48 research outputs found
A CCO-based Sigma-Delta ADC
Analog-to-digital converter (ADC) is one of the most important blocks in nowadays systems. Most of the data processing is done in the digital domain however, the physical world is analog. ADCs make the bridge between analog and digital domain.
The constant and unstoppable evolution of the technology makes the dimensions of the transistors smaller and smaller, and the classical solutions of Sigma-Delta converters (ΣΔ) are becoming more challenging to design because they normally require high active gain blocks difficult to achieve in modern technologies.
In recent years, the use of voltage-controlled oscillators (VCO) in ΣΔ converters has been widely explored, since they are used as quantizers and their implementations are mostly made with digital blocks, which is preferable with new technologies.
In this work a second-order ΣΔ modulator based on two current-controlled oscillators (CCO) with a single output phase and an independent phase generator for each CCO that generates any desired number of phases using the oscillation of its CCO as reference has been proposed.
This ΣΔ modulator was studied through a MATLAB/Simulink® model, obtaining promising results with the SNDR in the order of 75 dB, at a sampling frequency of 1 GHz, and a bandwidth of 5 MHz, corresponding to an ENOB of, approximately, 12 bits
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Low-power ADC designs in scaled CMOS process
This thesis presents advanced design techniques for successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), continuous-time ∆Σ ADCs, and single-slope (SS) ADCs in nano-scale CMOS technologies. (1) In high-speed SAR ADCs, metastability of the comparator limits the performance, which even results in the sparkle code errors. Proposed background calibration utilizing the comparator decision time detector removes the metastability-induced sparkle code errors by controlling the metastability detection window. At the same time, 1-bit resolution increase is gained from the proposed technique, which results in the fewer comparison cycles. Along with the relaxed requirement on the comparator, this cycle reduction helps to achieve the good power efficiency in high-speed SAR design. A prototype ADC in 40nm CMOS achieves 35.3dB SNDR and consumes 0.81mW while sampling at 700MS/s. (2) In the proposed continuous-time ∆Σ ADCs, conventional power-hungry opamp is replaced by voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs) that perform the data conversion in the phase domain instead of the voltage domain. In contrary to the opamp which is difficult to achieve good performance in the advanced CMOS process, VCOs have many advantages in the phase domain. To solve the nonlinear gain of VCOs, dual VCO-based integrator is used to suppress the dominant second-order distortion. To address the distortion from the DAC, a novel DAC calibration technique that both digitally senses and removes DAC mismatch errors is proposed. It has low hardware complexity by taking advantage of the intrinsic clocked level averaging (CLA) capability of dual-VCO-based integrator. It ensures high linearity regardless of the VCO center frequency. By lowering the VCO center frequency, power consumption is reduced. A prototype ADC designed in 130nm occupies an area of only 0.04mm² . It achieves 71dB SNDR over 1.7MHz bandwidth (BW) while sampling at 250MS/s and consuming only 0.9mW from a 1.2V power supply. The corresponding figure-of-merit (FOM) is 98 fJ/conversion-step. (3) A SS ADC has advantages of high linearity and a simple architecture. Thus, it is well suited for the column-parallel architecture for the CMOS image sensors. However, conversion speed is severely limited in high-bit resolution since more than 2 [superscript N] cycles are required for a N-bit resolution. To tackle this limitation, a two-step approach becomes popular. In this thesis, a two-step SAR/SS architecture is presented. In addition to reducing the conversion time, analog correlated double sampling (CDS) can cancel kT/C noise, which enables capacitor area reduction. A prototype ADC in 180nm CMOS occupies only 9.3µm x 830µm. It achieves 60.5dB SNR after CDS while sampling at 256kHz and consuming 91µWElectrical and Computer Engineerin
Time-encoding analog-to-digital converters : bridging the analog gap to advanced digital CMOS? Part 2: architectures and circuits
The scaling of CMOS technology deep into the nanometer range has created challenges for the design of highperformance analog ICs: they remain large in area and power consumption in spite of process scaling. Analog circuits based on time encoding [1], [2], where the signal information is encoded in the waveform transitions instead of its amplitude, have been developed to overcome these issues. While part one of this overview article [3] presented the basic principles of time encoding, this follow-up article describes and compares the main time-encoding architectures for analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) and discusses the corresponding design challenges of the circuit blocks. The focus is on structures that avoid, as much as possible, the use of traditional analog blocks like operational amplifiers (opamps) or comparators but instead use digital circuitry, ring oscillators, flip-flops, counters, an so on. Our overview of the state of the art will show that these circuits can achieve excellent performance. The obvious benefit of this highly digital approach to realizing analog functionality is that the resulting circuits are small in area and more compatible with CMOS process scaling. The approach also allows for the easy integration of these analog functions in systems on chip operating at "digital" supply voltages as low as 1V and lower. A large part of the design process can also be embedded in a standard digital synthesis flow
