10 research outputs found

    Design of sigma-delta modulators for analog-to-digital conversion intensively using passive circuits

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    This thesis presents the analysis, design implementation and experimental evaluation of passiveactive discrete-time and continuous-time Sigma-Delta (ΣΔ) modulators (ΣΔMs) analog-todigital converters (ADCs). Two prototype circuits were manufactured. The first one, a discrete-time 2nd-order ΣΔM, was designed in a 130 nm CMOS technology. This prototype confirmed the validity of the ultra incomplete settling (UIS) concept used for implementing the passive integrators. This circuit, clocked at 100 MHz and consuming 298 μW, achieves DR/SNR/SNDR of 78.2/73.9/72.8 dB, respectively, for a signal bandwidth of 300 kHz. This results in a Walden FoMW of 139.3 fJ/conv.-step and Schreier FoMS of 168 dB. The final prototype circuit is a highly area and power efficient ΣΔM using a combination of a cascaded topology, a continuous-time RC loop filter and switched-capacitor feedback paths. The modulator requires only two low gain stages that are based on differential pairs. A systematic design methodology based on genetic algorithm, was used, which allowed decreasing the circuit’s sensitivity to the circuit components’ variations. This continuous-time, 2-1 MASH ΣΔM has been designed in a 65 nm CMOS technology and it occupies an area of just 0.027 mm2. Measurement results show that this modulator achieves a peak SNR/SNDR of 76/72.2 dB and DR of 77dB for an input signal bandwidth of 10 MHz, while dissipating 1.57 mW from a 1 V power supply voltage. The ΣΔM achieves a Walden FoMW of 23.6 fJ/level and a Schreier FoMS of 175 dB. The innovations proposed in this circuit result, both, in the reduction of the power consumption and of the chip size. To the best of the author’s knowledge the circuit achieves the lowest Walden FOMW for ΣΔMs operating at signal bandwidth from 5 MHz to 50 MHz reported to date

    CMOS ASIC Design of Multi-frequency Multi-constellation GNSS Front-ends

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    With the emergence of the new global navigation satellite systems (GNSSs) such as Galileo, COMPASS and GLONASS, the US Global Positioning System (GPS) has new competitors. This multiplicity of constellations will offer new services and a much better satellite coverage. Public regulated service (PRS) is one of these new services that Galileo, the first global positioning service under civilian control, will offers. The PRS is a proprietary encrypted navigation designed to be more reliable and robust against jamming and provides premium quality in terms of position and timing and continuity of service, but it requires the use of FEs with extended capabilities. The project that this thesis starts from, aims to develop a dual frequency (E1 and E6) PRS receiver with a focus on a solution for professional applications that combines affordability and robustness. To limit the production cost, the choice of a monolithic design in a multi-purpose 0.18 µm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology have been selected, and to reduce the susceptibility to interference, the targeted receiver is composed of two independent FEs. The first ASIC described here is such FEs bundle. Each FE is composed of a radio frequency (RF) chain that includes a low-noise amplifier (LNA), a quadrature mixer, a frequency synthesizer (FS), two intermediate frequency (IF) filters, two variable-gain amplifiers (VGAs) and two 6-bit flash analog-to-digital converters (ADCs). Each have an IF bandwidth of 50 MHz to accommodate the wide-band PRS signals. The FE achieves a 30 dB of dynamic gain control at each channel. The complete receivers occupies a die area of 11.5 mm2 while consuming 115 mW from a supply of a 1.8 V. The second ASIC that targets civilian applications, is a reconfigurable single-channel FE that permits to exploit the interoperability among GNSSs. The FE can operate in two modes: a ¿narrow-band mode¿, dedicated to Beidou-B1 with an IF bandwidth of 8 MHz, and a ¿wide-band mode¿ with an IF bandwidth of 23 MHz, which can accommodate simultaneous reception of Beidou-B1/GPS-L1/Galileo-E1. These two modes consumes respectively 22.85 mA and 28.45 mA from a 1.8 V supply. Developed with the best linearity in mind, the FE shows very good linearity with an input-referred 1 dB compression point (IP1dB) of better than -27.6 dBm. The FE gain is stepwise flexible from 39 dB and to a maximum of 58 dB. The complete FE occupies a die area of only 2.6 mm2 in a 0.18 µm CMOS. To also accommodate the wide-band PRS signals in the IF section of the FE, a highly selective wide-tuning-range 4th-order Gm-C elliptic low-pass filter is used. It features an innovative continuous tuning circuit that adjusts the bias current of the Gm cell¿s input stage to control the cutoff frequency. With this circuit, the power consumption is proportional to the cutoff frequency thus the power efficiency is achieved while keeping the linearity near constant. Thanks to a Gm switching technique, which permit to keep the signal path switchless, the filter shows an extended tuning of the cutoff frequency that covers continuously a range from 7.4 MHz to 27.4 MHz. Moreover the abrupt roll-off of up to 66 dB/octave, can mitigate out-of-band interference. The filter consumes 2.1 mA and 7.5 mA at its lowest and highest cutoff frequencies respectively, and its active area occupies, 0.23 mm2. It achieves a high input-referred third-order intercept point (IIP3) of up to -1.3 dBVRMS

