58 research outputs found
An identification of the tolerable time-interleaved analog-to-digital converter timing mismatch level in high-speed orthogonal frequency division multiplexing systems
High-speed Terahertz communication systems has recently employed orthogonal frequency division multiplexing approach as it provides high spectral efficiency and avoids inter-symbol interference caused by dispersive channels. Such high-speed systems require extremely high-sampling time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters at the receiver. However, timing mismatch of time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters significantly causes system performance degradation. In this paper, to avoid such performance degradation induced by timing mismatch, we theoretically determine maximum tolerable mismatch levels for orthogonal frequency division multiplexing communication systems. To obtain these levels, we first propose an analytical method to derive the bit error rate formula for quadrature and pulse amplitude modulations in Rayleigh fading channels, assuming binary reflected gray code (BRGC) mapping. Further, from the derived bit error rate (BER) expressions, we reveal a threshold of timing mismatch level for which error floors produced by the mismatch will be smaller than a given BER. Simulation results demonstrate that if we preserve mismatch level smaller than 25% of this obtained threshold, the BER performance degradation is smaller than 0.5 dB as compared to the case without timing mismatch
New iterative framework for frequency response mismatch correction in time-interleaved ADCs: Design and performance analysis
This paper proposes a new iterative framework for the correction of frequency response mismatch in time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters. Based on a general time-varying linear system model for the mismatch, we treat the reconstruction problem as a linear inverse problem and establish a flexible iterative framework for practical implementation. It encumbrances a number of efficient iterative correction algorithms and simplifies their design, implementation, and performance analysis. In particular, an efficient Gauss-Seidel iteration is studied in detail to illustrate how the correction problem can be solved iteratively and how the proposed structure can be efficiently implemented using Farrow-based variable digital filters with few general-purpose multipliers. We also study important issues, such as the sufficient convergence condition and reconstructed signal spectrum, derive new lower bound of signal-to-distortion-and-noise ratio in order to ensure stable operation, and predict the performance of the proposed structure. Furthermore, we propose an extended iterative structure, which is able to cope with systems involving more than one type of mismatches. Finally, the theoretical results and the effectiveness of the proposed approach are validated by means of computer simulations. © 2011 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
A Novel Iterative Structure for Online Calibration of M-Channel Time-Interleaved ADCs
published_or_final_versio
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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
Estimation and Calibration Algorithms for Distributed Sampling Systems
Thesis Supervisor: Gregory W. Wornell
Title: Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer ScienceTraditionally, the sampling of a signal is performed using a single component such as an
analog-to-digital converter. However, many new technologies are motivating the use of
multiple sampling components to capture a signal. In some cases such as sensor networks,
multiple components are naturally found in the physical layout; while in other cases like
time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters, additional components are added to increase
the sampling rate. Although distributing the sampling load across multiple channels can
provide large benefits in terms of speed, power, and resolution, a variety mismatch errors
arise that require calibration in order to prevent a degradation in system performance.
In this thesis, we develop low-complexity, blind algorithms for the calibration of distributed
sampling systems. In particular, we focus on recovery from timing skews that
cause deviations from uniform timing. Methods for bandlimited input reconstruction from
nonuniform recurrent samples are presented for both the small-mismatch and the low-SNR
domains. Alternate iterative reconstruction methods are developed to give insight into the
geometry of the problem.
From these reconstruction methods, we develop time-skew estimation algorithms that
have high performance and low complexity even for large numbers of components. We also
extend these algorithms to compensate for gain mismatch between sampling components.
To understand the feasibility of implementation, analysis is also presented for a sequential
implementation of the estimation algorithm.
In distributed sampling systems, the minimum input reconstruction error is dependent
upon the number of sampling components as well as the sample times of the components. We
develop bounds on the expected reconstruction error when the time-skews are distributed
uniformly. Performance is compared to systems where input measurements are made via
projections onto random bases, an alternative to the sinc basis of time-domain sampling.
From these results, we provide a framework on which to compare the effectiveness of any
calibration algorithm.
Finally, we address the topic of extreme oversampling, which pertains to systems with
large amounts of oversampling due to redundant sampling components. Calibration algorithms
are developed for ordering the components and for estimating the input from ordered
components. The algorithms exploit the extra samples in the system to increase estimation
performance and decrease computational complexity
Nonlinear models and algorithms for RF systems digital calibration
Focusing on the receiving side of a communication system, the current trend in pushing the digital domain ever more closer to the antenna sets heavy constraints on the accuracy and linearity of the analog front-end and the conversion devices. Moreover, mixed-signal implementations of Systems-on-Chip using nanoscale CMOS processes result in an overall poorer analog performance and a reduced yield. To cope with the impairments of the low performance analog section in this "dirty RF" scenario, two solutions exist: designing more complex analog processing architectures or to identify the errors and correct them in the digital domain using DSP algorithms. In the latter, constraints in the analog circuits' precision can be offloaded to a digital signal processor.
