3,461 research outputs found

    A low power and low signal 4 bit 50MS/s double sampling pipelined ADC for monolithie active pixel sensors

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    A 4 bit very low power and low incoming signal analog to digital converter (ADC) using a double sampling switched capacitor technique, designed for use in CMOS monolithic active pixels sensor readout, has been implemented in 0.35μm CMOS technology. A non-resetting sample and hold stage is integrated to amplify the incoming signal by 4. This first stage compensates both the amplifier offset effect and the input common mode voltage fluctuations. The converter is composed of a 2.5 bit pipeline stage followed by a 2 bit flash stage. This prototype consists of 4 ADC double-channels; each one is sampling at 50MS/s and dissipates only 2.6mW at 3.3V supply voltage. A bias pulsing stage is integrated in the circuit. Therefore, the analog part is switched OFF or ON in less than 1μs. The size for the layout is 80μm*0.9mm. This corresponds to the pitch of 4 pixel columns, each one is 20μm wide

    A low power and low signal 4 bit 50MS/s double sampling pipelined ADC for Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

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    International audienceA 4 bit very low power and low incoming signal analog to digital converter (ADC) using a double sampling switched capacitor technique, designed for use in CMOS monolithic active pixels sensor readout, has been implemented in 0.35μm CMOS technology. A non-resetting sample and hold stage is integrated to amplify the incoming signal by 4. This first stage compensates both the amplifier offset effect and the input common mode voltage fluctuations. The converter is composed of a 2.5 bit pipeline stage followed by a 2 bit flash stage. This prototype consists of 4 ADC double-channels; each one is sampling at 50MS/s and dissipates only 2.6mW at 3.3V supply voltage. A bias pulsing stage is integrated in the circuit. Therefore, the analog part is switched OFF or ON in less than 1μs. The size for the layout is 80μm*0.9mm. This corresponds to the pitch of 4 pixel columns, each one is 20μm wide

    High-Speed Low-Power Analog to Digital Converter for Digital Beam Forming Systems

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    abstract: Time-interleaved analog to digital converters (ADCs) have become critical components in high-speed communication systems. Consumers demands for smaller size, more bandwidth and more features from their communication systems have driven the market to use modern complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technologies with shorter channel-length transistors and hence a more compact design. Downscaling the supply voltage which is required in submicron technologies benefits digital circuits in terms of power and area. Designing accurate analog circuits, however becomes more challenging due to the less headroom. One way to overcome this problem is to use calibration to compensate for the loss of accuracy in analog circuits. Time-interleaving increases the effective data conversion rate in ADCs while keeping the circuit requirements the same. However, this technique needs special considerations as other design issues associated with using parallel identical channels emerge. The first and the most important is the practical issue of timing mismatch between channels, also called sample-time error, which can directly affect the performance of the ADC. Many techniques have been developed to tackle this issue both in analog and digital domains. Most of these techniques have high complexities especially when the number of channels exceeds 2 and some of them are only valid when input signal is a single tone sinusoidal which limits the application. This dissertation proposes a sample-time error calibration technique which bests the previous techniques in terms of simplicity, and also could be used with arbitrary input signals. A 12-bit 650 MSPS pipeline ADC with 1.5 GHz analog bandwidth for digital beam forming systems is designed in IBM 8HP BiCMOS 130 nm technology. A front-end sample-and-hold amplifier (SHA) was also designed to compare with an SHA-less design in terms of performance, power and area. Simulation results show that the proposed technique is able to improve the SNDR by 20 dB for a mismatch of 50% of the sampling period and up to 29 dB at 37% of the Nyquist frequency. The designed ADC consumes 122 mW in each channel and the clock generation circuit consumes 142 mW. The ADC achieves 68.4 dB SNDR for an input of 61 MHz.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    A 12-bit, 40 msamples/s, low-power, low-area pipeline analog-to-digital converter in CMOS 0.18 mum technology.

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    With advancements in digital signal processing in recent years, the need for high-speed, high-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) which can be used in the analog front-end has been increasing. Some examples of these applications are image and video signal processing, wireless communications and asymmetrical digital subscriber line (ADSL). In CMOS integrated circuit design, it is desirable to integrate the digital circuit and the ADC in one microchip to reduce the cost of fabrication. Consequently the power dissipation and area of the ADCs are important design factors. The original contributions in this thesis are as follows. Since the performance of pipeline ADCs significantly depends on the op-amps and comparators circuits, the performance of various comparators is analyzed and the effect of op-amp topology on the performance of pipeline ADCs is investigated. This thesis also presents a novel architecture for design of low-power and low-area pipelined ADCs which will be more useful for very low voltage applications in the future. At the schematic level, a low-power CMOS implementation of the current-mode MDAC is presented and an improved voltage comparator is designed. With the proposed design and the optimization methodology it is possible to reduce power dissipation and area compared with conventional fully differential schemes.Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Paper copy at Leddy Library: Theses & Major Papers - Basement, West Bldg. / Call Number: Thesis2004 .M64. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-01, page: 0281. Adviser: C. Chen. Thesis (M.A.Sc.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 2004