Architectural Alternatives to Implement High-Performance Delta-Sigma Modulators
RÉSUMÉ Le besoin d’appareils portatifs, de téléphones intelligents et de systèmes microélectroniques implantables médicaux s’accroît remarquablement. Cependant, l’optimisation de l’alimentation de tous ces appareils électroniques portables est l’un des principaux défis en raison du manque de piles à grande capacité utilisées pour les alimenter. C’est un fait bien établi que le convertisseur analogique-numérique (CAN) est l’un des blocs les plus critiques de ces appareils et qu’il doit convertir efficacement les signaux analogiques au monde numérique pour effectuer un post-traitement tel que l’extraction de caractéristiques. Parmi les différents types de CAN, les modulateurs Delta Sigma (��M) ont été utilisés dans ces appareils en raison des fonctionnalités alléchantes qu’ils offrent. En raison du suréchantillonnage et pour éloigner le bruit de la bande d’intérêt, un CAN haute résolution peut être obtenu avec les architectures ��. Il offre également un compromis entre la fréquence d’échantillonnage et la résolution, tout en offrant une architecture programmable pour réaliser un CAN flexible. Ces CAN peuvent être implémentés avec des blocs analogiques de faible précision. De plus, ils peuvent être efficacement optimisés au niveau de l’architecture et circuits correspondants. Cette dernière caractéristique a été une motivation pour proposer différentes architectures au fil des ans. Cette thèse contribue à ce sujet en explorant de nouvelles architectures pour optimiser la structure ��M en termes de résolution, de consommation d’énergie et de surface de silicium. Des soucis particuliers doivent également être pris en compte pour faciliter la mise en œuvre du ��M. D’autre part, les nouveaux procédés CMOS de conception et fabrication apportent des améliorations remarquables en termes de vitesse, de taille et de consommation d’énergie lors de la mise en œuvre de circuits numériques. Une telle mise à l’échelle agressive des procédés, rend la conception de blocs analogiques tel que un amplificateur de transconductance opérationnel (OTA), difficile. Par conséquent, des soins spéciaux sont également pris en compte dans cette thèse pour surmonter les problèmes énumérés. Ayant mentionné ci-dessus que cette thèse est principalement composée de deux parties principales. La première concerne les nouvelles architectures implémentées en mode de tension et la seconde partie contient une nouvelle architecture réalisée en mode hybride tension et temps.----------ABSTRACT The need for hand-held devices, smart-phones and medical implantable microelectronic sys-tems, is remarkably growing up. However, keeping all these electronic devices power optimized is one of the main challenges due to the lack of long life-time batteries utilized to power them up. It is a well-established fact that analog-to-digital converter (ADC) is one of the most critical building blocks of such devices and it needs to efficiently convert analog signals to the digital world to perform post processing such as channelizing, feature extraction, etc. Among various type of ADCs, Delta Sigma Modulators (��Ms) have been widely used in those devices due to the tempting features they offer. In fact, due to oversampling and noise-shaping technique a high-resolution ADC can be achieved with �� architectures. It also offers a compromise between sampling frequency and resolution while providing a highly-programmable approach to realize an ADC. Moreover, such ADCs can be implemented with low-precision analog blocks. Last but not the least, they are capable of being effectively power optimized at both architectural and circuit levels. The latter has been a motivation to proposed different architectures over the years.This thesis contributes to this topic by exploring new architectures to effectively optimize the ��M structure in terms of resolution, power consumption and chip area. Special cares must also be taken into account to ease the implementation of the ��M. On the other hand, advanced node CMOS processes bring remarkable improvements in terms of speed, size and power consumption while implementing digital circuits. Such an aggressive process scaling, however, make the design of analog blocks, e.g. operational transconductance amplifiers (OTAs), cumbersome. Therefore, special cares are also taken into account in this thesis to overcome the mentioned issues. Having had above mentioned discussion, this thesis is mainly split in two main categories. First category addresses new architectures implemented in a pure voltage domain and the second category contains new architecture realized in a hybrid voltage and time domain. In doing so, the thesis first focuses on a switched-capacitor implementation of a ��M while presenting an architectural solution to overcome the limitations of the previous approaches. This limitations include a power hungry adder in a conventional feed-forward topology as well as power hungry OTAs