This thesis aims at the development of a methodology for the analysis, the modeling and the compensation of the analog impairments arising in different stages of a receiving chain using digital calibration techniques.
Both single and multiple channel architectures are addressed exploiting the capability of the calibration algorithm to homogenize all the channels' responses of a multi-channel system in addition to the compensation of nonlinearities in each response. The systems targeted for the application of digital post compensation are a pipeline ADC, a digital-IF sub-sampling receiver and a 4-channel TI-ADC.
The research focuses on post distortion methods using nonlinear dynamic models to approximate the post-inverse of the nonlinear system and to correct the distortions arising from static and dynamic errors. Volterra model is used due to its general approximation capabilities for the compensation of nonlinear systems with memory. Digital calibration is applied to a Sample and Hold and to a pipeline ADC simulated in the 45nm process, demonstrating high linearity improvement even with incomplete settling errors enabling the use of faster clock speeds.
An extended model based on the baseband Volterra series is proposed and applied to the compensation of a digital-IF sub-sampling receiver. This architecture envisages frequency selectivity carried out at IF by an active band-pass CMOS filter causing in-band and out-of-band nonlinear distortions. The improved performance of the proposed model is demonstrated with circuital simulations of a 10th-order band pass filter, realized using a five-stage Gm-C Biquad cascade, and validated using out-of-sample sinusoidal and QAM signals. The same technique is extended to an array receiver with mismatched channels' responses showing that digital calibration can compensate the loss of directivity and enhance the overall system SFDR.
An iterative backward pruning is applied to the Volterra models showing that complexity can be reduced without impacting linearity, obtaining state-of-the-art accuracy/complexity performance.
Calibration of Time-Interleaved ADCs, widely used in RF-to-digital wideband receivers, is carried out developing ad hoc models because the steep discontinuities generated by the imperfect canceling of aliasing would require a huge number of terms in a polynomial approximation. A closed-form solution is derived for a 4-channel TI-ADC affected by gain errors and timing skews solving the perfect reconstruction equations. A background calibration technique is presented based on cyclo-stationary filter banks architecture. Convergence speed and accuracy of the recursive algorithm are discussed and complexity reduction techniques are applied
Compensation numérique pour convertisseur large bande hautement parallélisé.
Time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters (TIADC) seem to be the holy grail of analog-to-digital conversion. Theoretically, their sampling speed can be increased, very simply, by duplicating the sub-converters. The real world is different because mismatches between the converters strongly reduce the TIADC performance, especially when trying to push forward the sampling speed, or the resolution of the converter. Using background digital mismatch calibration can alleviate this limitation. The first part of the thesis is dedicated to studying the sources and effects of mismatches in a TIADC. Performance metrics such as the SNDR and the SFDR are derived as a function of the mismatch levels. In the second part, new background digital mismatch calibration techniques are presented. They are able to reduce the offset, gain, skew and bandwidth mismatch errors. The mismatches are estimated by using the statistical properties of the input signal and digital filters are used to reconstruct the correct output samples. In the third part, a 1.6 GS/s TIADC circuit, implementing offset, gain and skew mismatch calibration, demonstrates a reduction of the mismatch spurs down to a level of -70 dBFS, up to an input frequency of 750 MHz. The circuit achieves the lowest level of mismatches among TIADCs in the same frequency range, with a reasonable power and area, in spite of the overhead caused by the calibration.Les convertisseurs analogique-numérique à entrelacement temporel (TIADC) semblent être une solution prometteuse dans le monde de la conversion analogique-numérique. Leur fréquence d’échantillonnage peut théoriquement être augmentée en augmentant le nombre de convertisseurs en parallèle. En réalité, des désappariements entre les convertisseurs peuvent fortement dégrader les performances, particulièrement à haute fréquence d’échantillonnage ou à haute résolution. Ces défauts d’appariement peuvent être réduits en utilisant des techniques de calibration en arrière-plan. La première partie de cette thèse est consacrée à l’étude des sources et effets des différents types de désappariements dans un TIADC. Des indicateurs de performance tels que le SNDR ou la SFDR sont exprimés en fonction du niveau des désappariements. Dans la deuxième partie, des nouvelles techniques de calibration sont proposées. Ces techniques permettent de réduire les effets des désappariements d’offset, de gain, d’instant d’échantillonnage et de bande passante. Les désappariements sont estimés en se basant sur des propriétés statistiques du signal et la reconstruction des échantillons de sortie se fait en utilisant des filtres numériques. La troisième partie démontre les performance d’un TIADC fonctionnant a une fréquence d’échantillonnage de 1.6 GE/s et comprenant les calibration d’offset, de gain et d’instant d’échantillonnage proposées. Les raies fréquentielles dues aux désappariements sont réduites à un niveau de -70dBc jusqu’à une fréquence d’entrée de 750 MHz. Ce circuit démontre une meilleure correction de désappariements que des circuits similaires récemment publiés, et ce avec une augmentation de puissance consommée et de surface relativement faible
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