2,230 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Noise shaping Asynchronous SAR ADC based time to digital converter
Time-to-digital converters (TDCs) are key elements for the digitization of timing information in modern mixed-signal circuits such as digital PLLs, DLLs, ADCs, and on-chip jitter-monitoring circuits. Especially, high-resolution TDCs are increasingly employed in on-chip timing tests, such as jitter and clock skew measurements, as advanced fabrication technologies allow fine on-chip time resolutions. Its main purpose is to quantize the time interval of a pulse signal or the time interval between the rising edges of two clock signals. Similarly to ADCs, the performance of TDCs are also primarily characterized by Resolution, Sampling Rate, FOM, SNDR, Dynamic Range and DNL/INL. This work proposes and demonstrates 2nd order noise shaping Asynchronous SAR ADC based TDC architecture with highest resolution of 0.25 ps among current state of art designs with respect to post-layout simulation results. This circuit is a combination of low power/High Resolution 2nd Order Noise Shaped Asynchronous SAR ADC backend with simple Time to Amplitude converter (TAC) front-end and is implemented in 40nm CMOS technology. Additionally, special emphasis is given on the discussion on various current state of art TDC architectures.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
An Offset Cancelation Technique for Latch Type Sense Amplifiers
An offset compensation technique for a latch type sense amplifier is proposed in this paper. The proposed scheme is based on the recalibration of the charging/discharging current of the critical nodes which are affected by the device mismatches. The circuit has been designed in a 65 nm CMOS technology with 1.2 V core transistors. The auto-calibration procedure is fully digital. Simulation results are given verifying the operation for sampling a 5 Gb/s signal dissipating only 360 uW
Digital Background Self-Calibration Technique for Compensating Transition Offsets in Reference-less Flash ADCs
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
Recommended from our members
Design and implementation of Radix-3/Radix-2 based novel hybrid SAR ADC in scaled CMOS technologies
This thesis focuses on low power and high speed design techniques for successive
approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) in nanoscale
CMOS technologies. SAR ADCs’ speed is limited by the number of bits of
resolution. An N-bit conventional SAR ADC takes N conversion cycles. To speed
up the conversion process, we introduce a radix-3 SAR ADC which can compute
1:6 bits per cycle. To our knowledge, it is the first fully programmable and efficiently
hardware controlled radix-3 SAR ADC. We had to use two comparators per
cycle due to ADC architecture and we proposed a simple calibration scheme for
the comparators. Also, as the architecture of the DAC array is completely different
from the architecture of conventional radix-2 SAR ADC’s DAC arrays, we came up
with an algorithm for calibration of capacitors of the DAC.
Low power SAR ADCs face two major challenges especially at high resolutions:
(1) increased comparator power to suppress the noise, and (2) increased
DAC switching energy due to the large DAC size. Due to our proposed architecture,the radix-3 SAR ADC uses two comparators per cycle and two differential DACs.
To improve the comparator’s power efficiency, an efficient and low cost calibration
technique has been introduced. It allows a low power and noisy comparator to
achieve high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
To improve the DAC switching energy, we introduced a radix-3/radix-2
based novel hybrid SAR ADC. We use two single ended DACs for radix-3 SAR
ADC and these two single ended DACs can be used as one differential DAC for
radix-2 SAR ADC. So, overall, we only have a single DAC as conventional radix-
2 SAR ADC. In addition, a monotonic switching technique is adopted for radix-2
search to reduce the DAC capacitor size and hence, to reduce switching power. It
can reduce the total number of unit capacitors by four times. Our proposed hybrid
SAR ADC can achieve less DAC energy compared to radix-3 and radix-2 SAR
ADCs. Also, to utilize technology scaling, we used the minimum capacitor size
allowed by thermal noise limitations. To achieve high resolution, we introduced
calibration algorithm for the DAC array.
