6 research outputs found

    Design techniques for high-performance current-steering digital-to-analog converters

    Get PDF
    Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) is a crucial building block limiting the accuracy and speed of many signal processing and telecommunication systems. To achieve high speed and high resolution, the current-steering architecture is almost exclusively used. Three important issues for current-steering DAC design are addressed in this dissertation. In a current-steering DAC design, it is essential that a designer determine the minimum required current source accuracy to overcome random current mismatch and achieve high linearity with guaranteed yield. Simple formulas are derived that clearly exhibit the relationship between the standard deviation of unit current sources, the bits of resolution, the INL/DNL, and the soft yield of DAC arrays. It is shown that these formulas are very effective for optimizing the DAC segmentation so as to achieve high performance and high yield with minimal area and power consumption. To overcome random mismatch effects without any trimming, the current source array of a high-accuracy DAC is usually rather large, causing the gradient errors in these arrays to become significant. How gradient errors affect the DAC linearity and how to compensate for them through switching sequence optimization is analyzed in the second part of this dissertation. To overcome technology barriers, relax the requirements on layout and reduce the sensitivities of DACs to process, temperature and aging, calibration is emerging as an attractive solution for the next-generation high-performance DACs, especially as process feature size keeps shrinking and supply voltage is reduced correspondingly. A new foreground calibration technique suitable for low-voltage environment is presented in the third part of this dissertation. It can effectively compensate for current source mismatches, and achieve high linearity with small die size and low power consumption. The dynamic performance of the DAC is also improved due to the dramatic reduction of parasitic effects. To demonstrate this technique, a 14-bit prototype was designed and fabricated in a 0.13u digital CMOS process. It is the first 14-bit CMOS DAC ever reported that operates with a single 1.5V power supply, occupies an active area less than 0.1mm2, and requires only 16.7mW at 100MHz sampling rate, but still maintains state-of-art linearity and speed

    Design of a wideband low-power continuous-time sigma-delta (ΣΔ) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) in 90nm CMOS technology

    Get PDF
    The growing trend in VLSI systems is to shift more signal processing functionality from analog to digital domain to reduce manufacturing cost and improve reliability. It has resulted in the demand for wideband high-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADCs). There are many different techniques for doing analog-to-digital conversions. Oversampling ADC based on sigma-delta (ΣΔ) modulation is receiving a lot of attention due to its significantly relaxed matching requirements on analog components. Moreover, it does not need a steep roll-off anti-aliasing filter. A ΣΔ ADC can be implemented either as a discrete time system or a continuous time one. Nowadays growing interest is focused on the continuous-time ΣΔ ADC for its use in the wideband and low-power applications, such as medical imaging, portable ultrasound systems, wireless receivers, and test equipments. A continuous-time ΣΔ ADC offers some important advantages over its discrete-time counterpart, including higher sampling frequency, intrinsic anti-alias filtering, much relaxed sampling network requirements, and low-voltage implementation. Especially it has the potential in achieving low power consumption. This dissertation presents a novel fifth-order continuous-time ΣΔ ADC which is implemented in a 90nm CMOS technology with single 1.0-V power supply. To speed up design process, an improved direct design method is proposed and used to design the loop filter transfer function. To maximize the in-band gain provided by the loop filter, thus maximizing in-band noise suppression, the excess loop delay must be kept minimum. In this design, a very low latency 4-bit flash quantizer with digital-to-analog (DAC) trimming is utilized. DAC trimming technique is used to correct the quantizer offset error, which allows minimum-sized transistors to be used for fast and low-power operation. The modulator has sampling clock of 800MHz. It achieves a dynamic range (DR) of 75dB and a signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) of 70dB over 25MHz input signal bandwidth with 16.4mW power dissipation. Our work is among the most improved published to date. It uses the lowest supply voltage and has the highest input signal bandwidth while dissipating the lowest power among the bandwidths exceeding 15MHz

    Noise-Shaping SAR ADCs.

