335 research outputs found
Design of sigma-delta modulators for analog-to-digital conversion intensively using passive circuits
This thesis presents the analysis, design implementation and experimental evaluation of passiveactive discrete-time and continuous-time Sigma-Delta (ΣΔ) modulators (ΣΔMs) analog-todigital converters (ADCs).
Two prototype circuits were manufactured. The first one, a discrete-time 2nd-order ΣΔM, was designed in a 130 nm CMOS technology. This prototype confirmed the validity of the ultra incomplete settling (UIS) concept used for implementing the passive integrators. This circuit, clocked at 100 MHz and consuming 298 μW, achieves DR/SNR/SNDR of 78.2/73.9/72.8 dB, respectively, for a signal bandwidth of 300 kHz. This results in a Walden FoMW of 139.3 fJ/conv.-step and Schreier FoMS of 168 dB.
The final prototype circuit is a highly area and power efficient ΣΔM using a combination of a cascaded topology, a continuous-time RC loop filter and switched-capacitor feedback paths. The modulator requires only two low gain stages that are based on differential pairs. A systematic design methodology based on genetic algorithm, was used, which allowed decreasing the circuit’s sensitivity to the circuit components’ variations. This continuous-time, 2-1 MASH ΣΔM has been designed in a 65 nm CMOS technology and it occupies an area of just 0.027 mm2. Measurement results show that this modulator achieves a peak SNR/SNDR of 76/72.2 dB and DR of 77dB for an input signal bandwidth of 10 MHz, while dissipating 1.57 mW from a 1 V power supply voltage. The ΣΔM achieves a Walden FoMW of 23.6 fJ/level and a Schreier FoMS of 175 dB. The innovations proposed in this circuit result, both, in the reduction of the power consumption and of the chip size. To the best of the author’s knowledge the circuit achieves the lowest Walden FOMW for ΣΔMs operating at signal bandwidth from 5 MHz to 50 MHz reported to date
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Design techniques for wideband low-power Delta-Sigma analog-to-digital converters
Delta-Sigma (ΔΣ) analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are traditionally used in high quality audio systems, instrumentation and measurement (I&M) and biomedical devices. With the continued downscaling of CMOS technology, they are becoming popular in wideband applications such as wireless and wired communication systems,high-definition television and radar systems. There are two general realizations of a ΔΣ modulator. One is based on the discrete-time (DT) switched-capacitor (SC) circuitry and the other employs continuous-time (CT) circuitry. Compared to a CT
structure, the DT ΔΣ ADC is easier to analyze and design, is more robust to process variations and jitter noise, and is more flexible in the multi-mode applications. On the other hand, the CT ΔΣ ADC does not suffer from the strict settling accuracy requirement for the loop filter and thus can achieve lower power dissipation and higher sampling frequency than its DT counterpart.
In this thesis, both DT and CT ΔΣ ADCs are investigated. Several design innovations, in both system-level and circuit-level, are proposed to achieve lower power consumption and wider signal bandwidth.
For DT ΔΣ ADCs, a new dynamic-biasing scheme is proposed to reduce opamp bias current and the associated signal-dependent harmonic distortion is minimized by using the low-distortion architecture. The technique was verified in a 2.5MHz BW and 13bit dynamic range DT ΔΣ ADC. In addition, a second-order noise coupling technique is presented to save two integrators for the loop filter, and to achieve low power dissipation. Also, a direct-charge-transfer (DCT) technique is suggested to reduce the speed requirements of the adder, which is also preferable in wideband low-power applications.
For CT ΔΣ ADCs, a wideband low power CT 2-2 MASH has been designed. High linearity performance was achieved by using a modified low-distortion technique, and the modulator achieves higher noise-shaping ability than the single stage structure due to the inter-stage gain. Also, the quantization noise leakage due to analog circuit non-idealities can be adaptively compensated by a designed digital calibration filter. Using a 90nm process, simulation of the modulator predicts a 12bit resolution within 20MHz BW and consumes only 25mW for analog circuitry. In addition, the noise-coupling technique is investigated and proposed for the design of CT ΔΣ ADCs and it is promising to achieve low power dissipation for wideband applications.
Finally, the application of noise-coupling technique is extended and introduced to high-accuracy incremental data converters. Low power dissipation can be expected
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High efficiency delta-sigma modulation data converters
Enabled by continued device scaling in CMOS technology, more and more functions that were previously realized in separate chips are getting integrated on a single chip nowadays. Integration on silicon has opened the door to new portable wireless applications, and initiated a widespread use of these devices in our common everyday life. Wide signal bandwidth, high linearity and dynamic range, and low power dissipation are required of embedded data converters that are the performance-limiting key building blocks of those systems. Thus, power-efficient and highly-linear data conversion over wide range of signal bands is essential to get the full benefits from device scaling. This continued trend keeps innovation in the design of data converter continuing.