As mentioned earlier, the radix-3 SAR ADC offers higher power than conventional
radix-2 SAR ADC because of simultaneous use of two comparators. In
the proposed hybrid SAR ADC, we will be using radix-3 search for first few MSB
bits. So, the resolution required for radix-3 comparators are much larger than the
LSB value of 10-bit ADC. By implementing calibration of comparators, we can
use low power, high input referred offset and high speed comparators for radix-3
search. Radix-2 search will be used for rest of the bits and the resolution of the
radix-2 comparator has to be less than the required LSB value. So, a high power, low input referred offset and high speed comparator is used for radix-2 search.
Also, we introduced clock gating for comparators. So, radix-3 comparators will not
toggle during radix-2 search and the radix-2 comparators will be inactive during
radix-3 search. By using the aforementioned techniques, the overall comparator
power is definitely less than a radix-3 SAR ADC and comparable to a conventional
radix-2 SAR ADC.
A prototype radix-3/radix-2 based hybrid SAR ADC with the proposed
technique is designed and fabricated in 40nm CMOS technology. It achieves an
SNDR of 56.9 dB and consumes only 0.38 mW power at 30MS/s, leading to a
Walden figure of merit of 21.5 fJ/conv-step.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
A 9.38-bit, 422nW, high linear SAR-ADC for wireless implantable system
In wireless implantable systems (WIS) low power consumption and linearity are the most prominent performance metrics in data acquisition systems. successive approximation register-analog to digital converter (SAR-ADC) is used for data processing in WIS. In this research work, a 10-bit low power high linear SAR-ADC has been designed for WIS. The proposed SAR-ADC architecture is designed using the sample and hold (S/H) circuit consisting of a bootstrap circuit with a dummy switch. This SAR-ADC has a dynamic latch comparator, a split capacitance digital to analog converter (SC-DAC) with mismatch calibration, and a SAR using D-flipflop. This architecture is designed in 45 nm CMOS technology. This ADC reduces non-linearity errors and improve the output voltage swing due to the usage of a clock booster and dummy switch in the sample and hold. The calculated outcomes of the proposed SAR ADC display that with on-chip calibration an ENOB of 9.38 (bits), spurious free distortion ratio (SFDR) of 58.621 dB, and ± 0.2 LSB DNL and ± 0.4LSB INL after calibration
Recommended from our members
Utilizing digital design techniques and circuits to improve energy and design efficiency of analog and mixed-signal circuits
Technology scaling has long driven large growth in the electronics market. With each successive technology generation, digital circuits become more power and area efficient. The large performance increases realized for digital circuits due to digital scaling have not translated to similar performance improvements for analog circuits. First, noise-limited analog circuits are not capable of leveraging the reduced parasitics of advanced processes, since capacitor sizes are generally set by noise requirements. Second, analog circuit performance is closely tied to the achievable device intrinsic gain, which degrades as process sizes shrink. Reduced supply voltages further exacerbate this issue, as the achievable gain per stage is limited by the number of devices that can be stacked while maintaining all devices in saturation. Finally, process variation increases with decreased feature sizes, so analog circuits have deal with increased mismatch and wider variations in threshold voltages, increasing the time required to design a circuit that is robust across process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variation. This work seeks to address the limitations of analog circuits in advanced technologies by leveraging digital techniques and digital-like circuits that offer improved scalability. The first half of this dissertation investigates replacing the traditional closed-loop residue amplifier in a pipeline analog-to-digital converter (ADC) with an open loop dynamic amplifier. Previous works incorporating dynamic amplifiers have struggled to achieve large gains and have suffered from offset mismatch between the comparator and amplifier, which will only get worse in more advanced technologies. We propose the usage of a residue amplifier that combines an integration stage, to ensure low noise operation, with a positive feedback stage, to ensure high gain and high speed operation. By utilizing this topology, the proposed amplifier was the first dynamic amplifier to achieve a high gain of 32. Additionally, the proposed amplifier can reuse existing comparator hardware in the ADC, removing all offset mismatch between comparator and amplifier. Digital calibration techniques were applied to ensure a constant gain across PVT. The next part of this dissertation tries to overcome the scaling challenges for noise-limited ADCs with band-limited input signals. By leveraging digital filtering techniques to generate a prediction of the band-limited signal, the conversion can be limited to a range that is a fraction of the total ADC input range, allowing for significant decreases in reference and comparator power consumption. This work extends previous works by enabling accurate predictions for any band-limited signal characteristic. Previous works only focused on accurate predictions for low-activity signals. Finally, the large compute power enabled by modern technology scaling is leveraged to improve the design efficiency of analog circuits. A new automated circuit sizing tool is proposed that can achieve better performance than manual designs done by experts in a much shorter amount of time. All of these techniques help to alleviate the power and design efficiency limitations caused by technology scaling.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Design of Energy-Efficient A/D Converters with Partial Embedded Equalization for High-Speed Wireline Receiver Applications
