137 research outputs found
700mV low power low noise implantable neural recording system design
This dissertation presents the work for design and implementation of a low power, low noise neural recording system consisting of Bandpass Amplifier and Pipelined Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) for recording neural signal activities. A low power, low noise two stage neural amplifier for use in an intelligent Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) based on folded cascode Operational Transconductance Amplifier (OTA) is utilized to amplify the neural signals. The optimization of the number of amplifier stages is discussed to achieve the minimum power and area consumption. The amplifier power supply is 0.7V. The midband gain of amplifier is 58.4dB with a 3dB bandwidth from 0.71 to 8.26 kHz. Measured input-referred noise and total power consumption are 20.7 μVrms and 1.90 μW respectively. The measured result shows that the optimizing the number of stages can achieve lower power consumption and demonstrates the neural amplifier's suitability for instu neutral activity recording. The advantage of power consumption of Pipelined ADC over Successive Approximation Register (SAR) ADC and Delta-Sigma ADC is discussed. An 8 bit fully differential (FD) Pipeline ADC for use in a smart RFID is presented in this dissertation. The Multiplying Digital to Analog Converter (MDAC) utilizes a novel offset cancellation technique robust to device leakage to reduce the input drift voltage. Simulation results of static and dynamic performance show this low power Pipeline ADC is suitable for multi-channel neural recording applications. The performance of all proposed building blocks is verified through test chips fabricated in IBM 180nm CMOS process. Both bench-top and real animal test results demonstrate the system's capability of recording neural signals for neural spike detection
A re-configurable pipeline ADC architecture with built-in self-test techniques
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
Transmitter architectures with digital modulators, D/A converters and switching-mode power amplifiers
This thesis is composed of nine publications and an overview of the research topic, which also summarises the work. The research described in this thesis focuses on research into the digitalisation of wireless communication base station transmitters. In particular it has three foci: digital modulation, D/A conversion and switching-mode power amplification. The main interest in the implementation of these circuits is in CMOS.
The work summarizes the designs of several circuit blocks of a wireless transmitter base station. In the baseband stage, a multicarrier digital modulator that combines multiple modulated signals at different carrier frequencies digitally at baseband, and a multimode digital modulator that can be operated for three different communications standards, are implemented as integrated circuits. The digital modulators include digital power ramping and power level control units for transmission bursts. The upconversion of the baseband signal is implemented using an integrated digital quadrature modulator.
The work presented provides insight into the digital-to-analogue interface in the transmitters. This interface is studied both by implementing an intermediate frequency D/A converter in BiCMOS technology and bandpass Delta-Sigma modulator-based D/A conversion in CMOS technology.
Finally, the last part of the work discusses switching-mode power amplifiers which are experimented with both as discrete and integrated implementations in conjunction with 1-bit Delta-Sigma modulation and pulse-width modulation as input signal generation methods.Tämä väitöskirja koostuu yhdeksästä julkaisusta ja tutkimusaiheen yhteenvedosta. Väitöskirjassa esitetty tutkimus keskittyy langattaman viestinnän tukiasemien lähettimien digitalisoinnin tutkimukseen. Yksityiskohtaisemmin tutkimusalueet ovat: digitaalinen modulaatio, D/A muunnos ja kytkinmuotoiset tehovahvistimet. Näiden elektronisten piirien toteutuksessa keskitytään CMOS teknologiaan.
Työ vetää yhteen useiden langattoman viestinnän tukiasemien lähettimien piirilohkojen suunnittelun. Kantataajuusasteella toteutetaan integroituna piirinä monikantoaaltoinen digitaalinen modulaattori, joka yhdistää useita moduloituja signaaleja eri kantoaalloilla digitaalisesti ja monistandardi digitaalinen modulaatori, joka tukee kolmea eri viestintästandardia. Digitaaliset modulaattoripiirit sisältävät digitaalisen tehoramping ja tehotason säätöyksikön lähetyspurskeita varten. Kantataajuussignaalin ylössekoitus toteutetaan integroitua digitaalista kvadratuurimodulaattoria käyttäen.
Esitetty työ antaa näkemystä lähettimien digitalia-analogia rajapintaan, jota tutkitaan toteuttamalla välitaajuinen D/A muunnin BiCMOS teknologialla ja päästökaistainen Delta-Sigma-modulaattoripohjainen D/A muunnin CMOS teknologialla.