A 23μW Solar-Powered Keyword-Spotting ASIC with Ring-Oscillator-Based Time-Domain Feature Extraction
Voice-controlled interfaces on acoustic Internet-of-Things (IoT) sensor nodes and mobile devices require integrated low-power always-on wake-up functions such as Voice Activity Detection (VAD) and Keyword Spotting (KWS) to ensure longer battery life. Most VAD and KWS ICs focused on reducing the power of the feature extractor (FEx) as it is the most power-hungry building block. A serial Fast Fourier Transform (FFT)-based KWS chip [1] achieved 510nW; however, it suffered from a high 64ms latency and was limited to detection of only 1-to-4 keywords (2-to-5 classes). Although the analog FEx [2]–[3] for VAD/KWS reported 0.2μW-to-1 μW and 10ms-to-100ms latency, neither demonstrated >5 classes in keyword detection. In addition, their voltage-domain implementations cannot benefit from process scaling because the low supply voltage reduces signal swing; and the degradation of intrinsic gain forces transistors to have larger lengths and poor linearity
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Power-Efficient Design Techniques and Architectures for Scalable Submicron Analog Circuits
As the CMOS process scales down to submicron, digital circuit performance improves, while reduced supply voltage and lower transistor intrinsic gain make it difficult to implement analog circuits in a power efficient manner. Therefore, it has become advantageous to shift more analog signal processing functions conventionally realized in voltage (analog) domain into utilizing charge or time as the variable that can be processed by mostly digital/passive circuits. In this thesis, both circuit-level techniques and architectures are proposed that are inherently compatible with transistor scaling in submicron CMOS, meanwhile achieving state-of-the-art performance and optimizing power efficiency. The first part focuses on a highly reconfigurable charge-domain switched-g[subscript m]-C biquad band-pass filter (BPF) topology that utilizes an interleaved semi-passive charge sharing technique. It uses only switches, capacitors, linearity-enhanced gm-stages and digital circuitry for a 3-phase non-overlapping clock scheme. Flexible tunability in both center frequency and -3dB bandwidth is achieved with a scaling-compatible implementation. A 4th-order BPF prototype operating at a 1.2GS/s sampling rate is designed with a cascade of two proposed biquads in a 65nm LPE CMOS process. A tunable center frequency of 35−70MHz is measured with programmable bandwidth and a maximum stop-band rejection of 72dB. The measured in-band IIP3 is +12.5dBm. The filter prototype consumes 7.5mW total power from a 1.2V supply voltage, and occupies a core area of 0.17mm². In the second part, a highly linear continuous-time low-pass filter (LPF) topology with source follower coupling is presented that achieves excellent power efficiency. It synthesizes a 3rd-order low-pass transfer function in a single stage using coupled source followers and three capacitors, and can be configured to 2nd-order by disconnecting a capacitor. A 5th-order Butterworth prototype is designed with a cascade of two proposed filter stages in a 0.18μm CMOS, and occupies a core area of 0.12mm². Operating with a 1.3V supply voltage, the filter consumes only 0.5mA current, and achieves a -3dB bandwidth of 20MHz with 82dB stop-band rejection. A total harmonic distortion (THD) of -39.5dB at the output is measured with a +6.6dBm (i.e. 1.35V[subscript pk-pk]) input signal at 2MHz. The measured in-band IIP3 is +28.8dBm. The dynamic range (at 1% THD) is 76.8dB, with 15.3nV/√Hz averaged in-band input-referred noise. A pseudo-differential-VCO based 2nd-order continuous-time ΔΣ ADC with a residue self-coupling technique is proposed and implemented with mostly digital circuits in the third part. Two VCOs are arranged in a pseudo-differential manner. The digital output is obtained by comparing the sampled output phase of one VCO with that of the other. Passive subtraction is realized in current domain to obtain the residue at the VCO input. The residue self-coupling is implemented using a linear 1st-order transconductance low-pass filter (TCLPF). Moreover, a highly linear VCO topology is presented. The transistor-level simulations in a 65nm CMOS process show a 78dB SNDR over a 10MHz signal bandwidth with a power consumption of 2.9mW, which is 16dB improvement in contrast to the case with the TCLPF block powered off
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Voltage and Time-Domain Analog Circuit Techniques for Scaled CMOS Technologies
CMOS technology scaling has resulted in reduced supply voltage and intrinsic voltage gain of the transistor. This presents challenges to the analog circuit designers due to lower signal swing and achievable signal to noise ratio (SNR), leading to increased power consumption. At the same time, device speed has increased in lower design nodes, which has not been directly beneficial for analog circuit design. This thesis presents voltage-domain and time-domain circuit scaling friendly circuit architectures that minimize the power consumption and benefit from the increasing transistor speeds.
