713 research outputs found

    High performance zero-crossing based pipelined analog-to-digital converters

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Cataloged from student submitted PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 133-137).As CMOS processes continue to scale to smaller dimensions, the increased fT of the devices and smaller parasitic capacitance allow for more power ecient and faster digital circuits to be made. But at the same time, output impedance of transistors has gone down, as have the power supply voltages, and leakage currents have increased. These changes in the technology have made analog design more difficult. More specifically, the design of a high gain op-amp, a fundamental analog building block, has become more difficult in scaled processes. In this work, op-amps in pipelined ADCs are replaced with zero-crossing detectors(ZCD). Without the closed-loop feedback provided by the op-amp, a new set of design constraints for Zero-Crossing Based Circuits (ZCBC) is explored.by Yue Jack Chu.Ph.D

    Calibration techniques in nyquist A/D converters

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    In modern systems signal processing is performed in the digital domain. Contrary to analog circuits, digital signal processing offers more robustness, programmability, error correction and storage possibility. The trend to shift the A/D converter towards the input of the system requires A/D converters with more dynamic range and higher sampling speeds. This puts extreme demands on the A/D converter and potentially increases the power consumption. Calibration Techniques in Nyquist A/D Converters analyses different A/D-converter architectures with an emphasis on the maximum achievable power efficiency. It is shown that in order to achieve high speed and high accuracy at high power efficiency, calibration is required. Calibration reduces the overall power consumption by using the available digital processing capability to relax the demands on critical power hungry analog components. Several calibration techniques are analyzed. The calibration techniques presented in this book are applicable to other analog-to-digital systems, such as those applied in integrated receivers. Further refinements will allow using analog components with less accuracy, which will then be compensated by digital signal processing. The presented methods allow implementing this without introducing a speed or power penalty

    Ring-oscillator with multiple transconductors for linear analog-to-digital conversion

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    This paper proposes a new circuit-based approach to mitigate nonlinearity in open-loop ring-oscillator-based analog-to-digital converters (ADCs). The approach consists of driving a current-controlled oscillator (CCO) with several transconductors connected in parallel with different bias conditions. The current injected into the oscillator can then be properly sized to linearize the oscillator, performing the inverse current-to-frequency function. To evaluate the approach, a circuit example has been designed in a 65-nm CMOS process, leading to a more than 3-ENOB enhancement in simulation for a high-swing differential input voltage signal of 800-mVpp, with considerable less complex design and lower power and expected area in comparison to state-of-the-art circuit based solutions. The architecture has also been checked against PVT and mismatch variations, proving to be highly robust, requiring only very simple calibration techniques. The solution is especially suitable for high-bandwidth (tens of MHz) medium-resolution applications (10–12 ENOBs), such as 5G or Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices.This research was funded by Project TEC2017-82653-R, Spain

    Design and debugging of multi-step analog to digital converters

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    With the fast advancement of CMOS fabrication technology, more and more signal-processing functions are implemented in the digital domain for a lower cost, lower power consumption, higher yield, and higher re-configurability. The trend of increasing integration level for integrated circuits has forced the A/D converter interface to reside on the same silicon in complex mixed-signal ICs containing mostly digital blocks for DSP and control. However, specifications of the converters in various applications emphasize high dynamic range and low spurious spectral performance. It is nontrivial to achieve this level of linearity in a monolithic environment where post-fabrication component trimming or calibration is cumbersome to implement for certain applications or/and for cost and manufacturability reasons. Additionally, as CMOS integrated circuits are accomplishing unprecedented integration levels, potential problems associated with device scaling – the short-channel effects – are also looming large as technology strides into the deep-submicron regime. The A/D conversion process involves sampling the applied analog input signal and quantizing it to its digital representation by comparing it to reference voltages before further signal processing in subsequent digital systems. Depending on how these functions are combined, different A/D converter architectures can be implemented with different requirements on each function. Practical realizations show the trend that to a first order, converter power is directly proportional to sampling rate. However, power dissipation required becomes nonlinear as the speed capabilities of a process technology are pushed to the limit. Pipeline and two-step/multi-step converters tend to be the most efficient at achieving a given resolution and sampling rate specification. This thesis is in a sense unique work as it covers the whole spectrum of design, test, debugging and calibration of multi-step A/D converters; it incorporates development of circuit techniques and algorithms to enhance the resolution and attainable sample rate of an A/D converter and to enhance testing and debugging potential to detect errors dynamically, to isolate and confine faults, and to recover and compensate for the errors continuously. The power proficiency for high resolution of multi-step converter by combining parallelism and calibration and exploiting low-voltage circuit techniques is demonstrated with a 1.8 V, 12-bit, 80 MS/s, 100 mW analog to-digital converter fabricated in five-metal layers 0.18-µm CMOS process. Lower power supply voltages significantly reduce noise margins and increase variations in process, device and design parameters. Consequently, it is steadily more difficult to control the fabrication process precisely enough to maintain uniformity. Microscopic particles present in the manufacturing environment and slight variations in the parameters of manufacturing steps can all lead to the geometrical and electrical properties of an IC to deviate from those generated at the end of the design process. Those defects can cause various types of malfunctioning, depending on the IC topology and the nature of the defect. To relive the burden placed on IC design and manufacturing originated with ever-increasing costs associated with testing and debugging of complex mixed-signal electronic systems, several circuit techniques and algorithms are developed and incorporated in proposed ATPG, DfT and BIST methodologies. Process variation cannot be solved by improving manufacturing tolerances; variability must be reduced by new device technology or managed by design in order for scaling to continue. Similarly, within-die performance variation also imposes new challenges for test methods. With the use of dedicated sensors, which exploit knowledge of the circuit structure and the specific defect mechanisms, the method described in this thesis facilitates early and fast identification of excessive process parameter variation effects. The expectation-maximization algorithm makes the estimation problem more tractable and also yields good estimates of the parameters for small sample sizes. To allow the test guidance with the information obtained through monitoring process variations implemented adjusted support vector machine classifier simultaneously minimize the empirical classification error and maximize the geometric margin. On a positive note, the use of digital enhancing calibration techniques reduces the need for expensive technologies with special fabrication steps. Indeed, the extra cost of digital processing is normally affordable as the use of submicron mixed signal technologies allows for efficient usage of silicon area even for relatively complex algorithms. Employed adaptive filtering algorithm for error estimation offers the small number of operations per iteration and does not require correlation function calculation nor matrix inversions. The presented foreground calibration algorithm does not need any dedicated test signal and does not require a part of the conversion time. It works continuously and with every signal applied to the A/D converter. The feasibility of the method for on-line and off-line debugging and calibration has been verified by experimental measurements from the silicon prototype fabricated in standard single poly, six metal 0.09-µm CMOS process