    A 12-bit SAR ADC for a flexible tactile sensor

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    Successive Approximation Register (SAR) Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADC) are some of the most efficient ADC topologies available, allowing excellent performance values at low power consumption across a wide range of sampling frequencies. The proposed ADC is aimed at a tactile sensor application, requiring a low-noise and lowpower solution. In addition, it should have high SNDR to detect even the weakest signals with precision. This thesis presents a 12-bit 400 kS/s SAR ADC implemented in a 180 nm CMOS technology for such a task. The designed SAR ADC uses a hybrid R-C DAC topology consisting of a chargescaling MSB DAC and a voltage-scaling LSB DAC, allowing a good trade-off between power consumption, layout area and performance while keeping the total DAC capacitance under reasonable values. Bootstrapped switches have been implemented to preserve high-linearity during the sampling period. A double-tail dynamic comparator has been designed to obtain a low-noise measurement while ensuring suitable delay values. Finally, regarding the logic, an asynchronous implementation and the conventional switching algorithm provide a simple but effective solution to supply the digital signals of the design. Pre-layout noise simulations with input frequencies around 200 kHz show SNDR values of 72.07 dB, corresponding to an ENOB of 11.67 bits. The total power consumption is 365 ?W while the Walden and Schreier figure-of-merit (FoM) correspond to values of 275 fJ/conversion and 160 dB, respectively

    Design of a low power switched-capacitor pipeline analog-to-digital converter

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    An Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) is a circuit which converts an analog signal into digital signal. Real world is analog, and the data processed by the computer or by other signal processing systems is digital. Therefore, the need for ADCs is obvious. In this thesis, several novel designs used to improve ADCs operation speed and reduce ADC power consumption are proposed. First, a high speed switched source follower (SSF) sample and hold amplifier without feedthrough penalty is implemented and simulated. The SSF sample and hold amplifier can achieve 6 Bit resolution with sampling rate at 10Gs/s. Second, a novel rail-to-rail time domain comparator used in successive approximation register ADC (SAR ADC) is implemented and simulated. The simulation results show that the proposed SAR ADC can only consume 1.3 muW with a 0.7 V power supply. Finally, a prototype pipeline ADC is implemented and fabricated in an IBM 90nm CMOS process. The proposed design is validated using measurement on a fabricated silicon IC, and the proposed 10-bit ADC achieves a peak signal-to-noise- and-distortion-ratio (SNDR) of 47 dB. This SNDR translates to a figure of merit (FOM) of 2.6N/conversion-step with a 1.2 V power supply

    A Study of Linear Approximation Techniques for SAR Azimuth Processing

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    The application of the step transform subarray processing techniques to synthetic aperture radar (SAR) was studied. The subarray technique permits the application of efficient digital transform computational techniques such as the fast Fourier transform to be applied while offering an effective tool for range migration compensation. Range migration compensation is applied at the subarray level, and with the subarray size based on worst case range migration conditions, a minimum control system is achieved. A baseline processor was designed for a four-look SAR system covering approximately 4096 by 4096 SAR sample field every 2.5 seconds. Implementation of the baseline system was projected using advanced low power technologies. A 20 swath is implemented with approximately 1000 circuits having a power dissipation of from 70 to 195 watts. The baseline batch step transform processor is compared to a continuous strip processor, and variations of the baseline are developed for a wide range of SAR parameters

    Digital Background Self-Calibration Technique for Compensating Transition Offsets in Reference-less Flash ADCs

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    This Dissertation focusses on proving that background calibration using adaptive algorithms are low-cost, stable and effective methods for obtaining high accuracy in flash A/D converters. An integrated reference-less 3-bit flash ADC circuit has been successfully designed and taped out in UMC 180 nm CMOS technology in order to prove the efficiency of our proposed background calibration. References for ADC transitions have been virtually implemented built-in in the comparators dynamic-latch topology by a controlled mismatch added to each comparator input front-end. An external very simple DAC block (calibration bank) allows control the quantity of mismatch added in each comparator front-end and, therefore, compensate the offset of its effective transition with respect to the nominal value. In order to assist to the estimation of the offset of the prototype comparators, an auxiliary A/D converter with higher resolution and lower conversion speed than the flash ADC is used: a 6-bit capacitive-DAC SAR type. Special care in synchronization of analogue sampling instant in both ADCs has been taken into account. In this thesis, a criterion to identify the optimum parameters of the flash ADC design with adaptive background calibration has been set. With this criterion, the best choice for dynamic latch architecture, calibration bank resolution and flash ADC resolution are selected. The performance of the calibration algorithm have been tested, providing great programmability to the digital processor that implements the algorithm, allowing to choose the algorithm limits, accuracy and quantization errors in the arithmetic. Further, systematic controlled offset can be forced in the comparators of the flash ADC in order to have a more exhaustive test of calibration
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