16 research outputs found
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Fully-passive switched-capacitor techniques for high performance SAR ADC design
In recent years, SAR ADC becomes more and more popular in various low-power applications such as wireless sensors and low energy radios due to its circuit simplicity, high power efficiency, and scaling compatibility. However, its speed is limited by its successive approximation procedures and its power efficiency greatly reduces with the ADC resolution going beyond 10 bit. To address these issues, this thesis proposes to embed two techniques: 1) compressive sensing (CS) and 2) noise shaping (NS) to a conventional SAR ADC. The realization of both techniques are based on fully-passive switched-capacitor techniques.
CS is a recently emerging sampling paradigm, stating that the sparsity of a signal can be exploited to reduce the ADC sampling rate below the Nyquist rate. Different from conventional CS frameworks which require dedicated analog CS encoders, this thesis proposes a fully-passive CS-SAR ADC architecture which only requires minor modification to a conventional SAR ADC. Two chips are fabricated in a 0.13 µm process to prove the concept. One chip is a single-channel CS-SAR ADC which can reduce the ADC conversion rate by 4 times, thus reducing the ADC power by 4 times. In many wireless sensing applications, multiple ADCs are commonly required to sense multi-channel signals such as multi-lead ECG sensing and parallel neural recording. Therefore, the other chip is a multi-channel CS-SAR ADC which can simultaneously convert 4-channel signals with a sampling rate of one channel’s Nyquist rate. At 0.8 V and 1 MS/s, both chips achieve an effective Walden FoM of around 5 fJ/conversion-step.
This thesis also proposes a novel NS SAR ADC architecture that is simple, robust and low power for high-resolution applications. Compared to conventional ∆Σ ADCs, it replaces the power-hungry active integrator with a passive integrator which only requires one switch and two capacitors. Compared to previous 1st-order NS SAR ADC works, it achieves the best NS performance and can be easily extended to 2nd-order. A 1st-order 10-bit NS SAR ADC is fabricated in a 0.13 µm process. Through NS, SNDR increases by 6 dB with OSR doubled, achieving a 12- bit ENOB at OSR = 8. An improved version of a 2nd-order 9-bit NS SAR ADC is designed and simulated in a 40 nm process. The SNDR increases by 10 dB with OSR doubled, achieving a 14-bit ENOB at OSR = 16. At a bandwidth of 312.5 kHz, the Schreier FoM is 181 dB and the Walden FoM is 12.5 fJ/conversion-step, proving that the proposed NS SAR ADC architecture can achieve high resolution and high power efficiency simultaneously.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
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Energy and area efficient techniques for data converters
Data converters are ubiquitous building blocks of a signal chain. The rapid increase in
communication and connectivity devices presents new avenues for pushing the state of
the art analog to digital converters. Techniques for improving resolution, bandwidth,
linearity and bit-error rate, while reducing the power, energy and area is the motivation
for this research. This research focuses on achieving this goal by enabling circuit
techniques, architecture techniques and calibration methods. The following techniques
are proposed for enabling power, area and energy efficient analog to digital converter
techniques.
1. A capacitor switching scheme for successive approximation ADC is introduced to
enable 93.4% energy reduction and 75 % reduction in capacitor area as compared to a
conventional SAR ADCs.
2. Asynchronous correlated level shifting technique for improving current source linearity
and power supply rejection ratio of zero crossing based circuits is proposed. This
technique enables asynchronous ADC architectures for energy efficient system.
3. Unified gain enhancement model is proposed to catalogue gain enhancement techniques.
Class-A+ and Replicated Parallel Gain Enhancement (RPGe) amplifiers are
introduced as parallel gain enhancement techniques for switched capacitor circuits. A
prototype pipelined ADC using RPGE amplifier achieves 74.9 dB SNDR, 90.8 dB SFDR,
87 dB THD at 20 MS/s. Built in 1P4M 0.18 μm technology and operating at 1.3 V supply,
the ADC consumes 5.9 mW. The ADC occupies 3.06 sq. mm and has a figure of
merit of 65 fJ /conversion step. Extracted simulation results of the prototype pipeline
ADC using dynamic RPGE amplifier achieve 74 dB SNDR, 90 dB SFDR, and 85 dB
THD at 30 MS /s in a 0.18 μm process. The ADC consumes 6.6 mW from a 1.3 V
supply and achieves a figure of merit of 40 fJ/C-S.
