3 research outputs found

    Design of High-Speed Power-Efficient A/D Converters for Wireline ADC-Based Receiver Applications

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    Serial input/output (I/O) data rates are increasing in order to support the explosion in network traffic driven by big data applications such as the Internet of Things (IoT), cloud computing and etc. As the high-speed data symbol times shrink, this results in an increased amount of inter-symbol interference (ISI) for transmission over both severe low-pass electrical channels and dispersive optical channels. This necessitates increased equalization complexity and consideration of advanced modulation schemes, such as four-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-4). Serial links which utilize an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) receiver front-end offer a potential solution, as they enable more powerful and flexible digital signal processing (DSP) for equalization and symbol detection and can easily support advanced modulation schemes. Moreover, the DSP back-end provides robustness to process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variations, benefits from improved area and power with CMOS technology scaling and offers easy design transfer between different technology nodes and thus improved time-to-market. However, ADC-based receivers generally consume higher power relative to their mixed-signal counterparts because of the significant power consumed by conventional multi-GS/s ADC implementations. This motivates exploration of energy-efficient ADC designs with moderate resolution and very high sampling rates to support data rates at or above 50Gb/s. This dissertation presents two power-efficient designs of ≄25GS/s time-interleaved ADCs for ADC-based wireline receivers. The first prototype includes the implementation of a 6b 25GS/s time-interleaved multi-bit search ADC in 65nm CMOS with a soft-decision selection algorithm that provides redundancy for relaxed track-and-hold (T/H) settling and improved metastability tolerance, achieving a figure-of-merit (FoM) of 143fJ/conversion step and 1.76pJ/bit for a PAM-4 receiver design. The second prototype features the design of a 52Gb/s PAM-4 ADC-based receiver in 65nm CMOS, where the front-end consists of a 4-stage continuous-time linear equalizer (CTLE)/variable gain amplifier (VGA) and a 6b 26GS/s time-interleaved SAR ADC with a comparator-assisted 2b/stage structure for reduced digital-to-analog converter (DAC) complexity and a 3-tap embedded feed-forward equalizer (FFE) for relaxed ADC resolution requirement. The receiver front-end achieves an efficiency of 4.53bJ/bit, while compensating for up to 31dB loss with DSP and no transmitter (TX) equalization

    Design Techniques for High Performance Wireline Communication and Security Systems

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    As the amount of data traffic grows exponentially on the internet, towards thousands of exabytes by 2020, high performance and high efficiency communication and security solutions are constantly in high demand, calling for innovative solutions. Within server communication dominates todays network data transfer, outweighing between-server and server-to-user data transfer by an order of magnitude. Solutions for within-server communication tend to be very wideband, i.e. on the order of tens of gigahertz, equalizers are widely deployed to provide extended bandwidth at reasonable cost. However, using equalizers typically costs the available signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at the receiver side. What is worse is that the SNR available at the channel becomes worse as data rate increases, making it harder to meet the tight constraint on error rate, delay, and power consumption. In this thesis, two equalization solutions that address optimal equalizer implementations are discussed. One is a low-power high-speed maximum likelihood sequence detection (MLSD) that achieves record energy efficiency, below 10 pico-Joule per bit. The other one is a phase-shaping equalizer design that suppresses inter-symbol interference at almost zero cost of SNR. The growing amount of communication use also challenges the design of security subsystems, and the emerging need for post-quantum security adds to the difficulties. Most of currently deployed cryptographic primitives rely on the hardness of discrete logarithms that could potentially be solved efficiently with a powerful enough quantum computer. Efficient post-quantum encryption solutions have become of substantial value. In this thesis a fast and efficient lattice encryption application-specific integrated circuit is presented that surpasses the energy efficiency of embedded processors by 4 orders of magnitude.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146092/1/shisong_1.pd

    Modeling and Design of Architectures for High-Speed ADC-Based Serial Links

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    There is an ongoing dramatic rise in the volume of internet traffic. Standards such as 56Gb/s OIF very short reach (VSR), medium reach (MR) and long reach (LR) standards for chip to chip communication over channels with up to 10dB, 20dB and 30dB insertion loss at the PAM 4 Nyquist frequency, respectively, are being adopted. These standards call for the spectrally efficient PAM-4 signaling over NRZ signaling. PAM-4 signaling offers challenges such as a reduced SNR at the receiver, susceptibility to nonlinearities and increased sensitivity to residual ISI. Equalization provided by traditional mixed signal architectures can be insufficient to achieve the target BER requirements for very long reach channels. ADC-based receiver architectures for PAM-4 links take advantage of the more powerful equalization techniques, which lend themselves to easier and robust digital implementations, to extend the amount of insertion loss that the receiver can handle. However, ADC-based receivers can consume more power compared to mixed-signal implementations. Techniques that model the receiver performance to understand the various system trade-offs are necessary. This research presents a fast and accurate hybrid modeling framework to efficiently investigate system trade-offs for an ADC-based receiver. The key contribution being the addition of ADC related non-idealities such as quantization noise in the presence of integral and differential nonlinearities, and time-interleaving mismatch errors such as gain mismatch, bandwidth mismatch, offset mismatch and sampling skew. The research also presents a 52Gb/s ADC-based PAM-4 receiver prototype employing a 32-way time-interleaved, 2-bit/stage, 6-bit SAR ADC and a DSP with a 12-tap FFE and a 2-tap DFE. A new DFE architecture that reduces the complexity of a PAM-4 DFE to that of an NRZ DFE while simultaneously nearly doubling the maximum achievable data rate is presented. The receiver architecture also includes an analog front-end (AFE) consisting of a programmable two stage CTLE. A digital baud-rate CDR’s utilizing a Mueller-Muller phase detector sets the sampling phase. Measurement results show that for 32Gb/s operation a BER < 10⁻âč is achieved for a 30dB loss channel while for 52 Gb/s operation achieves a BER < 10⁻⁶ for a 31dB loss channel with a power efficiency of 8.06pj/bit
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