Lopuksi työn viimeinen osa käsittelee kytkinmuotoisia tehovahvistimia, joita tutkitaan kokeellisesti sekä erilliskompontein toteutettuina piirein että integroiduin piirein toteutettuina käyttäen sisääntulosignaalin muodostamismenetemänä yksibittistä Delta-Sigma-modulaatiota ja pulssin leveys modulaatiota.reviewe
A bandpass sigma delta modulator IF receiver
Thesis (M. Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1997.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 170-173).by Emilija Simic.M.Eng
1.2 Racing Down the Slopes of Moore's Law
Since its inception, Moore's Law has been the driving force for IC design. Although during the first decade, 'everything' seemed to be better, however, we lost the scaling of processor clock speed and RF transistor speed, and now it looks as if power efficiency of digital gates will stall. What remains is scaling in transistor count and cost-per-function, thanks to 3D integration.Thus, this is an excellent moment to reconsider how we design for analog and digital signal processing. The higher the required signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), the more power-efficient digital signal processing is compared to analog. Pure analog processing remains more efficient only for ~ 30 dB SNR or less. In the case of digital processing, the conversion from analog to digital should therefore be made as early in the signal chain as possible. Thanks to the figure-of-merit race, analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) have experienced a tremendous win in power efficiency. However, these ADCs require a large input voltage swing while the input signals to be converted, from an antenna or sensor interface, are usually much smaller. Therefore, RF and analog front-ends are needed, which consume much more power than the ADCs to be driven.Let us re-think these analog front-ends. Can we still efficiently design these front-ends in future CMOS? Do we need so much linear amplification? Do we need active linear circuits at all? Can we not use 'digital' components to replace the analog front-ends and ADCs? This paper aims to look at digital and analog processing trends from technology and design fundamentals points of view. We will first zoom out on asymptotic trends in technology scaling and try to identify future design opportunities and challenges. For circuit design, fundamental limits linking power, speed, and accuracy will be reviewed to gain insight into the implications of how we design circuits the way we currently do. This paper aims to create awareness and gives a new vision of designing analog circuits.</p
Analysis and design of ΣΔ Modulators for Radio Frequency Switchmode Power Amplifiers
Power amplifiers are an integral part of every basestation, macrocell, microcell and mobile
phone, enabling data to be sent over the distances needed to reach the receiver’s antenna.
While linear operation is needed for transmitting WCDMA and OFDM signals, linear
operation of a power amplifier is characterized by low power efficiency, and contributes
to unwanted power dissipation in a transmitter. Recently, a switchmode power amplifier
operation was considered for reducing power losses in a RF transmitter. A linear and
efficient operation of a PA can be achieved when the transmitted RF signal is ΣΔ modu-
lated, and subsequently amplified by a nonlinear device. Although in theory this approach
offers linearity and efficiency reaching 100%, the use of ΣΔ modulation for transmitting
wideband signals causes problems in practical implementation: it requires high sampling
rate by the digital hardware, which is needed for shaping large contents of a quantization
noise induced by the modulator but also, the binary output from the modulator needs an
RF power amplifier operating over very wide frequency band.
This thesis addresses the problem of noise shaping in a ΣΔ modulator and nonlinear
distortion caused by broadband operation in switchmode power amplifier driven by a ΣΔ
modulated waveform. The problem of sampling rate increase in a ΣΔ modulator is solved
by optimizing structure of the modulator, and subsequent processing of an input signal’s
samples in parallel. Independent from the above, a novel technique for reducing quan-
tization noise in a bandpass ΣΔ modulator using single bit quantizer is presented. The
technique combines error pulse shaping and 3-level quantization for improving signal to
noise ratio in a 2-level output. The improvement is achieved without the increase of a digital
hardware’s sampling rate, which is advantageous also from the perspective of power
consumption. The new method is explored in the course of analysis, and verified by simulated
and experimental results. The process of RF signal conversion from the Cartesian to
polar form is analyzed, and a signal modulator for a polar transmitter with a ΣΔ-digitized
envelope signal is designed and implemented. The new modulator takes an advantage of
bandpass digital to analog conversion for simplifying the analog part of the modulator.
A deformation of the pulsed RF signal in the experimental modulator is demonstrated to
have an effect primarily on amplitude of the RF signal, which is correctable with simple
predistortion
Recommended from our members
Design of low OSR, high precision analog-to-digital converters
Advances in electronic systems have lead to the demand for high resolution, high bandwidth Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs). Oversampled ADCs are well- known for high accuracy applications since they benefit from noise shaping and they usually do not need highly accurate components. However, as a consequence of oversampling, they have limited signal bandwidth. The signal bandwidth (BW) of oversampled ADCs can be increased either by increasing the sampling rate or reducing the oversampling ratio (OSR). Reducing OSR is a more promising method for increasing the BW, since the sampling speed is usually limited by the technology. The advantageous properties (e.g. low in-band quantization, relaxed accuracy requirements of components) of oversampled ADCs are usually diminished at lower OSRs and preserving these properties requires complicated and power hungry architectures.
