137 research outputs found

    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

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    ํ•™์œ„๋…ผ๋ฌธ (๋ฐ•์‚ฌ)-- ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์› : ์ „๊ธฐยท์ปดํ“จํ„ฐ๊ณตํ•™๋ถ€, 2014. 2. ์ •๋•๊ท .As a device scaling proceeds, Charge Pump PLL has been confronted by many design challenges. Especially, a leakage current in loop filter and reduced dynamic range due to a lower operating voltage make it difficult to adopt a conventional analog PLL architecture for a highly scaled technology. To solve these issues, All Digital PLL (ADPLL) has been widely studied recently. ADPLL mitigates a filter leakage and a reduced dynamic range issues by replacing the analog circuits with digital ones. However, it is still difficult to get a low jitter under low supply voltage. In this thesis, we propose a dual loop architecture to achieve a low jitter even with a low supply voltage. And bottom-up based multi-step TDC and DCO are proposed to meet both fine resolution and wide operation range. In the aspect of design methodology, ADPLL has relied on a full custom design method although ADPLL is fully described in HDL (Hardware Description Language). We propose a new cell based layout technique to automatically synthesize the whole circuit and layout. The test chip has no linearity degradation although it is fully synthesized using a commercially available auto P&R tool. We has implemented an all digital pixel clock generator using the proposed dual loop architecture and the cell based layout technique. The entire circuit is automatically synthesized using 28nm CMOS technology. And s-domain linear model is utilized to optimize the jitter of the dual-loop PLL. Test chip occupies 0.032mm2, and achieves a 15ps_rms integrated jitter although it has extremely low input reference clock of 100 kHz. The whole circuit operates at 1.0V and consumes only 3.1mW.Abstract i Lists of Figures vii Lists of Tables xiii 1. Introduction 1 1.1 Thesis Motivation and Organization 1 1.1.1 Motivation 1 1.1.2 Thesis Organization 2 1.2 PLL Design Issues in Scaled CMOS Technology 3 1.2.1 Low Supply Voltage 4 1.2.2 High Leakage Current 6 1.2.3 Device Reliability: NBTI, HCI, TDDB, EM 8 1.2.4 Mismatch due to Proximity Effects: WPE, STI 11 1.3 Overview of Clock Synthesizers 14 1.3.1 Dual Voltage Charge Pump PLL 14 1.3.2 DLL Based Edge Combining Clock Multiplier 16 1.3.3 Recirculation DLL 17 1.3.4 Reference Injected PLL 18 1.3.5 All Digital PLL 19 1.3.6 Flying Adder Clock Synthesizer 20 1.3.7 Dual Loop Hybrid PLL 21 1.3.8 Comparisons 23 2. Tutorial of ADPLL Design 25 2.1 Introduction 25 2.1.1 Motivation for a pure digital 25 2.1.2 Conversion to digital domain 26 2.2 Functional Blocks 26 2.2.1 TDC, and PFD/Charge Pump 26 2.2.2 Digital Loop Filter and Analog R/C Loop Filter 29 2.2.3 DCO and VCO 34 2.2.4 S-domain Model of the Whole Loop 34 2.2.5 ADPLL Loop Design Flow 36 2.3 S-domain Noise Model 41 2.3.1 Noise Transfer Functions 41 2.3.2 Quantization Noise due to Limited TDC Resolution 45 2.3.3 Quantization Noise due to Divider ฮ”ฮฃ Noise 46 2.3.4 Quantization Noise due to Limited DCO Resolution 47 2.3.5 Quantization Noise due to DCO ฮ”ฮฃ Dithering 48 2.3.6 Random Noise of DCO and Input Clock 50 2.3.7 Over-all Phase Noise 50 3. Synthesizable All Digital Pixel Clock PLL Design 53 3.1 Overview 53 3.1.1 Introduction of Pixel Clock PLL 53 3.1.1 Design Specifications 55 3.2 Proposed Architecture 60 3.2.1 All Digital Dual Loop PLL 60 3.2.2 2-step controlled TDC 61 3.2.3 3-step controlled DCO 64 3.2.4 Digital Loop Filter 76 3.3 S-domain Noise Model 78 3.4 Loop Parameter Optimization Based on the s-domain Model 85 3.5 RTL and Gate Level Circuit Design 88 3.5.1 Overview of the design flow 88 3.5.2 Behavioral Simulation and Gate level synthesis 89 3.5.1 Preventing a meta-stability 90 3.5.1 Reusable Coding Style 92 3.6 Layout Synthesis 94 3.6.1 Auto P&R 94 3.6.2 Design of Unit Cells 97 3.6.3 Linearity Degradation in Synthesized TDC 98 3.6.4 Linearity Degradation in Synthesized DCO 106 3.7 Experiment Results 109 3.7.1 DCO measurement 109 3.7.2 PLL measurement 113 3.8 Conclusions 117 A. Device Technology Scaling Trends 118 A.1. Motivation for Technology Scaling 118 A.2. Constant Field Scaling 120 A.3. Quasi Constant Voltage Scaling 123 A.4. Device Technology Trends in Real World 124 B. Spice Simulation Tip for a DCO 137 C. Phase Noise to Jitter Conversion 141 Bibliography 144 ์ดˆ๋ก 151Docto

