87 research outputs found

    A Research on High-Performance Analog-to-Digital Converters in Wireless Communication Systems

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    博士(工学)法政大学 (Hosei University

    Pipelined analog-to-digital conversion using current-mode reference shifting

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    Dissertação para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Electrotécnica e de ComputadoresPipeline Analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are the most popular architecture for high-speed medium-to-high resolution applications. A fundamental, but often unreferenced building block of pipeline ADCs are the reference voltage circuits. They are required to maintain a stable reference with low output impedance to drive large internal switched capacitor loads quickly. Achieving this usually leads to a scheme that consumes a large portion of the overall power and area. A review of the literature shows that the required stable reference can be achieved with either on-chip buffering or with large off-chip decoupling capacitors. On-chip buffering is ideal for system integration but requires a high speed buffer with high power dissipation. The use of a reference with off-chip decoupling results in significant power savings but increases the pads of chip, the count of external components and the overall system cost. Moreover the amount of ringing on the internal reference voltage caused by the series inductance of the package makes this solution not viable for high speed ADCs. To address this challenge, a pipeline ADC employing a multiplying digital-to-analog converter (MDAC) with current-mode reference shifting is presented. Consequently, no reference voltages and, therefore, no voltage buffers are necessary. The bias currents are generated on-chip by a reference current generator that dissipates low power. The proposed ADC is designed in a 65 nm CMOS technology and operates at sampling rates ranging from 10 to 80 MS/s. At 40 MS/s the ADC dissipates 10.8 mW from a 1.2 V power supply and achieves an SNDR of 57.2 dB and a THD of -68 dB, corresponding to an ENOB of 9.2 bit. The corresponding figure of merit is 460 fJ/step

    A 1.8v 10-Bit 100ms/S Fully Differential Pipelined Adc In Cmos 0.18um Process Technology

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    The Bluetooth™ standards is one of the major driving forces of the short-range wireless communications market as well as home and office environments. There are many Bluetooth™ standards covering the signal bandwidth from 500 KHz to 25 MHz. For low frequency data sampling, SAR and Delta-Sigma ADC are preferred architecture for signal bandwidth of below 3 MHz and pipelined ADC is prefer for 5 MHz and above. This research is to deploy pipelined ADC as single architecture that able to cover Bluetooth™ standard from BT1.1 to BT4.0. The targeted sampling rate is 100MS/s with 10 bit resolution at 1.8V power and designed using Silterra CMOS 0.18um process. Flipped Voltage Follower (FVF) operational amplifier has been recommended as operational amplifier to achieve high sampling rate .Ten stages pipelined ADC was developed and tested at 50MS/s and 100MS/s. The sampling rate has achieved by measureable of 50MS/s and the power consumption is 54mW. Sampling rate can be increased further by improving the gain bandwidth of the FVF Op-Amp through the implementation of the digital calibration and common mode feedback (CMFB) circuit

    Low-Power SAR ADCs:Basic Techniques and Trends

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    With the advent of small, battery-powered devices, power efficiency has become of paramount importance. For analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), the successive approximation register (SAR) architecture plays a prominent role thanks to its ability to combine power efficiency with a simple architecture, a broad application scope, and technology portability. In this review article, the basic design challenges for low-power SAR ADCs are summarized and several design techniques are illustrated. Furthermore, the limitations of SAR ADCs are outlined and hybrid architecture trends, such as noise-shaping SAR ADCs and pipelined SAR ADCs, are briefly introduced and clarified with examples

    High speed – energy efficient successive approximation analog to digital converter using tri-level switching

