506 research outputs found

    Matrix Methods for the Dynamic Range Optimization of Continuous-TimeGm-CFilters

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a synthesis procedure for the optimization of the dynamic range of continuous-time fully differential G m - C filters. Such procedure builds up on a general extended state-space system representation which provides simple matrix algebra mechanisms to evaluate the noise and distortion performances of filters, as well as, the effect of amplitude and impedance scaling operations. Using these methods, an analytical technique for the dynamic range optimization of weakly nonlinear G m - C filters under power dissipation constraints is presented. The procedure is first explained for general filter structures and then illustrated with a simple biquadratic section

    A 0.18μm CMOS low-noise elliptic low-pass continuous-time filter

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a seventh order low-pass continuous-time elliptic filter for use in a high-performance wireline communication receiver. As an additional attribute, the filter provides programmable boost in the pass-band to counteract high frequency components attenuation. The filter shows a nominal cutoff frequency of fc=34 MHz , less than 1dB ripple in the pass-band, and a maximum stop-band rejection of 65dB. The filter also exhibits low noise feature (peak root spectral noise density below 56nV√Hz) and high linearity (more than 64dB of MTPR for a DMT signal of 0.5Vpp amplitude). It has been designed in a 0.18μm CMOS technology and it is compliant with industrial operation conditions (-40 to 85° C temperature variation and ± 5% power supply deviation). Simulations show a typical power consumption of 450 mW @ 1.8V supply.Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología TIC2003-0235

    A 0.18 μm CMOS low noise, highly linear continuous-time seventh-order elliptic low-pass filter

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a fast procedure for the system-level evaluation of noise and distortion in continuous-time integrated filters. The presented approach is based on Volterra's series theory and matrix algebra manipulation. This procedure has been integrated in a constrained optimization routine to improve the dynamic range of the filter while keeping the area and power consumption at a minimum. The proposed approach is demonstrated with the design, from system- to physical-level, of a seventh-order low-pass continuous-time elliptic filter for a high-performance broadband power-line communication receiver. The filter shows a nominal cut-off frequency of fc = 34MHz, less than 1dB ripple in the pass-band, and a maximum stop-band rejection of 65dB. Additionally, the filter features 12dB programmable boost in the pass-band to counteract high frequency components attenuation. Taking into account its wideband transfer characteristic, the filter has been implemented using G m-C techniques. The basic building block of its structure, the transconductor, uses a source degeneration topology with local feedback for linearity improving and shows a worst-case intermodulation distortion of -70 dB for two tones close to the passband edge, separated by 1MHz, with 70mV of amplitude. The filter combines very low noise (peak root spectral noise density below 56nV/√Hz) and high linearity (more than 64dB of MTPR for a DMT signal of 0.5Vpp amplitude) properties. The filter has been designed in a 0.18μm CMOS technology and it is compliant with industrial operation conditions (-40 to 85°C temperature variation and ±5% power supply deviation). The filter occupies 13mm2 and exhibits a typical power consumption of 450 mW from a 1.8V voltage supply.Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología TIC2003-0235

    Design of high-frequency Gm-C wavelet filters

    Get PDF
    “This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder." “Copyright IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.” DOI: 10.1109/ECCTD.2009.5274969A high-frequency wavelet filter which employs Gm-C blocks based on leap-frog (LF) multiple-loop feedback (MLF) structure is presented. The proposed method is well suitable for high-quality high-frequency operation since the Gm-C based filter can achieve high frequency, whilst LF MLF configuration has the characteristics of lower magnitude sensitivity and capability of realizing arbitrary rational functions. The Marr wavelet is selected as an example in this paper, and the design for a 100 MHz frequency operation is elaborated. The wavelet filter is simulated using TSMC 1.8 V 0.18 mum CMOS technology. Simulation results indicate that the proposed method is feasible for high frequency operation with relatively low power consumption.Peer reviewe

    A Polyphase Multipath Technique for Software-Defined Radio Transmitters

    Get PDF
    Transmitter circuits using large signal swings and hard-switched mixers are power-efficient, but also produce unwanted harmonics and sidebands, which are commonly removed using dedicated filters. This paper presents a polyphase multipath technique to relax or eliminate filters by canceling a multitude of harmonics and sidebands. Using this technique, a wideband and flexible power upconverter with a clean output spectrum is realized in 0.13-mum CMOS, aiming at a software-defined radio application. Prototype chips operate from DC to 2.4 GHz with spurs smaller than -40 dBc up to the 17th harmonic (18-path mode) or 5th harmonic (6-path mode) of the transmit frequency, without tuning or calibration. The transmitter delivers 8 mW of power to a 100-Omega load (2.54 Vpp-diff voltage swing) and the complete chip consumes 228 mW from a 1.2-V supply. It uses no filters, but only digital circuits and mixer

    System-level optimization of baseband filters for communication applications

    Get PDF
    In this paper, a design approach for the high-level synthesis of programmable continuous-time baseband filters able to achieve optimum trade-off among dynamic range, distortion behavior, mismatch tolerance and power area consumptions is presented. The proposed approach relies on building programming circuit elements as arrays of switchable unit cells and defines the synthesis as a constrained optimization problem with both continuous and discrete variables, this last representing the number of enabled cells of the arrays at each configuration. The cost function under optimization is, then, defined as a weighted combination of performance indices which are estimated from macromodels of the circuit elements. The methodology has been implemented in MATLAB™ and C++, and covers all the classical approximation techniques for filters, most common circuit topologies (namely, ladder simulation and cascaded biquad realizations) and both transconductance-C (Gm-C) and active-RC implementation approaches. The proposed synthesis strategy is illustrated with a programmable equal-ripple ladder Gm-C filter for a multi-band power-line communication modem.P.R.O.F.I.T. FIT-070000-2001-84

    A wideband linear tunable CDTA and its application in field programmable analogue array

    Get PDF
    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Hu, Z., Wang, C., Sun, J. et al. ‘A wideband linear tunable CDTA and its application in field programmable analogue array’, Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, Vol. 88 (3): 465-483, September 2016. Under embargo. Embargo end date: 6 June 2017. The final publication is available at Springer via https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10470-016-0772-7 © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2016In this paper, a NMOS-based wideband low power and linear tunable transconductance current differencing transconductance amplifier (CDTA) is presented. Based on the NMOS CDTA, a novel simple and easily reconfigurable configurable analogue block (CAB) is designed. Moreover, using the novel CAB, a simple and versatile butterfly-shaped FPAA structure is introduced. The FPAA consists of six identical CABs, and it could realize six order current-mode low pass filter, second order current-mode universal filter, current-mode quadrature oscillator, current-mode multi-phase oscillator and current-mode multiplier for analog signal processing. The Cadence IC Design Tools 5.1.41 post-layout simulation and measurement results are included to confirm the theory.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Multipath Polyphase Circuits and their Application to RF Transceivers

    Get PDF
    Nonlinearity and time-variance in radio frequency (RF) circuits leads to unwanted harmonics and intermodulation products, e.g. in power amplifiers and mixers. This paper reviews a recently proposed multipath polyphase circuit technique which can cancel such harmonics and intermodulation products. This will be illustrated using a power upconverter IC as an example. The upconverter works from DC to 2.4 GHz, and the multipath polyphase technique cleans its spectrum up to the 17th harmonic, keeping unwanted spurious responses more than 40dB below the carrier. The technique can also be useful for other applications, and some possible applications will be discussed
    corecore