4. A low-gain amplifier based V-T converter is utilized along with a TDC to replace
the function of flash ADC and the DAC references in a pipeline ADC. The simulated/
extracted performance of the chip is 12bit, 100 MHz in 65nm process while consuming
approximately 8-9 mA from 1 V supply.
5. A measurement technique for detecting and correcting bit-error rate in ADCs is proposed.
This multi-path ADC technique squares the bit-error rate of the ADC without
consuming additional analog power. The area increase is negligible compared to the
conventional modular redundancy techniques. This technique can be applied to digitally
detect and correct single event transients for ADCs. A three-path ADC can restore the
ADC performance independent of the input frequency and number of errors in a single
path.
6. LMS algorithm is used to estimate the VCO non-linearity by using the VCO as a
Nyquist ADC and utilizing a slow but accurate ADC. The simulated ADC performance
improves from 5 bits to 7.8 bits by using a second order fit to the VCO non-linearity
A 250 MHz 14 dB-NF 73 dB-Gain 82 dB-DR Analog Baseband Chain with Digital-Assisted DC-Offset Calibration for Ultra-Wideband
[[abstract]]A 250 MHz analog baseband chain for ultra-wideband was implemented in a 1.2 V 0.13 ¿ m CMOS process. The chip has an active area of 0.8 mm2. In the analog baseband, PGAs and filters are carried out by current-mode amplifiers to achieve wide bandwidth and wide dynamic range of gain, as well as low noise and high linearity. Besides, a current-mode Sallen-Key low-pass filter is adopted for effective rejection of out-of-band interferers. A 6 th-order Chebyshev low-pass filter realized in Gm-C topology is designed in the baseband chain for channel selection. Digitally-assisted DC-offset calibration improves second-order distortion of the entire chain. The design achieves a maximum gain of 73 dB and a dynamic range of 82 dB. Measured noise figure is 14 dB, an IIP3 of -6 dBV, and IIP2 of -5 dBV at the maximum gain mode. The analog baseband chain consumes 56.4 mA under supply of 1.2 V.[[incitationindex]]SCI[[incitationindex]]E
Analog Compressive Sensing for Multi-Channel Neural Recording: Modeling and Circuit Level Implementation
RÉSUMÉ
Dans cette thèse, nous présentons la conception d’un implant d’enregistrement neuronal multicanaux avec un échantillonnage compressé mis en oeuvre avec un procédé de fabrication CMOS à 65 nm.
La réduction de la technologie a˙ecte à la baisse les paramètres des amplificateurs neuronaux couplés en AC, comme la fréquence de coupure basse, en raison de l’e˙et de canal court des transistors MOS.
Nous analysons la fréquence de coupure basse et nous constatons que l’origine de ce problème, dans les technologies avancées, est la diminution de l’impédance d’entrée de l’amplificateur opérationnel de transconductance (OTA) en raison de la fuite d’oxyde de grille à l’entrée des OTA. Nous proposons deux solutions pour réduire la fréquence de coupure basse sans augmenter la valeur des condensateurs de rétroaction de l’étage d’entrée. La première solution est appelée rétroaction positive croisée et la deuxième solution utilise des PMOS à oxyde épais dans la paire de l’entrée di˙érentielle de l’OTA. Il est à noter que pour compresser le signal neuronal, nous utilisons le CS dans le domaine analogique.
Pour la réalisation, un intégrateur à capacité commutée est requis. Les paramètres non idéaux de l’OTA utilisé dans cet intégrateur, tels que le gain fini, la bande passante, la vitesse de balayage et le changement rapide de la sortie. Toutes ces imperfections induisent des erreurs et réduisent le rapport signal sur bruit (SNR) total. Nous avons simulé ces imperfections sur Matlab et Simulink pour définir les spécifications de l’OTA requis. Aussi, pour concevoir les circuits analogiques correspondant aux interfaces neuronales requises, tels qu’un amplificateur neuronal, une référence de tension compacte et à faible consommation d’énergie est requise. Nous avons proposé une référence de tension de faible consommation d’énergie sans utiliser le transistor bipolaire parasite de la technologie CMOS pour diminuer la surface de silicium requise. Finalement, nous avons complété l’encodeur de CS et un convertisseur analogique-numérique à approximation successive (SAR ADC) requis pour la chaine d’enregistrement des signaux neuronaux dans ce projet.----------ABSTRACT
In this thesis we present the design of a multi-channel neural recording implant with analog compressive sensing (CS) in 65 nm process.