    Performance improvement and cost reduction techniques for radio over fiber communications

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    Advanced cost reduction and performance improvement techniques conceived for Radio Over Fiber (ROF) communications are considered. ROF techniques are expected to form the backbone of the future 5G generation of wireless networks. The achievable link performance and the associated deployement cost constitute the most salient metrics of a ROF architecture. In this paper, we commence by providing a rudimentary overview of the ROF architecture and then elaborate on ROF techniques designed for improving the attainable system performance. We conclude by describing the ROF techniques conceived for reducing the ROF system installation costs

    Digital assistance design for analog systems : digital baseband for outphasing power amplifiers

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2013.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-150).Digital assistance is among many aspects that can be leveraged to help analog/mixed-signal designers keep up with the technology scaling. It usually takes the form of predistorter or compensator in an analog/mixed-signal system and helps compensate the nonidealities in the system. Digital assistance takes advantage of the process scaling with faster speed and a higher level of integration. When a digital system is co-optimized with system modeling techniques, digital assistance usually becomes a key enabling block for the high performance of the overall system. This thesis presents the design of digital assistances through the digital baseband design for outphasing power amplifiers. In the digital baseband design, this thesis conveys two major points: the importance of the use of the reduced-complexity system modeling techniques, and the communications between hardware design and system modeling. These points greatly help the success in the design of the energy-efficient baseband. The first part of the baseband design is to realize the nonlinear signal processing unit required by the modulation scheme. Conventional approaches of implementing this functionality do not scale well to meet the throughput, area and energy-efficiency targets. We propose a novel fixed-point piece-wise linear approximation technique for the nonlinear function computations involved in the signal processing unit. The new technique allows us to achieve an energy and area-efficient design with a throughput of 3.4Gsamples/s. Compared to the projected previous designs, our design shows 2x improvement in energy-efficiency and 25x in area-efficiency. The second part of the baseband design devotes to the nonlinear compensator design, aiming to improve the linearity performance of the outphasing power amplifier. We first explore the feasibility of a working compensator by use of an off-line iterative solving scheme. With the confirmation that a compensator does exist, we analyze the structure of the nonlinear baseband-equivalent PA system and create a dynamical real-time compensator model. The resulting compensator provides the overall PA system with around 10dB improvement in ACPR and up to 2.5% in EVM.by Yan Li.Ph.D

    Design Techniques for High Performance Serial Link Transceivers

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    Increasing data rates over electrical channels with significant frequency-dependent loss is difficult due to excessive inter-symbol interference (ISI). In order to achieve sufficient link margins at high rates, I/O system designers implement equalization in the transmitters and are motivated to consider more spectrally-efficient modulation formats relative to the common PAM-2 scheme, such as PAM-4 and duobinary. The first work, reviews when to consider PAM-4 and duobinary formats, as the modulation scheme which yields the highest system margins at a given data rate is a function of the channel loss profile, and presents a 20Gb/s triple-mode transmitter capable of efficiently implementing these three modulation schemes and three-tap feedforward equalization. A statistical link modeling tool, which models ISI, crosstalk, random noise, and timing jitter, is developed to compare the three common modulation formats operating on electrical backplane channel models. In order to improve duobinary modulation efficiency, a low-power quarter-rate duobinary precoder circuit is proposed which provides significant timing margin improvement relative to full-rate precoders. Also as serial I/O data rates scale above 10 Gb/s, crosstalk between neighboring channels degrades system bit-error rate (BER) performance. The next work presents receive-side circuitry which merges the cancellation of both near-end and far-end crosstalk (NEXT/FEXT) and can automatically adapt to different channel environments and variations in process, voltage, and temperature. NEXT cancellation is realized with a novel 3-tap FIR filter which combines two traditional FIR filter taps and a continuous-time band-pass filter IIR tap for efficient crosstalk cancellation, with all filter tap coefficients automatically determined via an ondie sign-sign least-mean-square (SS-LMS) adaptation engine. FEXT cancellation is realized by coupling the aggressor signal through a differentiator circuit whose gain is automatically adjusted with a power-detection-based adaptation loop. In conclusion, the proposed architectures in the transmitter side and receiver side together are to be good solution in the high speed I/O serial links to improve the performance by overcome the physical channel loss and adjacent channel noise as the system becomes complicated

