193 research outputs found
High-Bandwidth Voltage-Controlled Oscillator based architectures for Analog-to-Digital Conversion
The purpose of this thesis is the proposal and implementation of data conversion
open-loop architectures based on voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs) built with
ring oscillators (RO-based ADCs), suitable for highly digital designs, scalable to
the newest complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) nodes.
The scaling of the design technologies into the nanometer range imposes the
reduction of the supply voltage towards small and power-efficient architectures,
leading to lower voltage overhead of the transistors. Additionally, phenomena
like a lower intrinsic gain, inherent noise, and parasitic effects (mismatch between
devices and PVT variations) make the design of classic structures for ADCs more
challenging. In recent years, time-encoded A/D conversion has gained relevant
popularity due to the possibility of being implemented with mostly digital structures.
Within this trend, VCOs designed with ring oscillator based topologies
have emerged as promising candidates for the conception of new digitization
techniques.
RO-based data converters show excellent scalability and sensitivity, apart from
some other desirable properties, such as inherent quantization noise shaping and
implicit anti-aliasing filtering. However, their nonlinearity and the limited time
delay achievable in a simple NOT gate drastically limits the resolution of the converter,
especially if we focus on wide-band A/D conversion. This thesis proposes
new ways to alleviate these issues.
Firstly, circuit-based techniques to compensate for the nonlinearity of the ring
oscillator are proposed and compared to equivalent state-of-the-art solutions.
The proposals are designed and simulated in a 65-nm CMOS node for open-loop
RO-based ADC architectures. One of the techniques is also validated experimentally
through a prototype. Secondly, new ways to artificially increase the effective
oscillation frequency are introduced and validated by simulations. Finally, new
approaches to shape the quantization noise and filter the output spectrum of a
RO-based ADC are proposed theoretically. In particular, a quadrature RO-based
band-pass ADC and a power-efficient Nyquist A/D converter are proposed and
validated by simulations.
All the techniques proposed in this work are especially devoted for highbandwidth
applications, such as Internet-of-Things (IoT) nodes or maximally
digital radio receivers. Nevertheless, their field of application is not restricted to
them, and could be extended to others like biomedical instrumentation or sensing.El propósito de esta tesis doctoral es la propuesta y la implementación de arquitecturas
de conversión de datos basadas en osciladores en anillos, compatibles
con diseños mayoritariamente digitales, escalables en los procesos CMOS de fabricación
más modernos donde las estructuras digitales se ven favorecidas.
La miniaturización de las tecnologías CMOS de diseño lleva consigo la reducción
de la tensión de alimentación para el desarrollo de arquitecturas pequeñas
y eficientes en potencia. Esto reduce significativamente la disponibilidad de tensión
para saturar transistores, lo que añadido a una ganancia cada vez menor
de los mismos, ruido y efectos parásitos como el “mismatch” y las variaciones
de proceso, tensión y temperatura han llevado a que sea cada vez más complejo
el diseño de estructuras analógicas eficientes. Durante los últimos años la conversión
A/D basada en codificación temporal ha ganado gran popularidad dado
que permite la implementación de estructuras mayoritariamente digitales. Como
parte de esta evolución, los osciladores controlados por tensión diseñados con topologías
de oscilador en anillo han surgido como un candidato prometedor para
la concepción de nuevas técnicas de digitalización.
Los convertidores de datos basados en osciladores en anillo son extremadamente
sensibles (variación de frecuencia con respecto a la señal de entrada) así como
escalables, además de otras propiedades muy atractivas, como el conformado
espectral de ruido de cuantificación y el filtrado “anti-aliasing”. Sin embargo, su
respuesta no lineal y el limitado tiempo de retraso alcanzable por una compuerta
NOT restringen la resolución del conversor, especialmente para conversión A/D
en aplicaciones de elevado ancho de banda. Esta tesis doctoral propone nuevas
técnicas para aliviar este tipo de problemas.