Scaling down technology demotes the parameters of AC-coupled neural amplifiers, such as increasing the low-cuto˙ frequency due to the short-channel e˙ects of MOS transistors.
We analyze the low-cuto˙ frequency and find that the main reason of this problem in advanced technologies is decreasing the input resistance of the operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) due to the gate oxide static current leakage in the input of the OTA. In advanced technologies, the gate oxide is thin and some electrons can penetrate to the channel and cause DC current leakage. We proposed two solutions to reduce the low-cuto˙ frequency without increasing the value of the feedback capacitors of the front-end neural amplifier. The first solution is called cross-coupled positive feedback, and the second solution is utilizing thick-oxide PMOS transistors in the input di˙erential pair of the OTA. Compress the neural signal, we utilized the CS method in analog domain.
For its implementation, a switched-capacitor integrator is required. Non-ideal specifications of OTA of CS integrator such as finite gain, bandwidth, slew rate and output swing induce error and reduce the total signal to noise ratio (SNR). We simulated these non-idealities in Matlab and Simulink and extracted the specification of the required OTA. Also, to design analog circuits such as neural amplifier a low power and compact voltage reference is required. We implemented a low-power band-gap reference without utilizing parasitic bipolar transis-tor to decrease the silicon area. At the end, we completed the CS encoder and successive approximation architecture analog-to-digital converter (SAR ADC)
Analysis and design of low-power data converters
In a large number of applications the signal processing is done exploiting both
analog and digital signal processing techniques. In the past digital and analog
circuits were made on separate chip in order to limit the interference and other
side effects, but the actual trend is to realize the whole elaboration chain on a
single System on Chip (SoC). This choice is driven by different reasons such as the
reduction of power consumption, less silicon area occupation on the chip and also
reliability and repeatability. Commonly a large area in a SoC is occupied by digital
circuits, then, usually a CMOS short-channel technological processes optimized to
realize digital circuits is chosen to maximize the performance of the Digital Signal
Proccessor (DSP). Opposite, the short-channel technology nodes do not represent
the best choice for analog circuits. But in a large number of applications, the signals
which are treated have analog nature (microphone, speaker, antenna, accelerometers,
biopotential, etc.), then the input and output interfaces of the processing chip are
analog/mixed-signal conversion circuits. Therefore in a single integrated circuit (IC)
both digital and analog circuits can be found. This gives advantages in term of total
size, cost and power consumption of the SoC. The specific characteristics of CMOS
short-channel processes such as:
• Low breakdown voltage (BV) gives a power supply limit (about 1.2 V).
• High threshold voltage VTH (compared with the available voltage supply) fixed
in order to limit the leakage power consumption in digital applications (of the
order of 0.35 / 0.4V), puts a limit on the voltage dynamic, and creates many
problems with the stacked topologies.
• Threshold voltage dependent on the channel length VTH = f(L) (short channel
effects).
• Low value of the output resistance of the MOS (r0) and gm limited by speed
saturation, both causes contribute to achieving a low intrinsic gain gmr0 = 20
to 26dB.
• Mismatch which brings offset effects on analog circuits.
make the design of high performance analog circuits very difficult. Realizing lowpower
circuits is fundamental in different contexts, and for different reasons: lowering
the power dissipation gives the capability to reduce the batteries size in mobile
devices (laptops, smartphones, cameras, measuring instruments, etc.), increase the
life of remote sensing devices, satellites, space probes, also allows the reduction of
the size and weight of the heat sink. The reduction of power dissipation allows the
realization of implantable biomedical devices that do not damage biological tissue.