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    This thesis reports issues and design methods used to achieve high-speed and high-resolution Successive Approximation Register analog to digital converters (SAR ADCs). A major drawback of this technique relates to the mismatch in the binary ratios of capacitors which causes nonlinearity. Another issue is the use of large capacitors due to nonlinear effect of parasitic capacitance. Nonlinear effect of capacitor mismatch is investigated in this thesis. Based on the analysis, a new Tri-level switching algorithm is proposed to reduce the matching requirement for capacitors in SAR ADCs. The integral non-linearity (INL) and the differential non-linearity (DNL) of the proposed scheme are reduced by factor of two over conventional SAR ADC, which is the lowest compared to the previously reported schemes. In addition, the switching energy of the proposed scheme is reduced by 98.02% compared with the conventional SAR architecture. A new correction method to solve metastability error of comparator based on a novel design approach is proposed which reduces the required settling time about 1.1τ for each conversion cycle. Based on the above proposed methods two SAR ADCs: an 8-bit SAR ADC with 50MS/sec sampling rate, and a 10-bit SAR split ADC with 70 MS/sec sampling rate have been designed in 0.18μm Silterra complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology process which works at 1.2V supply voltage and input voltage of 2.4Vp-p. The 8-bit ADC digitizes 25MHz input signal with 48.16dB signal to noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) and 52.41dB spurious free dynamic range (SFDR) while consuming about 589μW. The figure of merit (FOM) of this ADC is 56.65 fJ/conv-step. The post layout of the 10-bit ADC with 1MHz input frequency produces SNDR, SFDR and effective number of bits (ENOB) of 57.1dB, 64.05dB and 9.17Bit, respectively, while its DNL and INL are -0.9/+2.8 least significant bit (LSB) and -2.5/+2.7 LSB, respectively. The total power consumption, including digital, analog and reference power, is 1.6mW. The FOM is 71.75fJ/conv. step

    DESIGN OF LOW-POWER LOW-VOLTAGE SUCCESSIVE-APPROXIMATION ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTERS

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    A 12-bit, 40 msamples/s, low-power, low-area pipeline analog-to-digital converter in CMOS 0.18 mum technology.

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    With advancements in digital signal processing in recent years, the need for high-speed, high-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) which can be used in the analog front-end has been increasing. Some examples of these applications are image and video signal processing, wireless communications and asymmetrical digital subscriber line (ADSL). In CMOS integrated circuit design, it is desirable to integrate the digital circuit and the ADC in one microchip to reduce the cost of fabrication. Consequently the power dissipation and area of the ADCs are important design factors. The original contributions in this thesis are as follows. Since the performance of pipeline ADCs significantly depends on the op-amps and comparators circuits, the performance of various comparators is analyzed and the effect of op-amp topology on the performance of pipeline ADCs is investigated. This thesis also presents a novel architecture for design of low-power and low-area pipelined ADCs which will be more useful for very low voltage applications in the future. At the schematic level, a low-power CMOS implementation of the current-mode MDAC is presented and an improved voltage comparator is designed. With the proposed design and the optimization methodology it is possible to reduce power dissipation and area compared with conventional fully differential schemes.Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Paper copy at Leddy Library: Theses & Major Papers - Basement, West Bldg. / Call Number: Thesis2004 .M64. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-01, page: 0281. Adviser: C. Chen. Thesis (M.A.Sc.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 2004

    A re-configurable pipeline ADC architecture with built-in self-test techniques

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    High-performance analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits are integral parts of today\u27s and future networking and communication systems. The main challenge facing the semiconductor industry is the ability to economically produce these analog ICs. This translates, in part, into the need to efficiently evaluate the performance of such ICs during manufacturing (production testing) and to come up with dynamic architectures that enable the performance of these ICs to be maximized during manufacturing and later when they\u27re operating in the field. On the performance evaluation side, this dissertation deals with the concept of Built-In-Self-Test (BIST) to allow the efficient and economical evaluation of certain classes of high-performance analog circuits. On the dynamic architecture side, this dissertation deals with pipeline ADCs and the use of BIST to dynamically, during production testing or in the field, re-configure them to produce better performing ICs.;In the BIST system proposed, the analog test signal is generated on-chip by sigma-delta modulation techniques. The performance of the ADC is measured on-chip by a digital narrow-band filter. When this system is used on the wafer level, significant testing time and thus testing cost can be saved.;A re-configurable pipeline ADC architecture to improve the dynamic performance is proposed. Based on dynamic performance measurements, the best performance configuration is chosen from a collection of possible pipeline configurations. This basic algorithm can be applied to many pipeline analog systems. The proposed grouping algorithm cuts down the number of evaluation permutation from thousands to 18 for a 9-bit ADC thus allowing the method to be used in real applications.;To validate the developments of this dissertation, a 40MS/s 9-bit re-configurable pipeline ADC was designed and implemented in TSMC\u27s 0.25mum single-poly CMOS digital process. This includes a fully differential folded-cascode gain-boosting operational amplifier with high gain and high unity-gain bandwidth. The experimental results strongly support the effectiveness of reconfiguration algorithm, which provides an average of 0.5bit ENOB improvement among the set of configurations. For many applications, this is a very significant performance improvement.;The BIST and re-configurability techniques proposed are not limited to pipeline ADCs only. The BIST methodology is applicable to many analog systems and the re-configurability is applicable to any analog pipeline system
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