    Energy-Efficient Receiver Design for High-Speed Interconnects

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    High-speed interconnects are of vital importance to the operation of high-performance computing and communication systems, determining the ultimate bandwidth or data rates at which the information can be exchanged. Optical interconnects and the employment of high-order modulation formats are considered as the solutions to fulfilling the envisioned speed and power efficiency of future interconnects. One common key factor in bringing the success is the availability of energy-efficient receivers with superior sensitivity. To enhance the receiver sensitivity, improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the front-end circuits, or equalization that mitigates the detrimental inter-symbol interference (ISI) is required. In this dissertation, architectural and circuit-level energy-efficient techniques serving these goals are presented. First, an avalanche photodetector (APD)-based optical receiver is described, which utilizes non-return-to-zero (NRZ) modulation and is applicable to burst-mode operation. For the purposes of improving the overall optical link energy efficiency as well as the link bandwidth, this optical receiver is designed to achieve high sensitivity and high reconfiguration speed. The high sensitivity is enabled by optimizing the SNR at the front-end through adjusting the APD responsivity via its reverse bias voltage, along with the incorporation of 2-tap feedforward equalization (FFE) and 2-tap decision feedback equalization (DFE) implemented in current-integrating fashion. The high reconfiguration speed is empowered by the proposed integrating dc and amplitude comparators, which eliminate the RC settling time constraints. The receiver circuits, excluding the APD die, are fabricated in 28-nm CMOS technology. The optical receiver achieves bit-error-rate (BER) better than 1Eโˆ’12 at โˆ’16-dBm optical modulation amplitude (OMA), 2.24-ns reconfiguration time with 5-dB dynamic range, and 1.37-pJ/b energy efficiency at 25 Gb/s. Second, a 4-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM4) wireline receiver is described, which incorporates continuous time linear equalizers (CTLEs) and a 2-tap direct DFE dedicated to the compensation for the first and second post-cursor ISI. The direct DFE in a PAM4 receiver (PAM4-DFE) is made possible by the proposed CMOS track-and-regenerate slicer. This proposed slicer offers rail-to-rail digital feedback signals with significantly improved clock-to-Q delay performance. The reduced slicer delay relaxes the settling time constraint of the summer circuits and allows the stringent DFE timing constraint to be satisfied. With the availability of a direct DFE employing the proposed slicer, inductor-based bandwidth enhancement and loop-unrolling techniques, which can be power/area intensive, are not required. Fabricated in 28-nm CMOS technology, the PAM4 receiver achieves BER better than 1Eโˆ’12 and 1.1-pJ/b energy efficiency at 60 Gb/s, measured over a channel with 8.2-dB loss at Nyquist frequency. Third, digital neural-network-enhanced FFEs (NN-FFEs) for PAM4 analog-to-digital converter (ADC)-based optical interconnects are described. The proposed NN-FFEs employ a custom learnable piecewise linear (PWL) activation function to tackle the nonlinearities with short memory lengths. In contrast to the conventional Volterra equalizers where multipliers are utilized to generate the nonlinear terms, the proposed NN-FFEs leverage the custom PWL activation function for nonlinear operations and reduce the required number of multipliers, thereby improving the area and power efficiencies. Applications in the optical interconnects based on micro-ring modulators (MRMs) are demonstrated with simulation results of 50-Gb/s and 100-Gb/s links adopting PAM4 signaling. The proposed NN-FFEs and the conventional Volterra equalizers are synthesized with the standard-cell libraries in a commercial 28-nm CMOS technology, and their power consumptions and performance are compared. Better than 37% lower power overhead can be achieved by employing the proposed NN-FFEs, in comparison with the Volterra equalizer that leads to similar improvement in the symbol-error-rate (SER) performance.</p
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