For this reason, the analysis and design of low power and high precision analog
circuits is important in order to obtain high performance in technological processes
that are not optimized for such applications. Different ways can be taken to reduce
the effect of the problems related to the technology:
• Circuital level: a circuit-level intervention is possible to solve a specific problem
of the circuit (i.e. Techniques for bandwidth expansion, increase the gain,
power reduction, etc.).
• Digital calibration: it is the highest level to intervene, and generally going to
correct the non-ideal structure through a digital processing, these aims are
based on models of specific errors of the structure.
• Definition of new paradigms.
This work has focused the attention on a very useful mixed-signal circuit: the
pipeline ADC. The pipeline ADCs are widely used for their energy efficiency in
high-precision applications where a resolution of about 10-16 bits and sampling
rates above hundreds of Mega-samples per second (telecommunication, radar, etc.)
are needed. An introduction on the theory of pipeline ADC, its state of the art
and the principal non-idealities that affect the energy efficiency and the accuracy
of this kind of data converters are reported in Chapter 1. Special consideration is
put on low-voltage low-power ADCs. In particular, for ADCs implemented in deep
submicron technology nodes side effects called short channel effects exist opposed to
older technology nodes where undesired effects are not present. An overview of the
short channel effects and their consequences on design, and also power consuption
reduction techniques, with particular emphasis on the specific techniques adopted
in pipelined ADC are reported in Chapter 2. Moreover, another way may be
undertaken to increase the accuracy and the efficiency of an ADC, this way is the
digital calibration. In Chapter 3 an overview on digital calibration techniques, and
furthermore a new calibration technique based on Volterra kernels are reported. In
some specific applications, such as software defined radios or micropower sensor,
some circuits should be reconfigurable to be suitable for different radio standard
or process signals with different charateristics. One of this building blocks is the
ADC that should be able to reconfigure the resolution and conversion frequency. A
reconfigurable voltage-scalable ADC pipeline capable to adapt its voltage supply
starting from the required conversion frequency was developed, and the results are
reported in Chapter 4. In Chapter 5, a pipeline ADC based on a novel paradigm for
the feedback loop and its theory is described
Advanced CMOS Integrated Circuit Design and Application
The recent development of various application systems and platforms, such as 5G, B5G, 6G, and IoT, is based on the advancement of CMOS integrated circuit (IC) technology that enables them to implement high-performance chipsets. In addition to development in the traditional fields of analog and digital integrated circuits, the development of CMOS IC design and application in high-power and high-frequency operations, which was previously thought to be possible only with compound semiconductor technology, is a core technology that drives rapid industrial development. This book aims to highlight advances in all aspects of CMOS integrated circuit design and applications without discriminating between different operating frequencies, output powers, and the analog/digital domains. Specific topics in the book include: Next-generation CMOS circuit design and application; CMOS RF/microwave/millimeter-wave/terahertz-wave integrated circuits and systems; CMOS integrated circuits specially used for wireless or wired systems and applications such as converters, sensors, interfaces, frequency synthesizers/generators/rectifiers, and so on; Algorithm and signal-processing methods to improve the performance of CMOS circuits and systems
A Closed-Loop Bidirectional Brain-Machine Interface System For Freely Behaving Animals
A brain-machine interface (BMI) creates an artificial pathway between the brain and the external world. The research and applications of BMI have received enormous attention among the scientific community as well as the public in the past decade. However, most research of BMI relies on experiments with tethered or sedated animals, using rack-mount equipment, which significantly restricts the experimental methods and paradigms. Moreover, most research to date has focused on neural signal recording or decoding in an open-loop method. Although the use of a closed-loop, wireless BMI is critical to the success of an extensive range of neuroscience research, it is an approach yet to be widely used, with the electronics design being one of the major bottlenecks. The key goal of this research is to address the design challenges of a closed-loop, bidirectional BMI by providing innovative solutions from the neuron-electronics interface up to the system level.
Circuit design innovations have been proposed in the neural recording front-end, the neural feature extraction module, and the neural stimulator. Practical design issues of the bidirectional neural interface, the closed-loop controller and the overall system integration have been carefully studied and discussed.To the best of our knowledge, this work presents the first reported portable system to provide all required hardware for a closed-loop sensorimotor neural interface, the first wireless sensory encoding experiment conducted in freely swimming animals, and the first bidirectional study of the hippocampal field potentials in freely behaving animals from sedation to sleep.
