142 research outputs found
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Low-power high-speed ADC design techniques in scaled CMOS process
The power consumption of a single-channel successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital (ADC) tends to linearly increase with its sampling rate (f[subscript s]), when f[subscript s] is small. However, when f[subscript s] passes a certain point for a given technology node, the ADC power P increases at much higher rate and the normalized power efficiency (P/f[subscript s]) starts to degrade rapidly. To enhance the conversion speed of SAR ADC, while maintaining a good power efficiency, this thesis presents speed-enhancing techniques for SAR ADC in nano-scale CMOS technologies. First chapter presents a 2b/cycle hybrid SAR architecture with only 1 differential capacitor-DAC (CDAC). Unlike prior multi-bit/cycle SAR works that make use of only the DAC differential mode (DM) voltage, the proposed architecture exploits both the DM and the common mode (CM). By using two degrees of freedom, 2b/cycle conversion technique can boost the f[subscript s] of the ADC without any additional DAC arrays. High-speed ADCs can boost the conversion speed not only by increasing the f[subscript s] of a single-channel ADC, but also by time-interleaving multiple ADC sub-channels running at a lower rate. For an N-channel time-interleaved (TI) SAR ADC operating at f[subscript s], each sub-SAR channel only needs to operate at f[subscript s]=N. Therefore, each sub-SAR can operate in the linear power versus speed region, leading to a significant power saving compared to a single-channel ADC running at the same sampling rate. Despite of its power efficiency, TI-ADC suffers from mismatches among sub-ADC channels, including gain, offset, and timing mismatches. Among them, timing skew is one of the most difficult errors to calibrate as it is nontrivial to extract and its induced error depends on both the frequency and the amplitude of the input signal. Second chapter of this thesis presents a TI-SAR with a fast variance-based timing-skew calibration technique. It uses a single-comparator based window detector (WD) to calibrate the timing skew. The WD suppresses variance estimation errors and allow precise variance estimation from a significantly small number of samples. It has low-hardware cost and orders of magnitude faster convergence speed compared to prior variance-based timing-skew calibration technique. The last chapter presents another TI-SAR with mean absolute deviation (MAD) based timing-skew calibration technique. In addition to all the advantages presented with the fast variance-based timing-skew calibration technique, the proposed technique further reduces the digital computation power by 50% by eliminating the squaring operations, which are essential in variance-based calibration techniqueElectrical and Computer Engineerin
Design of Energy-Efficient A/D Converters with Partial Embedded Equalization for High-Speed Wireline Receiver Applications
As the data rates of wireline communication links increases, channel impairments such as skin effect, dielectric loss, fiber dispersion, reflections and cross-talk become more pronounced. This warrants more interest in analog-to-digital converter (ADC)-based serial link receivers, as they allow for more complex and flexible back-end digital signal processing (DSP) relative to binary or mixed-signal receivers. Utilizing this back-end DSP allows for complex digital equalization and more bandwidth-efficient modulation schemes, while also displaying reduced process/voltage/temperature (PVT) sensitivity. Furthermore, these architectures offer straightforward design translation and can directly leverage the area and power scaling offered by new CMOS technology nodes. However, the power consumption of the ADC front-end and subsequent digital signal processing is a major issue. Embedding partial equalization inside the front-end ADC can potentially result in lowering the complexity of back-end DSP and/or decreasing the ADC resolution requirement, which results in a more energy-effcient receiver. This dissertation presents efficient implementations for multi-GS/s time-interleaved ADCs with partial embedded equalization. First prototype details a 6b 1.6GS/s ADC with a novel embedded redundant-cycle 1-tap DFE structure in 90nm CMOS. The other two prototypes explain more complex 6b 10GS/s ADCs with efficiently embedded feed-forward equalization (FFE) and decision feedback equalization (DFE) in 65nm CMOS. Leveraging a time-interleaved successive approximation ADC architecture, new structures for embedded DFE and FFE are proposed with low power/area overhead. Measurement results over FR4 channels verify the effectiveness of proposed embedded equalization schemes. The comparison of fabricated prototypes against state-of-the-art general-purpose ADCs at similar speed/resolution range shows comparable performances, while the proposed architectures include embedded equalization as well
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Design Techniques for High-Performance SAR A/D Converters
The design of electronics needs to account for the non-ideal characteristics of the device technologies used to realize practical circuits. This is particularly important in mixed analog-digital design since the best device technologies are very different for digital compared to analog circuits. One solution for this problem is to use a calibration correction approach to remove the errors introduced by devices, but this adds complexity and power dissipation, as well as reducing operation speed, and so must be optimised. This thesis addresses such an approach to improve the performance of certain types of analog-to-digital converter (ADC) used in advanced telecommunications, where speed, accuracy and power dissipation currently limit applications. The thesis specifically focuses on the design of compensation circuits for use in successive approximation register (SAR) ADCs.