    Digital control of a multi-channel boundary-conduction-mode boost converter for power-factor-correction applications

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    This thesis focuses on the design of digital control schemes for multi-channel boundary-conduction-mode (BCM) boost converters. Multi-channel BCM boost converters are commonly used for the front-end power-factor-corrected (PFC) stage of isolated ac-dc power supplies due to the advantages of being low cost and having high efficiency for a universal line-voltage input. Single-channel and two-channel BCM boost converters using analog control ICs have been commonly used in industry. However, the use of multi-channel BCM boost converters with more than two-channels has been limited as there are no analog control integrated circuits (IC) existing on the market with the ability to control BCM boost converters with more than two channels. Digital microcontrollers are an enabling technology, which can be used to implement a control scheme for a multi-channel BCM boost converter with any number of boost-converter channels. Moreover, digital microcontrollers have the added benefit of reducing the power supply’s overall system cost. For example, in an ac-dc medical power supply, there is typically a dedicated analog control IC for the PFC stage, a dedicated analog control IC for a dcdc isolated stage, and a low-power microcontroller used for safety and house-keeping functions, such as reducing standby power, detecting line-fault conditions, providing external communications, etc. The total system cost is reduced by replacing these three chips with a single microcontroller, which provides all the same functions. This requires the development of digital control algorithms which enable the microcontroller to match the performance of the analog control IC for the PFC stage. These functions include providing a well-regulated output voltage, ensuring the input current has high power quality, and permitting interleaving between the different boost-converter channels. It is difficult to have a well-regulated output voltage for two reasons. Firstly, the controller must provide fast output-voltage dynamics over the universal line-voltage range from 85 Vrms to 265 Vrms. Secondly, the output voltage of PFC rectifiers contains a 2nd harmonic ripple which can be fed into the control loop and distort the line current. In this work, an adaptive notch filter which works over a range of line frequencies, is designed to attenuate the feedback of the 2nd harmonic ripple. The notch filter allows the voltage compensator to be designed at a higher bandwidth, thus ensuring fast output-voltage regulation. Moreover, an adaptive voltage-compensator gain is used to guarantee fast output-voltage regulation at all line voltages. BCM boost converters have a variable switching frequency. Hence, a phase-shift control scheme is used to allow interleaving between the different boost-converter channels. It is important that the phase-shift control scheme requires minimal microcontroller computational resources. This allows a low-cost microcontroller to be used. In this work, a novel phase-shift control scheme is proposed. The phase-shift control algorithm is executed at a fixed frequency much lower than the maximum switching frequency of the converter. This reduces the computational requirements of the algorithm. It is important that the PFC controller provides low input-current distortion. BCM boost PFC rectifiers suffer from a zero-crossing distortion of the line current. Feedforward control is commonly adopted in to overcome this problem, however most digital feedforward control schemes require complicated design procedures or are computationally expensive. In this work, a novel feedforward algorithm is proposed which has a simple design procedure, low computational requirements and provides high power factor. In applications which are not cost sensitive, it can be more preferable to use a more powerful microcontroller and more computationally expensive algorithms. Hence, a digital average-current-mode-control (ACMC) scheme is proposed to regulate the input current of BCM boost converter. The algorithm allows for an even greater improvement in power quality of the input line current compared to feedforward control, but comes at the cost of a more complex controller implementation. The design, implementation and performance of the proposed digital control algorithms have been experimentally verified. Experimental results for the different control schemes are demonstrated on a 2-channel 600 W and a 3-channel 1 kW BCM PFC rectifier

