusion that the minimum passive area will be achieved with the equalized resistor and capacitor.;In the Chapter 4, a well recognized and highly honored current division circuit has been studied. Although it was claimed to be inherently linear and there are over 60 published works reported with high linearity based on this technique, our study discovered that this current division circuit can achieve, if proper circuit condition being managed, very limited linearity and all the experimental verified performance actually based on more general circuit principle. Besides its limitation, however, we invented a novel current division digital to analog converter (DAC) based on this technique. Benefiting from the simple circuit structure and moderate good linearity, a prototype 8-bit DAC was designed in TSMC018 0.2 um CMOS process and the post layout simulations exhibited the good linearity with very low power consumption and extreme small active area.;As the part of study of the output stage for the current division DAC discussed in the Chapter 4, a current mirror is expected to amplify the output current to drive the low resistive load. The strategy of achieving the optimum bandwidth of the cascode current mirror with fixed total current gain is discussed in the Chapter 5.;Improving the linearity of pipeline ADC has been the hottest and hardest topic in solid-state circuit community for decade. In the Chapter 6, a comprehensive study focus on the existing calibration algorithms for pipeline ADCs is presented. The benefits and limitations of different calibration algorithms have been discussed. Based on the understanding of those reported works, a new model-based calibration is delivered. The simulation results demonstrate that the model-based algorithms are vulnerable to the model accuracy and this weakness is very hard to be removed. From there, we predict the future developments of calibration algorithms that can break the linearity limitations for pipelined ADC. (Abstract shortened by UMI.
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