ADCs are crucial building blocks in communication systems, in general, and for mobile networks, in particular. The recently launched fifth generation of mobile networks (5G) has required new ADC circuit techniques to meet the higher speed and lower power dissipation requirements for 5G technology. The SAR has become one of the most favoured architectures for designing high-performance ADCs, but the successive nature of the circuit operation makes it difficult to reach ∼GS/s sampling rates at reasonable power consumption.
Here, two calibration techniques for high-performance SAR ADCs are presented. The first uses an on-chip stochastic-based mismatch calibration technique that is able to accurately compute and compensate for the mismatch of a capacitive DAC in a SAR ADC. The stochastic nature of the proposed calibration method enables determination of the mismatch of the CAPDAC with a resolution much better than that of the DAC. This allows the unit capacitor to scale down to as low as 280aF for a 9-bit DAC. Since the CAP-DAC causes a large part of the overall dynamic power consumption and directly determines both the sizes of the driving and sampling switches and the size of the input capacitive load of the ADC and the kT/C noise power, a small CAP-DAC helps the power efficiency. To validate the proposed calibration idea, a 10-bit asynchronous SAR ADC was fabricated in 28-nm CMOS. Measurement results show that the proposed stochastic calibration improves the ADC’s SFDR and SNDR by 14.9 dB, 11.5 dB, respectively. After calibration, the fabricated SAR ADC achieves an ENOB of 9.14 bit at a sampling rate of 85 MS/s, resulting in a Walden FoM of 10.9 fJ/c-s.
The second calibration technique is a timing-skew calibration for a time-interleaved (TI) SAR ADC that calibrates/computes the inter-channel timing and offset mismatch simultaneously. Simulation results show the effectiveness of this calibration method. When used together, the proposed mismatch calibration technique and the timing-skew
calibration technique enables a TI SAR ADC to be designed that can achieve a sampling rate of ∼GS/s with 10-bit resolution and a power consumption as low as ∼10mW; specifications that satisfy the requirements of 5G technology
A 6-bit 2GS/s CMOS Time-Interleaved ADC for Analysis of Mixed-Signal Calibration Techniques
A 6-bit 2-GS/s time interleaved (TI) successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) is designed and fabricated in a 0.13 μm CMOS process. The architecture uses 8 time-interleaved track-and-hold amplifiers (THA), and 16 SARADC’s. Thechipincludes (i) a programmable delay cell array to adjust the interleaved sampling phase, and (ii) a 12 Gbps low voltage differential signaling (LVDS) interface. These blocks make the fabricated ADC an excellent platform to evaluate mixed-signal calibration techniques, which are of great interest for application in high-speed optical systems. Measurements of the fabricated ADC show 33.9 dB of peak signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) and 192 mW of power consumption at 1.2 Vhttp://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=6820267Fil: Reyes, Benjamín. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales; Argentina.Fil: Tealdi, Lucas. Fundación Fulgor; Argentina.Fil: Paulina, German. Fundación Fulgor; Argentina.Fil: Labat, Emanuel. Fundación Fulgor; Argentina.Fil: Sánchez, Raúl. Fundación Fulgor; Argentina.Fil: Mandolesi, Pablo. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Grupo de Investigación en Sistemas Electrónicos y Electromecatrónicos (GISEE). Laboratorio de Micro y Nano Electrónica (LMNE); Argentina.Fil: Hueda, Mario. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Laboratorio de Comunicaciones Digitales; Argentina.Fil: Reyes, Benjamín. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Laboratorio de Comunicaciones Digitales; Argentina.Telecomunicacione
A 1.67 pJ/Conversion-step 8-bit SAR-Flash ADC Architecture in 90-nm CMOS Technology
