69 research outputs found

    Design of High-Speed Power-Efficient A/D Converters for Wireline ADC-Based Receiver Applications

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    Serial input/output (I/O) data rates are increasing in order to support the explosion in network traffic driven by big data applications such as the Internet of Things (IoT), cloud computing and etc. As the high-speed data symbol times shrink, this results in an increased amount of inter-symbol interference (ISI) for transmission over both severe low-pass electrical channels and dispersive optical channels. This necessitates increased equalization complexity and consideration of advanced modulation schemes, such as four-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-4). Serial links which utilize an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) receiver front-end offer a potential solution, as they enable more powerful and flexible digital signal processing (DSP) for equalization and symbol detection and can easily support advanced modulation schemes. Moreover, the DSP back-end provides robustness to process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variations, benefits from improved area and power with CMOS technology scaling and offers easy design transfer between different technology nodes and thus improved time-to-market. However, ADC-based receivers generally consume higher power relative to their mixed-signal counterparts because of the significant power consumed by conventional multi-GS/s ADC implementations. This motivates exploration of energy-efficient ADC designs with moderate resolution and very high sampling rates to support data rates at or above 50Gb/s. This dissertation presents two power-efficient designs of ≥25GS/s time-interleaved ADCs for ADC-based wireline receivers. The first prototype includes the implementation of a 6b 25GS/s time-interleaved multi-bit search ADC in 65nm CMOS with a soft-decision selection algorithm that provides redundancy for relaxed track-and-hold (T/H) settling and improved metastability tolerance, achieving a figure-of-merit (FoM) of 143fJ/conversion step and 1.76pJ/bit for a PAM-4 receiver design. The second prototype features the design of a 52Gb/s PAM-4 ADC-based receiver in 65nm CMOS, where the front-end consists of a 4-stage continuous-time linear equalizer (CTLE)/variable gain amplifier (VGA) and a 6b 26GS/s time-interleaved SAR ADC with a comparator-assisted 2b/stage structure for reduced digital-to-analog converter (DAC) complexity and a 3-tap embedded feed-forward equalizer (FFE) for relaxed ADC resolution requirement. The receiver front-end achieves an efficiency of 4.53bJ/bit, while compensating for up to 31dB loss with DSP and no transmitter (TX) equalization

    A 1.67 pJ/Conversion-step 8-bit SAR-Flash ADC Architecture in 90-nm CMOS Technology

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    A novice advanced architecture of 8-bit analog todigital converter is introduced and analyzed in this work. Thestructure of proposed ADC is based on the sub-ranging ADCarchitecture in which a 4-bit resolution flash-ADC is utilized. Theproposed ADC architecture is designed by employing a comparatorwhich is equipped with common mode current feedback andgain boosting technique (CMFD-GB) and a residue amplifier. Theproposed 8 bits ADC structure can achieve the speed of 140 megasamplesper second. The proposed ADC architecture is designedat a resolution of 8 bits at 10 MHz sampling frequency. DNL andINL values of the proposed design are -0.94/1.22 and -1.19/1.19respectively. The ADC design dissipates a power of 1.24 mWwith the conversion speed of 0.98 ns. The magnitude of SFDRand SNR from the simulations at Nyquist input is 39.77 and 35.62decibel respectively. Simulations are performed on a SPICE basedtool in 90 nm CMOS technology. The comparison shows betterperformance for the proposed ADC design in comparison toother ADC architectures regarding speed, resolution and powerconsumption

    DIGITALLY ASSISTED TECHNIQUES FOR NYQUIST RATE ANALOG-to-DIGITAL CONVERTERS

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    With the advance of technology and rapid growth of digital systems, low power high speed analog-to-digital converters with great accuracy are in demand. To achieve high effective number of bits Analog-to-Digital Converter(ADC) calibration as a time consuming process is a potential bottleneck for designs. This dissertation presentsa fully digital background calibration algorithm for a 7-bit redundant flash ADC using split structure and look-up table based correction. Redundant comparators are used in the flash ADC design of this work in order to tolerate large offset voltages while minimizing signal input capacitance. The split ADC structure helps by eliminating the unknown input signal from the calibration path. The flash ADC has been designed in 180nm IBM CMOS technology and fabricated through MOSIS. This work was supported by Analog Devices, Wilmington,MA. While much research on ADC design has concentrated on increasing resolution and sample rate, there are many applications (e.g. biomedical devices and sensor networks) that do not require high performance but do require low power energy efficient ADCs. This dissertation also explores on design of a low quiescent current 100kSps Successive Approximation (SAR) ADC that has been used as an error detection ADC for an automotive application in 350nm CD (CMOS-DMOS) technology. This work was supported by ON Semiconductor Corp, East Greenwich,RI

    Parallel-sampling ADC architecture for power-efficient broadband multi-carrier systems

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    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

    Wideband CMOS Data Converters for Linear and Efficient mmWave Transmitters

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    With continuously increasing demands for wireless connectivity, higher\ua0carrier frequencies and wider bandwidths are explored. To overcome a limited transmit power at these higher carrier frequencies, multiple\ua0input multiple output (MIMO) systems, with a large number of transmitters\ua0and antennas, are used to direct the transmitted power towards\ua0the user. With a large transmitter count, each individual transmitter\ua0needs to be small and allow for tight integration with digital circuits. In\ua0addition, modern communication standards require linear transmitters,\ua0making linearity an important factor in the transmitter design.In this thesis, radio frequency digital-to-analog converter (RF-DAC)-based transmitters are explored. They shift the transition from digital\ua0to analog closer to the antennas, performing both digital-to-analog\ua0conversion and up-conversion in a single block. To reduce the need for\ua0computationally costly digital predistortion (DPD), a linear and wellbehaved\ua0RF-DAC transfer characteristic is desirable. The combination\ua0of non-overlapping local oscillator (LO) signals and an expanding segmented\ua0non-linear RF-DAC scaling is evaluated as a way to linearize\ua0the transmitter. This linearization concept has been studied both for\ua0the linearization of the RF-DAC itself and for the joint linearization of\ua0the cascaded RF-DAC-based modulator and power amplifier (PA) combination.\ua0To adapt the linearization, observation receivers are needed.\ua0In these, high-speed analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) have a central\ua0role. A high-speed ADC has been designed and evaluated to understand\ua0how concepts used to increase the sample rate affect the dynamic performance

    Time interleaved counter analog to digital converters

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    The work explores extending time interleaving in A/D converters, by applying a high-level of parallelism to one of the slowest and simplest types of data-converters, the counter ADC. The motivation for the work is to realise high-performance re-configurable A/D converters for use in multi-standard and multi-PHY communication receivers with signal bandwidths in the 10s to 100s of MHz. The counter ADC requires only a comparator, a ramp signal, and a digital counter, where the comparator compares the sampled input against all possible quantisation levels sequentially. This work explores arranging counter ADCs in large time-interleaved arrays, building a Time Interleaved Counter (TIC) ADC. The key to realising a TIC ADC is distributed sampling and a global multi-phase ramp generator realised with a novel figure-of-8 rotating resistor ring. Furthermore Counter ADCs allow for re-configurability between effective sampling rate and resolution due to their sequential comparison of reference levels in conversion. A prototype TIC ADC of 128-channels was fabricated and measured in 0.13μm CMOS technology, where the same block can be configured to operate as a 7-bit 1GS/s, 8-bit 500MS/s, or 9-bit 250MS/s dataconverter. The ADC achieves a sub 400fJ/step FOM in all modes of configuration
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