    Digitally-assisted, ultra-low power circuits and systems for medical applications

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2010.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 219-225).In recent years, trends in the medical industry have created a growing demand for a variety of implantable medical devices. At the same time, advances in integrated circuits techniques, particularly in CMOS, have opened possibilities for advanced implantable systems that are very small and consume minimal energy. Minimizing the volume of medical implants is important as it allows for less invasive procedures and greater comfort to patients. Minimizing energy consumption is imperative as batteries must last at least a decade without replacement. Two primary functions that consume energy in medical implants are sensor interfaces that collect information from biomedical signals, and radios that allow the implant to communicate with a base-station outside of the body. The general focus of this work was the development of circuits and systems that minimize the size and energy required to carry out these two functions. The first part of this work focuses on laying down the theoretical framework for an ultra-low power radio, including advances to the literature in the area of super-regeneration. The second part includes the design of a transceiver optimized for medical implants, and its implementation in a CMOS process. The final part describes the design of a sensor interface that leverages novel analog and digital techniques to reduce the system's size and improve its functionality. This final part was developed in conjunction with Marcus Yip.by Jose L. Bohorquez.Ph.D

    Jitter reduction techniques for digital audio.

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    by Tsang Yick Man, Steven.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1997.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 94-99).ABSTRACT --- p.iACKNOWLEDGMENT --- p.iiLIST OF GLOSSARY --- p.iiiChapter 1 --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1Chapter 1.1 --- What is the jitter ? --- p.3Chapter 2 --- WHY DOES JITTER OCCUR IN DIGITAL AUDIO ? --- p.4Chapter 2.1 --- Poorly-designed Phase Locked Loop ( PLL ) --- p.4Chapter 2.1.1 --- Digital data problem --- p.7Chapter 2.2 --- Sampling jitter or clock jitter ( Δti) --- p.9Chapter 2.3 --- Waveform distortion --- p.12Chapter 2.4 --- Logic induced jitter --- p.17Chapter 2.4.1 --- Digital noise mechanisms --- p.20Chapter 2.4.2 --- Different types of D-type flop-flip chips are linked below for ease of comparison --- p.21Chapter 2.4.3 --- Ground bounce --- p.22Chapter 2.5 --- Power supply high frequency noise --- p.23Chapter 2.6 --- Interface Jitter --- p.25Chapter 2.7 --- Cross-talk --- p.28Chapter 2.8 --- Inter-Symbol-Interference (ISI) --- p.28Chapter 2.9 --- Baseline wander --- p.29Chapter 2.10 --- Noise jitter --- p.30Chapter 2.11 --- FIFO jitter reduction chips --- p.31Chapter 3 --- JITTER REDUCTION TECHNIQUES --- p.33Chapter 3.1 --- Why using two-stage phase-locked loop (PLL ) ?Chapter 3.1.1 --- The PLL circuit components --- p.35Chapter 3.1.2 --- The PLL timing specifications --- p.36Chapter 3.2 --- Analog phase-locked loop (APLL ) circuit usedin second stage --- p.38Chapter 3.3 --- All digital phase-locked loop (ADPLL ) circuit used in second stage --- p.40Chapter 3.4 --- ADPLL design --- p.42Chapter 3.4.1 --- "Different of K counter value of ADPLL are listed for comparison with M=512, N=256, Kd=2" --- p.46Chapter 3.4.2 --- Computer simulated results and experimental results of the ADPLL --- p.47Chapter 3.4.3 --- PLL design notes --- p.58Chapter 3.5 --- Different of the all digital Phase-Locked Loop (ADPLL ) and the analogue Phase-Locked Loop (APLL ) are listed for comparison --- p.65Chapter 3.6 --- Discrete transistor oscillator --- p.68Chapter 3.7 --- Discrete transistor oscillator circuit operation --- p.69Chapter 3.8 --- The advantage and disadvantage of using external discrete oscillator --- p.71Chapter 3.9 --- Background of using high-precision oscillators --- p.72Chapter 3.9.1 --- The temperature compensated crystal circuit operation --- p.73Chapter 3.9.2 --- The temperature compensated circuit design notes --- p.75Chapter 3.10 --- The discrete voltage reference circuit operation --- p.76Chapter 3.10.1 --- Comparing the different types of Op-amps that can be used as a voltage comparator --- p.79Chapter 3.10.2 --- Precaution of separate CMOS chips Vdd and Vcc --- p.80Chapter 3.11 --- Board level jitter reduction method --- p.81Chapter 3.12 --- Digital audio interface chips --- p.82Chapter 3.12.1 --- Different brand of the digital interface receiver (DIR) chips and clock modular are listed for comparison --- p.84Chapter 4. --- APPLICATION CIRCUIT BLOCK DIAGRAMS OF JITTER REDUCTION AND CLOCK RECOVERY --- p.85Chapter 5 --- CONCLUSIONS --- p.90Chapter 5.1 --- Summary of the research --- p.90Chapter 5.2 --- Suggestions for further development --- p.92Chapter 5.3 --- Instrument listing that used in this thesis --- p.93Chapter 6 --- REFERENCES --- p.94Chapter 7 --- APPENDICES --- p.100Chapter 7.1.1 --- Phase instability in frequency dividersChapter 7.1.2 --- The effect of clock tree on Tskew on ASIC chipChapter 7.1.3 --- Digital audio transmission----Why jitter is important?Chapter 7.1.4 --- Overview of digital audio interface data structuresChapter 7.1.5 --- Typical frequency Vs temperature variations curve of Quartz crystalsChapter 7.2 --- IC specification used in these research projec