A novice advanced architecture of 8-bit analog todigital converter is introduced and analyzed in this work. Thestructure of proposed ADC is based on the sub-ranging ADCarchitecture in which a 4-bit resolution flash-ADC is utilized. Theproposed ADC architecture is designed by employing a comparatorwhich is equipped with common mode current feedback andgain boosting technique (CMFD-GB) and a residue amplifier. Theproposed 8 bits ADC structure can achieve the speed of 140 megasamplesper second. The proposed ADC architecture is designedat a resolution of 8 bits at 10 MHz sampling frequency. DNL andINL values of the proposed design are -0.94/1.22 and -1.19/1.19respectively. The ADC design dissipates a power of 1.24 mWwith the conversion speed of 0.98 ns. The magnitude of SFDRand SNR from the simulations at Nyquist input is 39.77 and 35.62decibel respectively. Simulations are performed on a SPICE basedtool in 90 nm CMOS technology. The comparison shows betterperformance for the proposed ADC design in comparison toother ADC architectures regarding speed, resolution and powerconsumption
A 1.67 pJ/Conversion-step 8-bit SAR-Flash ADC Architecture in 90-nm CMOS Technology
A novice advanced architecture of 8-bit analog todigital converter is introduced and analyzed in this work. Thestructure of proposed ADC is based on the sub-ranging ADCarchitecture in which a 4-bit resolution flash-ADC is utilized. Theproposed ADC architecture is designed by employing a comparatorwhich is equipped with common mode current feedback andgain boosting technique (CMFD-GB) and a residue amplifier. Theproposed 8 bits ADC structure can achieve the speed of 140 megasamplesper second. The proposed ADC architecture is designedat a resolution of 8 bits at 10 MHz sampling frequency. DNL andINL values of the proposed design are -0.94/1.22 and -1.19/1.19respectively. The ADC design dissipates a power of 1.24 mWwith the conversion speed of 0.98 ns. The magnitude of SFDRand SNR from the simulations at Nyquist input is 39.77 and 35.62decibel respectively. Simulations are performed on a SPICE basedtool in 90 nm CMOS technology. The comparison shows betterperformance for the proposed ADC design in comparison toother ADC architectures regarding speed, resolution and powerconsumption
Design of High-Speed Power-Efficient A/D Converters for Wireline ADC-Based Receiver Applications
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
Digital background calibration algorithm and its FPGA implementation for timing mismatch correction of time-interleaved ADC
Sample time error can degrade the performance of time-interleaved analog to digital converters (TIADCs). A fully digital background algorithm is presented in this paper to estimate and correct the timing mismatch errors between four interleaved channels, together with its hardware implementation. The proposed algorithm provides low computation burden and high performance. It is based on the simplified representation of the coefficients of the Lagrange interpolator. Simulation results show that it can suppress error tones in all of the Nyquist band. Results show that, for a four-channel TIADC with 10-bit resolution, the proposed algorithm improves the signal to noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) and spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) by 19.27 dB and 35.2 dB, respectively. This analysis was done for an input signal frequency of 0.09fs. In the case of an input signal frequency of 0.45fs, an improvement by 33.06 dB and 43.14 dB is respectively achieved in SNDR and SFDR. In addition to the simulation, the algorithm was implemented in hardware for real-time evaluation. The low computational burden of the algorithm allowed an FPGA implementation with a low logic resource usage and a high system clock speed (926.95 MHz for four channel algorithm implementation). Thus, the proposed architecture can be used as a post-processing algorithm in host processors for data acquisition systems to improve the performance of TIADC
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