En primer lugar, se proponen técnicas basadas en circuito para compensar el
efecto de la no linealidad en los osciladores en anillo, y se comparan con soluciones
equivalentes ya publicadas. Las propuestas se diseñan y simulan en tecnología
CMOS de 65 nm para arquitecturas en lazo abierto. Una de estas técnicas
presentadas es también validada experimentalmente a través de un prototipo.
En segundo lugar, se introducen y validan por simulación varias formas de incrementar
artificialmente la frecuencia de oscilación efectiva. Para finalizar, se
proponen teóricamente dos enfoques para configurar nuevas formas de conformación
del ruido de cuantificación y filtrado del espectro de salida de los datos
digitales. En particular, son propuestos y validados por simulación un ADC pasobanda
en cuadratura de fase y un ADC de Nyquist de gran eficiencia en potencia. Todas las técnicas propuestas en este trabajo están destinadas especialmente
para aplicaciones de alto ancho de banda, tales como módulos para el Internet
de las cosas o receptores de radiofrecuencia mayoritariamente digitales. A pesar
de ello, son extrapolables también a otros campos como el de la instrumentación
biomédica o el de la medición de señales mediante sensores.Programa de Doctorado en Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y Automática por la Universidad Carlos III de MadridPresidente: Juan Pablo Alegre Pérez.- Secretario: Celia López Ongil.- Vocal: Fernando Cardes Garcí
Recommended from our members
Fully-passive switched-capacitor techniques for high performance SAR ADC design
In recent years, SAR ADC becomes more and more popular in various low-power applications such as wireless sensors and low energy radios due to its circuit simplicity, high power efficiency, and scaling compatibility. However, its speed is limited by its successive approximation procedures and its power efficiency greatly reduces with the ADC resolution going beyond 10 bit. To address these issues, this thesis proposes to embed two techniques: 1) compressive sensing (CS) and 2) noise shaping (NS) to a conventional SAR ADC. The realization of both techniques are based on fully-passive switched-capacitor techniques.
CS is a recently emerging sampling paradigm, stating that the sparsity of a signal can be exploited to reduce the ADC sampling rate below the Nyquist rate. Different from conventional CS frameworks which require dedicated analog CS encoders, this thesis proposes a fully-passive CS-SAR ADC architecture which only requires minor modification to a conventional SAR ADC. Two chips are fabricated in a 0.13 µm process to prove the concept. One chip is a single-channel CS-SAR ADC which can reduce the ADC conversion rate by 4 times, thus reducing the ADC power by 4 times. In many wireless sensing applications, multiple ADCs are commonly required to sense multi-channel signals such as multi-lead ECG sensing and parallel neural recording. Therefore, the other chip is a multi-channel CS-SAR ADC which can simultaneously convert 4-channel signals with a sampling rate of one channel’s Nyquist rate. At 0.8 V and 1 MS/s, both chips achieve an effective Walden FoM of around 5 fJ/conversion-step.
This thesis also proposes a novel NS SAR ADC architecture that is simple, robust and low power for high-resolution applications. Compared to conventional ∆Σ ADCs, it replaces the power-hungry active integrator with a passive integrator which only requires one switch and two capacitors. Compared to previous 1st-order NS SAR ADC works, it achieves the best NS performance and can be easily extended to 2nd-order. A 1st-order 10-bit NS SAR ADC is fabricated in a 0.13 µm process. Through NS, SNDR increases by 6 dB with OSR doubled, achieving a 12- bit ENOB at OSR = 8. An improved version of a 2nd-order 9-bit NS SAR ADC is designed and simulated in a 40 nm process. The SNDR increases by 10 dB with OSR doubled, achieving a 14-bit ENOB at OSR = 16. At a bandwidth of 312.5 kHz, the Schreier FoM is 181 dB and the Walden FoM is 12.5 fJ/conversion-step, proving that the proposed NS SAR ADC architecture can achieve high resolution and high power efficiency simultaneously.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
- …