In the voltage-domain, an on-the-fly gain selection block is demonstrated as an alternative to the traditional MDAC architecture to enhance the input dynamic range of a medium-resolution medium-speed analog-to-digital converter (ADC) at reduced supply voltages. The proposed design also eliminates the need for a reference buffer, thus providing power savings. The measured prototype enhances the input dynamic range of a 12bit, 40MSPS ADC to 80.6dB at 1.2V supply voltage.
In the time-domain, a generic circuit design approach is presented, followed by an in-depth analysis of Voltage-Controlled-Oscillator based Operational Transconductance Amplifiers (VCO-OTAs). A discrete-time-domain small-signal model based on the zero crossings of the internal VCOs is developed to predict the stability, the step response, and the frequency response of the circuit when placed in feedback. The model accurately predicts the circuit behavior for an arbitrary input frequency, even as the VCO free-running frequency approaches the unity-gain bandwidth of the closed-loop system, where other intuitive small-signal models available in the literature fail.
Next, we present an application of VCO-OTA in designing a baseband trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) for current-mode receivers as a scaling-friendly and power-efficient alternative to the inverter-based OTA. We illustrate a design methodology for the choice of the VCO-OTA parameters in the context of a receiver design with an example of a 20MHz RF-channel-bandwidth receiver operating at 2GHz. Receiver simulation results demonstrate an improvement of up to 12dB in blocker 1dB compression point (B1dB) for slightly higher power consumption or up to 2.6x power reduction of the TIA resulting in up to 2x power reduction of the receiver for similar B1dB performance.
Next, we present some examples of VCO-OTAs. We first illustrate the benefit of a VCO-OTA in a low-dropout-voltage regulator to achieve a dropout voltage of only100mV and operating down to 0.8V input supply, compared to the prototype based on traditional OTA with a minimum dropout voltage of 150mV, operating at a minimum of 1.2V supply. Both the capacitor-less prototypes can drive up to 1nF load capacitor and provide a current of 60mA. The next prototype showcases a method to reduce the power consumption of a VCO-OTA and spurs at the VCO frequency, with an application in the design of a fourth-order Butterworth filter at 4MHz. The thesis concludes with a design example of 0.2V VCO-OTA
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Digital enhancement techniques for data converters in scaled CMOS technologies
This thesis presents digital enhancement techniques for data converters in advanced technology nodes. With technology scaling, traditional voltage-domain (VD) analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) face two major challenges: (1) reduction of dynamic range due to supply voltage scaling, and (2) decrease in intrinsic gain of transistors which makes high gain amplifier design tough. To address these challenges, a two-stage ADC architecture is presented which uses time-domain quantization to exploit the advantages of technology scaling. The architecture, consisting of a first stage successive approximation register (SAR) and a second stage ring oscillator, is highly digital and scaling friendly. Two prototypes have been developed to validate the proposed architecture. The 40nm CMOS prototype achieves 75.7 dB dynamic range at an excellent Schreier figure-of-merit of 172.2 dB. The proposed architecture has been extended to a capacitance-to-digital converter and a prototype has been developed in 40nm CMOS. The prototype can sense capacitances with a resolution of 1.3fF and has a Walden figure-of-merit of 60 fJ/step which is more than two times better than the current state-of-the-art. This thesis also presents digital techniques to improve performance of continuous-time(CT), delta-sigma digital-to-analog converters (DACs). Recently, CT delta-sigma DACs have received more attention than their discrete, switched-capacitor counterpart mainly because of low power and/or higher speed of operation. However, a critical disadvantage of CT, delta-sigma DACs is their greatly increased sensitivity to inter-symbol interference (ISI) error. To address this shortcoming of CT DACs, this thesis presents several algorithms that can mitigate ISI error simultaneously with static mismatch error. Further, the proposed algorithms are fully digital in nature and as such, are best poised to take maximum advantage of technology scaling. Thus, the techniques presented in this thesis will be important enabling factors in raising the envelope of performance of CT delta-sigma DACs in advanced technology nodes.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