In this thesis, different combinations of delta-sigma and pipelined ADCs are explored and new techniques for designing oversampled ADCs are proposed. A Hybrid Delta-Sigma/Pipelined (HDSP) ADC is presented. This ADC uses a pipelined ADC as the quantizer of a single-loop delta-sigma modulator and benefits from
the aggressive quantization of the pipelined quantizer at low OSRs. A Noise-Shaped Pipelined ADC is proposed which exploits a delta-sigma modulator as the sub-ADC of a pipeline stage to reduce the sensitivity to the analog imperfection. Three prototype ADCs were fabricated in 0.18μm CMOS technology to verify the effectiveness of the proposed techniques. The performance of these architectures is among the best reported for high bandwidth oversampled ADCs.Keywords: Delta-Sigma, Loop Filter, Oversampled ADC, Gain Stage, Pipeline, Noise Shapin
Characterization and modelling of software defined radio front-ends
Doutoramento em Engenharia ElectrotécnicaO presente trabalho tem por objectivo estudar a caracterização e modelação
de arquitecturas de rádio frequência para aplicações em rádios definidos por
software e rádios cognitivos. O constante aparecimento no mercado de novos
padrões e tecnologias para comunicações sem fios têm levantado algumas
limitações à implementação de transceptores rádio de banda larga. Para além
disso, o uso de sistemas reconfiguráveis e adaptáveis baseados no conceito
de rádio definido por software e rádio cognitivo assegurará a evolução para a
próxima geração de comunicações sem fios. A ideia base desta tese passa por
resolver alguns problemas em aberto e propor avanços relevantes, tirando
para isso partido das capacidades providenciadas pelos processadores digitais
de sinal de forma a melhorar o desempenho global dos sistemas propostos.
Inicialmente, serão abordadas várias estratégias para a implementação e
projecto de transceptores rádio, concentrando-se sempre na aplicabilidade
específica a sistemas de rádio definido por software e rádio cognitivo. Serão
também discutidas soluções actuais de instrumentação capaz de caracterizar
um dispositivo que opere simultaneamente nos domínios analógico e digital,
bem como, os próximos passos nesta área de caracterização e modelação.
Além disso, iremos apresentar novos formatos de modelos comportamentais
construídos especificamente para a descrição e caracterização não-linear de
receptores de amostragem passa-banda, bem como, para sistemas nãolineares
que utilizem sinais multi-portadora.
Será apresentada uma nova arquitectura suportada na avaliação estatística
dos sinais rádio que permite aumentar a gama dinâmica do receptor em
situações de multi-portadora. Da mesma forma, será apresentada uma técnica
de maximização da largura de banda de recepção baseada na utilização do
receptor de amostragem passa-banda no formato complexo.
Finalmente, importa referir que todas as arquitecturas propostas serão
acompanhadas por uma introdução teórica e simulações, sempre que possível,
sendo após isto validadas experimentalmente por protótipos laboratoriais.This work investigates the characterization and modeling of radio frequency
front-ends for software defined radio and cognitive radio applications. The
emergence of new standards and technologies in the wireless communications
market are raising several issues to the implementation of wideband
transceiver systems. Also, reconfigurable and adaptable systems based on
software defined and cognitive radio models are paving the way for the next
generation of wireless systems. In this doctoral thesis the fundamental idea is
to address the particular open issues and propose appropriate advancements
by exploring and taking profit from new capabilities of digital signal processors
in a way to improve the overall performance of the novel schemes.
Receiver and transmitter strategies for radio communications are summarized
by concentrating on the usability for software defined radio and cognitive radio
systems. Available instrumentation and next steps for analog and digital radio
frequency hardware characterization is also discussed.
Wideband behavioral model formats are proposed for nonlinear description and
characterization of bandpass sampling receivers, as well as, for multi-carrier
nonlinear systems operation. The proposed models share a great flexibility and
have the freedom to be simply expanded to other fields.
A new design for receiver dynamic range improvement in multi-carrier
scenarios is proposed, which is supported on the useful wireless signals
statistical evaluation. Additionally, receiver-side bandwidth maximization based
on higher-order bandpass sampling approaches is evaluated.
All the proposed designs and modeling strategies are accompanied by
theoretical backgrounds and simulations whenever possible, being then
experimentally validated by laboratory prototypes
Recommended from our members
Adaptive, wideband analog-to-digital conversion for convergent communication systems
The exponential rate of advances in modern communication devices in the last several years have brought us higher levels of functionality and performance as well as reductions in physical size and power consumption. To continue this rate of advancement, next generation systems require wider bandwidth and higher resolution ADCs. Additionally, in order for ADCs to be used in a wide range of applications, reconfigurability and adaptability are critical features of future ADCs. Reconfigurable ADC architectures allow consolidation of receivers for multiple communication standards into one, providing size, power and functionality improvements over multiple discrete ADCs. This thesis presents a high performance track-and-hold block and reconfigurable high performance ADC for multi-functional communication applications. In the design of analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), the front-end track-and-hold or sample-and-hold is often one of the most challenging parts of the design. Open-loop designs with high sample rates are reaching the limits of their linearity. Presented here is a high-speed, high-resolution closed-loop track-and-hold in a 0.18um SiGe BiCMOS technology. The architecture provides both high linearity and high speed, with 98.7dB and 89.4dB SNDR at 50MS/s and 100MS/s, respectively. As these specifications evolve to meet customer demands, new, high performance ADCs are needed. To this end, an efficient parallel ΔΣ ADC architecture has been designed that achieves high performance in digital processes, while also providing additional architecture flexibility. This ADC, consisting of four parallel ΔΣ ADCs and a single pipeline ADC provides high performance and reconfigurablity. This ADC is suited to applications requiring not only wide-bandwidth, high resolution signal conversion but an on-the-fly reconfigurable resolution and bandwidth
- …