As the data rates of wireline communication links increases, channel impairments such as skin effect, dielectric loss, fiber dispersion, reflections and cross-talk become more pronounced. This warrants more interest in analog-to-digital converter (ADC)-based serial link receivers, as they allow for more complex and flexible back-end digital signal processing (DSP) relative to binary or mixed-signal receivers. Utilizing this back-end DSP allows for complex digital equalization and more bandwidth-efficient modulation schemes, while also displaying reduced process/voltage/temperature (PVT) sensitivity. Furthermore, these architectures offer straightforward design translation and can directly leverage the area and power scaling offered by new CMOS technology nodes. However, the power consumption of the ADC front-end and subsequent digital signal processing is a major issue. Embedding partial equalization inside the front-end ADC can potentially result in lowering the complexity of back-end DSP and/or decreasing the ADC resolution requirement, which results in a more energy-effcient receiver. This dissertation presents efficient implementations for multi-GS/s time-interleaved ADCs with partial embedded equalization. First prototype details a 6b 1.6GS/s ADC with a novel embedded redundant-cycle 1-tap DFE structure in 90nm CMOS. The other two prototypes explain more complex 6b 10GS/s ADCs with efficiently embedded feed-forward equalization (FFE) and decision feedback equalization (DFE) in 65nm CMOS. Leveraging a time-interleaved successive approximation ADC architecture, new structures for embedded DFE and FFE are proposed with low power/area overhead. Measurement results over FR4 channels verify the effectiveness of proposed embedded equalization schemes. The comparison of fabricated prototypes against state-of-the-art general-purpose ADCs at similar speed/resolution range shows comparable performances, while the proposed architectures include embedded equalization as well
Recommended from our members
Design techniques for low-power SAR ADCs in nano-scale CMOS technologies
This thesis presents low power design techniques for successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) in nano-scale CMOS technologies. Low power SAR ADCs face two major challenges especially at high resolutions: (1) increased comparator power to suppress the noise, and (2) increased DAC switching energy due to the large DAC size. To improve the comparator’s power efficiency, a statistical estimation based comparator noise reduction technique is presented. It allows a low power and noisy comparator to achieve high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by estimating the conversion residue. A first prototype ADC in 65nm CMOS has been developed to validate the proposed noise reduction technique. It achieves 4.5 fJ/conv-step Walden figure of merit and 64.5 dB signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SNDR). In addition, a bidirectional single-side switching technique is developed to reduce the DAC switching power. It can reduce the DAC switching power and the total number of unit capacitors by 86% and 75%, respectively. A second prototype ADC with the proposed switching technique is designed and fabricated in 180nm CMOS technology. It achieves an SNDR of 63.4 dB and consumes only 24 Wat 1MS/s, leading to aWalden figure of merit of 19.9 fJ/conv-step. This thesis also presents an improved loop-unrolled SAR ADC, which works at high frequency with reduced SAR logic power and delay. It employs the bidirectional single-side switching technique to reduce the comparator common-mode voltage variation. In addition, it uses a Vcm-adaptive offset calibration technique which can accurately calibrate comparator’s offset at its operating Vcm. A prototype ADC designed in 40nm CMOS achieves 35 dB at 700 MS/s sampling rate and consumes only 0.95 mW, leading to a Walden figure of merit of 30 fJ/conv-step.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Analyses and design strategies for fundamental enabling building blocks: Dynamic comparators, voltage references and on-die temperature sensors
Dynamic comparators and voltage references are among the most widely used fundamental building blocks for various types of circuits and systems, such as data converters, PLLs, switching regulators, memories, and CPUs. As thermal constraints quickly emerged as a dominant performance limiter, on-die temperature sensors will be critical to the reliable operation of future integrated circuits. This dissertation investigates characteristics of these three enabling circuits and design strategies for improving their performances.