This thesis gives a comprehensive survey of bidirectional BMI designs, reviews the key design trade-offs in neural recorders and stimulators, and summarizes neural features and mechanisms for a successful closed-loop operation. The circuit and system design details are presented with bench testing and animal experimental results. The methods, circuit techniques, system topology, and experimental paradigms proposed in this work can be used in a wide range of relevant neurophysiology research and neuroprosthetic development, especially in experiments using freely behaving animals
Circuits and Systems Advances in Near Threshold Computing
Modern society is witnessing a sea change in ubiquitous computing, in which people have embraced computing systems as an indispensable part of day-to-day existence. Computation, storage, and communication abilities of smartphones, for example, have undergone monumental changes over the past decade. However, global emphasis on creating and sustaining green environments is leading to a rapid and ongoing proliferation of edge computing systems and applications. As a broad spectrum of healthcare, home, and transport applications shift to the edge of the network, near-threshold computing (NTC) is emerging as one of the promising low-power computing platforms. An NTC device sets its supply voltage close to its threshold voltage, dramatically reducing the energy consumption. Despite showing substantial promise in terms of energy efficiency, NTC is yet to see widescale commercial adoption. This is because circuits and systems operating with NTC suffer from several problems, including increased sensitivity to process variation, reliability problems, performance degradation, and security vulnerabilities, to name a few. To realize its potential, we need designs, techniques, and solutions to overcome these challenges associated with NTC circuits and systems. The readers of this book will be able to familiarize themselves with recent advances in electronics systems, focusing on near-threshold computing
Digital and Mixed Domain Hardware Reduction Algorithms and Implementations for Massive MIMO
Emerging 5G and 6G based wireless communications systems largely rely on multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems to reduce inherently extensive path losses, facilitate high data rates, and high spatial diversity. Massive MIMO systems used in mmWave and sub-THz applications consists of hundreds perhaps thousands of antenna elements at base stations. Digital beamforming techniques provide the highest flexibility and better degrees of freedom for phased antenna arrays as compared to its analog and hybrid alternatives but has the highest hardware complexity.
Conventional digital beamformers at the receiver require a dedicated analog to digital converter (ADC) for every antenna element, leading to ADCs for elements. The number of ADCs is the key deterministic factor for the power consumption of an antenna array system. The digital hardware consists of fast Fourier transform (FFT) cores with a multiplier complexity of (N log2N) for an element system to generate multiple beams. It is required to reduce the mixed and digital hardware complexities in MIMO systems to reduce the cost and the power consumption, while maintaining high performance.
The well-known concept has been in use for ADCs to achieve reduced complexities. An extension of the architecture to multi-dimensional domain is explored in this dissertation to implement a single port ADC to replace ADCs in an element system, using the correlation of received signals in the spatial domain. This concept has applications in conventional uniform linear arrays (ULAs) as well as in focal plane array (FPA) receivers.
Our analysis has shown that sparsity in the spatio-temporal frequency domain can be exploited to reduce the number of ADCs from N to where . By using the limited field of view of practical antennas, multiple sub-arrays are combined without interferences to achieve a factor of K increment in the information carrying capacity of the ADC systems. Applications of this concept include ULAs and rectangular array systems. Experimental verifications were done for a element, 1.8 - 2.1 GHz wideband array system to sample using ADCs.
This dissertation proposes that frequency division multiplexing (FDM) receiver outputs at an intermediate frequency (IF) can pack multiple (M) narrowband channels with a guard band to avoid interferences. The combined output is then sampled using a single wideband ADC and baseband channels are retrieved in the digital domain. Measurement results were obtained by employing a element, 28 GHz antenna array system to combine channels together to achieve a 75% reduction of ADC requirement.
Implementation of FFT cores in the digital domain is not always exact because of the finite precision. Therefore, this dissertation explores the possibility of approximating the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) matrix to achieve reduced hardware complexities at an allowable cost of accuracy. A point approximate DFT (ADFT) core was implemented on digital hardware using radix-32 to achieve savings in cost, size, weight and power (C-SWaP) and synthesized for ASIC at 45-nm technology