444 research outputs found

    Low-cost, high-precision DAC design based on ordered element matching and verification against undesired operating points for analog circuits

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    Over the past 50 years, the integrated circuit (IC) industry has grown rapidly, following the famous ``Moore\u27s law. The process feature size keeps shrinking, whereby the performance of digital circuits is constantly enhanced and their cost constantly decreases. However, with the system integration and the development of system on chip (SoC), nearly all of today\u27s ICs contain analog/mixed-Signal circuits. Although a mixed-signal SoC is primarily digital, the analog circuit design and verification consume most of the resources, and the dominant source of IC breakdowns is attributable to the analog circuits. One important reason for the high cost and risk of breakdowns of analog circuits is that the technology advancement does not benefit many analog and mixed-signal circuits, and in fact imposes higher requirements on their performance. With process scaling, many important parameters of integrated circuit components degrade, which cause a drop in many key aspects of performance of analog circuits. Many analog circuits rely on matched circuit components (transistors, resistors, or capacitors) to achieve the required linearity performance; examples are amplifiers, digital-to-analog converters (DACs), etc. However, shrinking of the feature sizes increases the circuit components mismatch, thereby making it more difficult to maintain circuit accuracy. Therefore, to reduce the cost of analog circuit design, designers should propose new structures whose key performance can be improved by the technology scaling. In this dissertation, we propose a low-cost, high-precision DAC structure based on ordered element matching (OEM) theory. High matching accuracy can be achieved by applying OEM calibration to the resistors in unary weighted segments and calibrating the gain error between different segments by calibration DAC (CalDAC). As a design example to verify the proposed structure, a high-precision DAC is designed in a 130 nm Global Foundry (GF) CMOS process. The 130 nm GF process features high-density digital circuits and is a typical process which is constantly enhanced by the scaling of device dimensions and voltage supply; implementation of a high-precision DAC in such process is important to decreasing the costs of high-precision DAC designs. As a result, our proposed DAC structure is demonstrated to be able to significantly lower the cost of high-precision DAC design. Another reason for the high cost and risk of breakdowns of analog circuits arises from the complexity of analog circuit working states. Most digital circuits serve as logic functions, so that digital transistors work in only two states, either low or high. In contrast, analog circuits have much more complicated functions; they may work in multiple operating points, since various feedback approaches are applied in analog circuits to enhance their performance. Circuits with undetected operating points can be devastating, particularly when they are employed in critical applications such as automotive, health care, and military products. However, since the existing circuit simulators provide only a single operating point, recognizing the existence of undesired operating points depends largely on the experiences of designers. In some circuits, even the most experienced designers may not be aware that a circuit they designed has undesired operating points, which often go undetected in the standard simulations in the design process. To identify undesired operating points in an analog circuit and reduce its risk of breakdowns, a systematic verification method against undesired operating points in analog circuits is proposed in this dissertation. Unlike traditional methods of finding all operating points, this method targets only searches for voltage intervals containing undesired operating points. To achieve this, our method first converts the circuit into a corresponding graph and locates the break point to break all the positive feedback loops (PFLs). For one dimensional verification, divide and contraction algorithms could be applied to identify undesired operating points. Two dimensional vector field methods are used to solve the two dimensional verifications. Based on the proposed verification methods against undesired operating points, an EDA tool called ``ITV is developed to identify undesired operating points in analog and mixed-signal circuits. Simulation results show ITV to be effective and efficient in identifying undesired operating points in a class of commonly used benchmark circuits that includes bias generators, voltage references, temperature sensors, and op-amp circuits

    Design and verification approaches for reliability and functional safety of analog integrated circuits

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    New breakthroughs in semiconductor design have enabled a rapid integration of semiconductor chips into systems that affect all aspects of the society. Examples of emerging systems include spacecraft, Internet of Things (IoT), intelligent automotive, and bio-implantable devices. Many of these systems are mission-critical or safety-critical, meaning that failure or malfunction may lead to severe economical losses, environmental damages or risks to human lives. In addition to performances improvement, the reliability and functional safety of the underlying integrated circuit (IC) have attracted more and more attention and have posed grand challenges for semiconductor industries. This dissertation introduces an approach for high performance voltage reference design and investigates two subjects that improve the reliability and functional safety of analog circuits. The first part of this dissertation studies design strategies of a low temperature-coefficient voltage reference generator, which is a fundamental building block and determines the maximum achievable performance of almost all analog/mixed-signal systems. The proposed method is targeted at extracting a physical quantity of the silicon bandgap, and has the potential of designing a voltage reference that has qualitatively better temperature dependence. An implementation of the proposed approach in GlobalFoundries 130nm process shows that the design can achieve temperature coefficients as low as 0.7ppm/°C over a temperature range of -40°C to 125°C over all process corners. The second part of this dissertation focuses on multi-states verification of analog circuits. The multiple DC equilibrium points or multi-states problem traces back to IC design. It is a well-known problem in many basic self-stabilized analog circuits because of the existence of positive feedback loops (PFLs). This work proposes systematic and automatic approaches for locating all PFLs to identify circuits vulnerable to undesired equilibrium states and methods for automatically identifying break-points to break all PFLs in the vulnerable circuits. The proposed methods make it possible to efficiently identify a circuit’s vulnerability to undesired operating points by considering circuit topology only, without the need for finding all possible solutions to a set of simultaneous nonlinear equations which is an open problem with no solution. Moreover, the automatic break-points identification enables easy use of homotopy analysis to guarantee absence of undesired states. The third part of this dissertation focuses on fault coverage simulation of analog circuits. This work describe two methods, one is to reduce the fault coverage estimation time and the other is to improve the fault coverage for analog circuits. The first method incorporates graph theory and sensitivity analysis and leads to dramatic reduction in fault coverage simulation time by 10’s of times for a moderately sized analog circuit. The second method discusses a systematic test-points selection technique to improve the analog fault coverage with simple DC tests and a concurrent sampling technique for monitoring these points. This work could be applied to manufacturing testing or for real-time fault detection

    Biomedical Engineering

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    Biomedical engineering is currently relatively wide scientific area which has been constantly bringing innovations with an objective to support and improve all areas of medicine such as therapy, diagnostics and rehabilitation. It holds a strong position also in natural and biological sciences. In the terms of application, biomedical engineering is present at almost all technical universities where some of them are targeted for the research and development in this area. The presented book brings chosen outputs and results of research and development tasks, often supported by important world or European framework programs or grant agencies. The knowledge and findings from the area of biomaterials, bioelectronics, bioinformatics, biomedical devices and tools or computer support in the processes of diagnostics and therapy are defined in a way that they bring both basic information to a reader and also specific outputs with a possible further use in research and development

    Particle detection experiment for Applications Technology Satellite 1 /ATS-1/ Final report

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    Applications technology satellite particle detection experiment for measuring energy spectra of earth magnetic fiel

    Process techniques study of integrated circuits Final scientific report

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    Surface impurity and structural defect analysis on thermally grown silicon oxide integrated circui

    Index to 1986 NASA Tech Briefs, volume 11, numbers 1-4

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    Short announcements of new technology derived from the R&D activities of NASA are presented. These briefs emphasize information considered likely to be transferrable across industrial, regional, or disciplinary lines and are issued to encourage commercial application. This index for 1986 Tech Briefs contains abstracts and four indexes: subject, personal author, originating center, and Tech Brief Number. The following areas are covered: electronic components and circuits, electronic systems, physical sciences, materials, life sciences, mechanics, machinery, fabrication technology, and mathematics and information sciences
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