Traditionally, delta-sigma modulation data converters proved to be very effective in applications where high resolution was necessary in a relatively narrow signal band. There have been active research efforts across academia and industry on the extension of achievable signal bandwidth without compromising the performance of these data converters. In this dissertation, architectural innovations, combined with effective design techniques for delta-sigma modulation data converters, are presented to overcome the associated limitations. The effectiveness of the proposed approaches is demonstrated by test results for the following state-of-the-art prototype designs: (1) a 0.8 V, 2.6 mW, 88 dB dual-channel audio delta-sigma modulation D/A converter with headphone driver; (2) an 88 dB ring-coupled delta-sigma ADC with 1.9 MHz bandwidth and -102.4 dB THD; (3) a multi-cell noise-coupled delta-sigma ADC with 1.9 MHz bandwidth, 88 dB DR, and -98 dB THD; (4) an 8.1 mW, 82 dB self-coupled delta-sigma ADC with 1.9 MHz bandwidth and -97 dB THD; (5) a noise-coupled time-interleaved delta-sigma ADC with 4.2 MHz bandwidth, -98 dB THD, and 79 dB SNDR; (6) a noise-coupled time-interleaved delta-sigma ADC with 2.5 MHz bandwidth, -104 dB THD, and 81 dB SNDR. As an extension of this research, two novel architectures for efficient double-sampling delta-sigma ADCs and improved low-distortion delta-sigma ADC are proposed, and validated by extensive simulations.Keywords: improved low-distortion modulator, time interleaving, data converter, multi-cell ADC, efficient double sampling, noise coupling, delta-sigma modulatio
ダイナミック・アナログ回路を用いる高精度AD変換器の設計技術に関する研究
東京都市大学2018年度(平成30年
Techniques for Wideband All Digital Polar Transmission
abstract: Modern Communication systems are progressively moving towards all-digital transmitters (ADTs) due to their high efficiency and potentially large frequency range. While significant work has been done on individual blocks within the ADT, there are few to no full systems designs at this point in time. The goal of this work is to provide a set of multiple novel block architectures which will allow for greater cohesion between the various ADT blocks. Furthermore, the design of these architectures are expected to focus on the practicalities of system design, such as regulatory compliance, which here to date has largely been neglected by the academic community. Amongst these techniques are a novel upconverted phase modulation, polyphase harmonic cancellation, and process voltage and temperature (PVT) invariant Delta Sigma phase interpolation. It will be shown in this work that the implementation of the aforementioned architectures allows ADTs to be designed with state of the art size, power, and accuracy levels, all while maintaining PVT insensitivity. Due to the significant performance enhancement over previously published works, this work presents the first feasible ADT architecture suitable for widespread commercial deployment.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201
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Wide-bandwidth, high-resolution delta-sigma analog-to-digital converters
There is a significant need in recent mobile communication and wireless broadband
systems for high-performance analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) that have wide
bandwidth (BW>5-MHz) and high data rate (>100-Mbps). A delta-sigma ADC is
recognized as a power-efficient ADC architecture when high resolution (>12-b) is
required. This is due to several advantages of the delta-sigma ADC including relaxed
anti-aliasing filter requirements, high signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) and
most importantly, reduced sensitivity to analog imperfections. In this thesis, several
structures and design techniques are developed for the implementation of continuoustime
(CT) and discrete-time (DT) delta-sigma ADCs. These techniques save the total
power consumption, reduce the design complexity, and decrease the chip die area of
delta-sigma modulators.
First a 4th-order single stage CT delta-sigma ADC with a novel single-amplifier-biquad
(SAB) based loop filter is presented. By utilizing the SAB networks in the loop filter of
an Nth-order CT delta-sigma modulator, it requires only half the number of active
amplifiers and feed-forward branches used in the conventional modulator architecture,
thus decreasing the power consumption and area by reducing the number of amplifiers.