    Full text link
    This work investigates hybrid analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) that combine the phenomenal energy efficiency of successive-approximation (SAR) ADCs with the resolution enhancement strategies used by noise-shaping converters. Because charge-redistribution SAR ADCs contain few active components and rely on highly digital controllers, SAR ADCs demonstrate the best energy efficiencies of all low bandwidth, moderate resolution converters (~10 bits). SAR ADCs achieve remarkable power efficiency at low resolution, but as the resolution of the SAR ADC increases, the specifications for input-referred comparator noise become more stringent and total DAC capacitance becomes too large, which degrades both power efficiency and bandwidth. For these reasons, lower resolution, lower bandwidth applications tend to favor traditional SAR ADC architectures, while higher bandwidth, higher resolution applications tend to favor pipeline-SARs. Although the use of amplifiers in pipeline-assisted SARs relaxes the comparator noise requirements and improves bandwidth, amplifier design becomes more of a challenge in highly scaled processes with reduced supply voltages. In this work, we explore the use of feedback and noise-shaping to enhance the resolution of SAR ADCs. Unlike pipeline-SARs, which require high-gain, linear amplifiers, noise-shaping SARs can be constructed using passive FIR filter structures. Furthermore, the use of feedback and noise-shaping reduces the impact of thermal kT/C noise and comparator noise. This work details and explores a new class of noise-shaping SARs.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/113647/1/fredenbu_1.pd

    High-Accuracy Digital to Analog Converter Dedicated to Sine-Waveform Generator for Avionic Applications

    Get PDF
    RÉSUMÉ De nos jours, malgré les avancées remarquables de la microélectronique, les systèmes avioniques emploient essentiellement des technologies vieillissantes afin de répondre aux normes de sécurité exigeantes des systèmes avioniques. La nouvelle génération d'avionique modulaire intégrée (AMI) des More Electric Aircrafts (MEA), nécessite des architectures de réseaux stables et fiables, employant des modules électroniques intégrables modernes qui restent à être conçus et développés. Suivant cette tendance, une interface générique intelligente pour capteurs (Smart Sensor Interface - SSI), dédiée aux capteurs de position avionique est proposée dans ce mémoire. Le circuit intégré SSI fera partie d'un réseau de capteurs AFDX amélioré et est composé de signaux d'excitation et de modules d'acquisition de données. Les efforts de conception sont concentrés sur l'unité de génération de signaux d'excitation (Excitation Signal Generation - ESG) de la SSI. En tant que lien entre le réseau AFDX et les capteurs de déplacement, l'unité ESG doit générer des signaux sinusoïdaux précis, d'une fréquence allant de 1.5 kHz à 10 kHz. En respectant la programmation de l'interface, nous démontrerons qu'une architecture de générateur de signaux basée sur la mémoire est la seule option qui réponde aux objectifs du design. Le design d'un convertisseur numérique-analogique (CNA) basé sur le principe du sur-échantillonnage et faisant partie du chemin ESG est également présenté dans ce travail. Ce CNA est le noyau d'un générateur de signaux sinusoïdaux versatile conçu pour le système SSI proposé. Un taux d'échantillonnage élevé est utilisé dans ce CNA, de façon à obtenir un rapport signal sur bruit (Signal to Noise Ratio - SNR) élevé. Une analyse de l'impact d'une implémentation carrée et non-carrée de la matrice de sources de courant (Current Source Array - CSA) sur la performance de la séquence de commutation est présentée. Il sera démontré que la considération de tels impacts conduit à la conception de CNA plus précis. Une séquence de commutation optimale pour la taille du CSA conçu, sera introduite. Afin de réduire la taille des plots d'entrées et de sorties de la puce, un convertisseur de données série à parallèle haute-vitesse est inclu dans le CNA. Ainsi, les données d'entrée peuvent être envoyées de façon sérielle à un registre à décalage et appliquées de façon interne au noyau du CNA.----------ABSTRACT Today, despite the astonishing advances in the field of Microelectronics, avionics systems are mostly employing older technologies to guarantee the level of reliability required by stringent safety standards of avionic systems. Toward the new generation of Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) in More Electric Aircrafts (MEA), reliable and stable network architecture which employs modern integrated electronic modules must be designed and developed. In this trend, a generic Smart Sensor Interface (SSI) for avionics displacement sensors will be proposed in this Master thesis. The integrated SSI circuit will be part of an improved AFDX sensor network and consists of signal excitation and data acquisition paths. The design efforts of this Master thesis will focus on the Excitation Signal Generation (ESG) unit of the SSI. As a link between AFDX network and displacement sensors, the ESG unit should generate pure and accurate sine-waveform with variable frequency between 1.5 kHz and 10 kHz. Respecting the programmability of the interface, it will be shown that a memory-based signal generator architecture is the only choice which supports the design objectives. As part of the ESG path, the detailed design of a 10-bit interpolating digital to analog converter (DAC) will also be presented in this work. The DAC is the core of a versatile sine-waveform generator unit designed for avionics SSI. High-speed sample rate will be used in this segmented current steering DAC in order to achieve a high Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR). In the module level design of the DAC, the impact of square and non-square implementation of the current source array (CSA) on the performance of the switching sequence is introduced. It will be shown that considering such impacts will lead to the design of more accurate DACs. An optimum switching sequence for the designed CSA size will be designed and introduced. In order to reduce the I/O pads of the chip, high-speed serial to parallel converter will be included in the DAC. Thus the input data can be serially sent to the input shift register and internally applied to the DAC core. The DAC was fabricated on 1.2 × 1.2 mm2 chip fabricated using IBM 0.13µm CMOS technology, operating with a supply voltage of 1.2 V. Sourcing a sine wave current with a peak of 1023 µA, the proposed DAC is able to achieve a SNR better than 84 dB in the Nyquist bandwidth of DC to 20 kHz