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Energy-efficient data converter design in scaled CMOS technology
Data converters bridge the physical and digital worlds. They have been the crucial building blocks in modern electronic systems, and are expected to have a growing significance in the booming era of Internet-of-Things (IoT) and 5G communications. The applications raise energy-efficiency requirements for both low-speed and high-speed converters since they are widely deployed in wireless sensor nodes and portable devices. To explore the solutions, the author worked on three directions: 1) techniques to improve the efficiency of the low-speed converters including the comparator; 2) techniques to develop high-speed data converters including the reference stabilization; 3) new architecture to improve the efficiency of the capacitance-to-digital converter (CDC). In the first part, a power-efficient 10-bit SAR ADC featured with a gain-boosted dynamic comparator is presented. In energy-constrained applications, the converter is usually supplied with low supply voltage (e.g., 0.3 V-0.5 V), which reduces the comparator pre-amplifier (pre-amp) gain and results in higher noise. A novel comparator topology with a dynamic common-gate stage is proposed to increase the pre-amplification gain, thereby reducing noise and offset. Besides, statistical estimation and loading switching techniques are combined to further improve energy efficiency. A 40-nm CMOS prototype achieves a Walden FoM of 1.5 fJ/conversion-step while operating at 100-kS/s from a 0.5-V supply. To further improve the energy-efficiency of the comparator, a novel dynamic pre-amp is proposed. By using an inverter-based input pair powered by a floating reservoir capacitor, the pre-amp realizes both current reuse and dynamic bias, thereby significantly boosting g [subscript m] /I [subscript D] and reducing noise. Moreover, it greatly reduces the influence of the input common-mode (CM) voltage on the comparator performance, including noise, offset, and delay. A prototype comparator in 180-nm achieves 46-μV input-referred noise while consuming only 1 pJ per comparison under 1.2-V supply, which represents greater than 7 times energy efficiency boost compared to that of a Strong-Arm (SA) latch. The second part of this dissertation focuses on high-speed data converter techniques. A 10-bit high-speed two-stage loop-unrolled SAR ADC is presented. To reduce the SAR logic delay and power, each bit uses a dedicated comparator to store its output and generate an asynchronous clock for the next comparison. To suppress the comparator offset mismatch induced non-linearity, a shared pre-amp are employed in the second fine stage, which is implemented by a dynamic latch to avoid static power consumption. The prototype ADC in 40-nm CMOS achieves 55-dB peak SNDR at 200-MS/s sampling rate without any calibration. A key limiting factor for the SAR ADC to simultaneously achieve high speed and high resolution is the reference ripple settling problem caused by DAC switching. Unlike prior techniques that aim to minimize the reference ripple which requires large reference buffer power or on-chip decoupling capacitance area, this work proposes a new perspective: it provides an extra path for the full-sized reference ripple to couple to the comparator but with an opposite polarity, so that the effect of the reference ripple is canceled out, thus ensuring an accurate conversion result. The prototype 10-bit 120-MS/s SAR ADC is fabricated in 40-nm CMOS process and achieves an SNDR of 55 dB with only 3 pF reference decoupling capacitor. Finally, this dissertation also presents the design of an incremental time-domain two-step CDC. Unlike the classic two-step CDC, this work replaces the OTA-based active-RC integrator with a VCO-based integrator and performs time domain (TD) ΔΣ modulation. The VCO is mostly digital and consumes low power. Featuring the infinite DC gain in phase domain and intrinsic spatial phase quantization, this TDΔΣ enables a CDC design, achieving 85-dB SQNR by having only a 4-bit quantizer, a 1st-order loop and a low OSR of 15. The prototype fabricated in 40-nm CMOS achieves a resolution of 0.29 fF while dissipating only 0.083 nJ per conversion, which improves the energy efficiency by greater than 2 times comparing to that of state-of-the-art CDCsElectrical and Computer Engineerin