    A 0.5–1.1-V Adaptive Bypassing SAR ADC Utilizing the Oscillation-Cycle Information of a VCO-Based Comparator

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    Techniques for high-performance digital frequency synthesis and phase control

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-190).This thesis presents a 3.6-GHz, 500-kHz bandwidth digital [delta][sigma] frequency synthesizer architecture that leverages a recently invented noise-shaping time-to-digital converter (TDC) and an all-digital quantization noise cancellation technique to achieve excellent in-band and out-of-band phase noise, respectively. In addition, a passive digital-to-analog converter (DAC) structure is proposed as an efficient interface between the digital loop filter and a conventional hybrid voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) to create a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO). An asynchronous divider structure is presented which lowers the required TDC range and avoids the divide-value-dependent delay variation. The prototype is implemented in a 0.13-am CMOS process and its active area occupies 0.95 mm². Operating under 1.5 V, the core parts, excluding the VCO output buffer, dissipate 26 mA. Measured phase noise at 3.67 GHz achieves -108 dBc/Hz and -150 dBc/Hz at 400 kHz and 20 MHz, respectively. Integrated phase noise at this carrier frequency yields 204 fs of jitter (measured from 1 kHz to 40 MHz). In addition, a 3.2-Gb/s delay-locked loop (DLL) in a 0.18-[mu]m CMOS for chip-tochip communications is presented. By leveraging the fractional-N synthesizer technique, this architecture provides a digitally-controlled delay adjustment with a fine resolution and infinite range. The provided delay resolution is less sensitive to the process, voltage, and temperature variations than conventional techniques. A new [delta][sigma] modulator enables a compact and low-power implementation of this architecture. A simple bang-bang detector is used for phase detection. The prototype operates at a 1.8-V supply voltage with a current consumption of 55 mA. The phase resolution and differential rms clock jitter are 1.4 degrees and 3.6 ps, respectively.by Chun-Ming Hsu.Ph.D

    Numerical and Evolutionary Optimization 2020

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    This book was established after the 8th International Workshop on Numerical and Evolutionary Optimization (NEO), representing a collection of papers on the intersection of the two research areas covered at this workshop: numerical optimization and evolutionary search techniques. While focusing on the design of fast and reliable methods lying across these two paradigms, the resulting techniques are strongly applicable to a broad class of real-world problems, such as pattern recognition, routing, energy, lines of production, prediction, and modeling, among others. This volume is intended to serve as a useful reference for mathematicians, engineers, and computer scientists to explore current issues and solutions emerging from these mathematical and computational methods and their applications

    Proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC 1990)

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    Presented here are the proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC), held June 17-20, 1990 in Ottawa, Canada. Topics covered include future mobile satellite communications concepts, aeronautical applications, modulation and coding, propagation and experimental systems, mobile terminal equipment, network architecture and control, regulatory and policy considerations, vehicle antennas, and speech compression

    GSI Scientific Report 2007 [GSI Report 2008-1]

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