One of the most critical specifications of a dynamic comparator is its input referred offset voltage, which is pivotal to achieving overall system performance requirements of many mixed-signal circuits and systems. Unlike offset voltages in other circuits such as amplifiers, the offset voltage in a dynamic comparator is extremely challenging to analyze and predict analytically due to its dependence on transient response and due to internal positive feedback and time-varying operating points in the comparator. In this work, a novel balanced method is proposed to facilitate the evaluation of time-varying operating points of transistors in a dynamic comparator. Two types of offsets are studied in the model: (1) static offset voltage caused by mismatches in mobilities, transistor sizes, and threshold voltages, and (2) dynamic offset voltage caused by mismatches in parasitic capacitors or loading capacitors. To validate the proposed method, dynamic comparators in two prevalent topologies are implemented in 0.25 ÎĽm and 40 nm CMOS technologies. Agreement between predicted results and simulated results verifies the effectiveness of the proposed method. The new method and the analytical models enable designers to identify the most dominant contributors to offset and to optimize the dynamic comparators\u27 performances. As an illustrating example, the Lewis-Gray dynamic comparator was analyzed using the balanced method and redesigned to minimize its offset voltage. Simulation results show that the offset voltage was easily reduced by 41% while maintaining the same silicon area.
A bandgap voltage reference is one of the core functional blocks in both analog and digital systems. Despite the reported improvements in performance of voltage references, little attention has been focused on theoretical characterizations of non-ideal effects on the value of the output voltage, on the inflection point location and on the curvature of the reference voltage. In this work, a systematic approach is proposed to analytically determine the effects of two non-ideal elements: the temperature dependent gain-determining resistors and the amplifier offset voltage. The effectiveness of the analytical models is validated by comparing analytical results against Spectre simulation results.
Research on on-die temperature sensor design has received rapidly increasing attention since component and power density induced thermal stress has become a critical factor in the reliable operation of integrated circuits. For effective power and thermal management of future multi-core systems, hundreds of sensors with sufficient accuracy, small area and low power are required on a single chip. This work introduces a new family of highly linear on chip temperature sensors. The proposed family of temperature sensors expresses CMOS threshold voltage as an output. The sensor output is independent of power supply voltage and independent of mobility values. It can achieve very high temperature linearity, with maximum nonlinearity around +/- 0.05oC over a temperature range of -20oC to 100oC. A sizing strategy based on combined analytical analysis and numerical optimization has been presented. Following this method, three circuits A, B and C have been designed in standard 0.18 ym CMOS technology, all achieving excellent linearity as demonstrated by Cadence Spectre simulations. Circuits B and C are the modified versions of circuit A, and have improved performance at the worst corner-low voltage supply and high threshold voltage corner. Finally, a direct temperature-to-digital converter architecture is proposed as a master-slave hybrid temperature-to-digital converter. It does not require any traditional constant reference voltage or reference current, it does not attempt to make any node voltage or branch current constant or precisely linear to temperature, yet it generates a digital output code that is very linear with temperature
- …