    A high resolution data conversion and digital processing for high energy physics calorimeter detectors readout

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    L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen

    High-Speed Analog-to-Digital Converters for Broadband Applications

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    Flash Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs), targeting optical communication standards, have been reported in SiGe BiCMOS technology. CMOS implementation of such designs faces two challenges. The first is to achieve a high sampling speed, given the lower gain-bandwidth (lower ft) of CMOS technology. The second challenge is to handle the wide bandwidth of the input signal with a certain accuracy. Although the first problem can be relaxed by using the time-interleaved architecture, the second problem remains as a main obstacle to CMOS implementation. As a result, the feasibility of the CMOS implementation of ADCs for such applications, or other wide band applications, depends primarily on achieving a very small input capacitance (large bandwidth) at the desired accuracy. In the flash architecture, the input capacitance is traded off for the achievable accuracy. This tradeoff becomes tighter with technology scaling. An effective way to ease this tradeoff is to use resistive offset averaging. This permits the use of smaller area transistors, leading to a reduction in the ADC input capacitance. In addition, interpolation can be used to decrease the input capacitance of flash ADCs. In an interpolating architecture, the number of ADC input preamplifiers is reduced significantly, and a resistor network interpolates the missing zero-crossings needed for an N-bit conversion. The resistive network also averages out the preamplifiers offsets. Consequently, an interpolating network works also as an averaging network. The resistor network used for averaging or interpolation causes a systematic non-linearity at the ADC transfer characteristics edges. The common solution to this problem is to extend the preamplifiers array beyond the input signal voltage range by using dummy preamplifiers. However, this demands a corresponding extension of the flash ADC reference-voltage resistor ladder. Since the voltage headroom of the reference ladder is considered to be a main bottleneck in the implementation of flash ADCs in deep-submicron technologies with reduced supply voltage, extending the reference voltage beyond the input voltage range is highly undesirable. The principal objective of this thesis is to develop a new circuit technique to enhance the bandwidth-accuracy product of flash ADCs. Thus, first, a rigorous analysis of flash ADC architectures accuracy-bandwidth tradeoff is presented. It is demonstrated that the interpolating architecture achieves a superior accuracy compared to that of a full flash architecture for the same input capacitance, and hence would lead to a higher bandwidth-accuracy product, especially in deep-submicron technologies that use low power supplies. Also, the gain obtained, when interpolation is employed, is quantified. In addition, the limitations of a previous claim, which suggests that an interpolating architecture is equivalent to an averaging full flash architecture that trades off accuracy for the input capacitance, is presented. Secondly, a termination technique for the averaging/interpolation network of flash ADC preamplifiers is devised. The proposed technique maintains the linearity of the ADC at the transfer characteristics edges and cancels out the over-range voltage, consumed by the dummy preamplifiers. This makes flash ADCs more amenable for integration in deep-submicron CMOS technologies. In addition, the elimination of this over-range voltage allows a larger least-significant bit. As a result, a higher input referred offset is tolerated, and a significant reductions in the ADC input capacitance and power dissipation are achieved at the same accuracy. Unlike a previous solution, the proposed technique does not introduce negative transconductance at flash ADC preamplifiers array edges. As a result, the offset averaging technique can be used efficiently. To prove the resulting saving in the ADC input capacitance and power dissipation that is attained by the proposed termination technique, a 6-bit 1.6-GS/s flash ADC test chip is designed and implemented in 0.13-μ\mum CMOS technology. The ADC consumes 180 mW from a 1.5-V supply and achieves a Signal-to-Noise-plus-Distortion Ratio (SNDR) of 34.5 dB and 30 dB at 50-MHz and 1450-MHz input signal frequency, respectively. The measured peak Integral-Non-Linearity (INL) and Differential-Non-Linearity (DNL) are 0.42 LSB and 0.49 LSB, respectively

    LHC beam instrumentation detectors and acquisition systems

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    Architectural Improvements Towards an Efficient 16-18 Bit 100-200 MSPS ADC

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    As Data conversion systems continue to improve in speed and resolution, increasing demands are placed on the performance of high-speed Analog to Digital Conversion systems. This work makes a survey about all these and proposes a suitable architecture in order to achieve the desired specifications of 100-200MS/s with 16-18 bit of resolution. The main architecture is based on paralleled structures in order to achieve high sampling rate and at the same time high resolution. In order to solve problems related to Time-interleaved architectures, an advanced randomization method was introduced. It combines randomization and spectral shaping of mismatches. With a simple low-pass filter the method can, compared to conventional randomization algorithms, improve the SFDR as well as the SINAD. The main advantage of this technique over previous ones is that, because the algorithm only need that ADCs are ordered basing on their time mismatches, the absolute accuracy of the mismatch identification method does not matter and, therefore, the requirements on the timing mismatch identification are very low. In addition to that, this correction system uses very simple algorithms able to correct not only for time but also for gain and offset mismatches
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