    Restoring Sensation of Gravitoinertial Acceleration through Prosthetic Stimulation of the Utricle and Saccule

    Get PDF
    Individuals with bilateral vestibular hypofunction suffer reduced quality of life due to loss of postural and ocular reflexes essential to maintaining balance and visual acuity during head movements. Vestibular stimulation has demonstrated success in restoring sensation of angular head rotations using electrical stimulation of the semi-circular canals (SCCs). Efforts toward utricle and saccule stimulation to restore sensation of gravitoinertial acceleration have been limited due to the complexity of the otolith end organs and otolith-ocular reflexes (OORs). Four key pieces of technology were developed to extend prosthetic stimulation to the utricle and saccule: a low-noise scleral coil system to record binocular 3D eye movements; a motion platform control system for automated presentation of rotational and translational stimuli; custom electrode arrays with fifty contacts targeting the SCCs, utricle and saccule; and a general-purpose neuroelectronic stimulator for vestibular and other neuromodulation applications. Using these new technologies, OORs were first characterized in six chinchillas to establish OOR norms during translations and static tilts. Results led to creation of a model that infers the axis of head tilt from measured binocular eye movements and thereby provides a context and means to assess the selectivity of prosthetic utricle and saccule stimulation. The model confirms the expectation that excitation of the left utricle and saccule primarily encodes tilts that bring the left ear down. Three of the chinchillas were implanted with electrode arrays in the left ear. Step changes in pulse rate were delivered to utricle and saccule electrodes near the maculae while measuring 3D binocular eye movements with the animal stationary in darkness. These stimuli elicited sustained ocular counter-roll responses that increased in magnitude as pulse rate or amplitude increased. Bipolar stimulation via neighboring electrodes elicited slow-rising or delayed onset of ocular counter-rolls (consistent with normal translational OOR low-pass filter behavior). Two chinchillas showed different direction of electrically-evoked ocular counter-roll between utricle versus saccule stimulation. Only near-neighbor bipolar electrode combinations elicited eye responses compensatory for tilts other than the ‘usual’ left ear down, suggesting the need for distributing multiple bipolar electrode pairs across the maculae to achieve selective stimulation and restore 3D sensation of gravitoinertial acceleration
    corecore