The proposed scheme also enables the modulator to use a switch-capacitor (SC) adder
due to the reduced number of feedforward branches to its summing block. As a sequence,
it consumes less power compared to a conventional CT adder. With a 130-nm CMOS
technology, the fabricated prototype IC achieves a dynamic range of 80 dB with 10 MHz
signal bandwidth and analog power dissipation lower than 12 mW. Presented as the
second scheme to save power consumption and chip die area in ΔΣ modulators is a new
stage-sharing technique in a discrete-time 2-2 MASH ΔΣ ADC. The proposed technique
shares all the active blocks of the modulator second stage with its first stage during the
two non-overlapping clock phases. Measurement results show that the modulator
designed in a 0.13-um CMOS technology achieves 76 dB SNDR over a 10 MHz
conversion bandwidth dissipating less than 9 mW analog power
Process and Temperature Compensated Wideband Injection Locked Frequency Dividers and their Application to Low-Power 2.4-GHz Frequency Synthesizers
There has been a dramatic increase in wireless awareness among the user community in the past five years. The 2.4-GHz Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) band is being used for a diverse range of applications due to the following reasons. It is the only unlicensed band approved worldwide and it offers more bandwidth and supports higher data rates compared to the 915-MHz ISM band. The power consumption of devices utilizing the 2.4-GHz band is much lower compared to the 5.2-GHz ISM band. Protocols like Bluetooth and Zigbee that utilize the 2.4-GHz ISM band are becoming extremely popular.
Bluetooth is an economic wireless solution for short range connectivity between PC, cell phones, PDAs, Laptops etc. The Zigbee protocol is a wireless technology that was developed as an open global standard to address the unique needs of low-cost, lowpower, wireless sensor networks. Wireless sensor networks are becoming ubiquitous, especially after the recent terrorist activities. Sensors are employed in strategic locations for real-time environmental monitoring, where they collect and transmit data frequently to a nearby terminal. The devices operating in this band are usually compact and battery powered. To enhance battery life and avoid the cumbersome task of battery replacement, the devices used should consume extremely low power. Also, to meet the growing demands cost and sized has to be kept low which mandates fully monolithic implementation using low cost process.
CMOS process is extremely attractive for such applications because of its low cost and the possibility to integrate baseband and high frequency circuits on the same chip. A fully integrated solution is attractive for low power consumption as it avoids the need for power hungry drivers for driving off-chip components. The transceiver is often the most power hungry block in a wireless communication system. The frequency divider (prescaler) and the voltage controlled oscillator in the transmitter’s frequency synthesizer are among the major sources of power consumption. There have been a number of publications in the past few decades on low-power high-performance VCOs. Therefore this work focuses on prescalers.
A class of analog frequency dividers called as Injection-Locked Frequency Dividers (ILFD) was introduced in the recent past as low power frequency division. ILFDs can consume an order of magnitude lower power when compared to conventional flip-flop based dividers. However the range of operation frequency also knows as the locking range is limited. ILFDs can be classified as LC based and Ring based. Though LC based are insensitive to process and temperature variation, they cannot be used for the 2.4-GHz ISM band because of the large size of on-chip inductors at these frequencies. This causes a lot of valuable chip area to be wasted. Ring based ILFDs are compact and provide a low power solution but are extremely sensitive to process and temperature variations. Process and temperature variation can cause ring based ILFD to loose lock in the desired operating band.
The goal of this work is to make the ring based ILFDs useful for practical applications. Techniques to extend the locking range of the ILFDs are discussed. A novel and simple compensation technique is devised to compensate the ILFD and keep the locking range tight with process and temperature variations. The proposed ILFD is used in a 2.4-GHz frequency synthesizer that is optimized for fractional-N synthesis. Measurement results supporting the theory are provided
Contribution to the design of continuous -time Sigma - Delta Modulators based on time delay elements
The research carried out in this thesis is focused in the development of a new class of data converters for digital radio. There are two main architectures for communication receivers which perform a digital demodulation. One of them is based on analog demodulation to the base band and digitization of the I/Q components. Another option is to digitize the band pass signal at the output of the IF stage using a bandpass Sigma-Delta modulator. Bandpass Sigma- Delta modulators can be implemented with discrete-time circuits, using switched capacitors or continuous-time circuits. The main innovation introduced in this work is the use of passive transmission lines in the loop filter of a bandpass continuous-time Sigma-Delta modulator instead of the conventional solution with gm-C or LC resonators. As long as transmission lines are used as replacement of a LC resonator in RF technology, it seems compelling that transmission lines could improve bandpass continuous-time Sigma-Delta modulators. The analysis of a Sigma- Delta modulator using distributed resonators has led to a completely new family of Sigma- Delta modulators which possess properties inherited both from continuous-time and discretetime Sigma-Delta modulators. In this thesis we present the basic theory and the practical design trade-offs of this new family of Sigma-Delta modulators. Three demonstration chips have been implemented to validate the theoretical developments. The first two are a proof of concept of the application of transmission lines to build lowpass and bandpass modulators. The third chip summarizes all the contributions of the thesis. It consists of a transmission line Sigma-Delta modulator which combines subsampling techniques, a mismatch insensitive circuitry and a quadrature architecture to implement the IF to digital stage of a receiver
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