3 research outputs found
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Low power design techniques for high speed pipelined ADCs
Real world is analog but the processing of signals can best be done in digital domain. So the need for Analog to Digital Converters(ADCs) is ever rising as more and more applications set in. With the advent of mobile technology, power in electronic equipment is being driven down to get more battery life. Because of their ubiquitous nature, ADCs are prime blocks in the signal chain in which power is intended to be reduced. In this thesis, four techniques to reduce power in high speed pipelined ADCs have been proposed. The first is a capacitor and opamp sharing technique that reduces the load on the first stage opamp by three fold. The second is a capacitor reset technique that aids removing the sample and hold block to reduce power. The third is a modified MDAC which can take rail-to-rail input swing to get an extra bit thus getting rid of a power hungry opamp. The fourth is a hybrid architecture which makes use of an asynchronous SAR ADC as the backend of a pipelined ADC to save power. Measurement and simulation results that prove the efficiency of the proposed techniques are presented
Design techniques for high-performance current-steering digital-to-analog converters
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
Advanced Radio Frequency Identification Design and Applications
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) is a modern wireless data transmission and reception technique for applications including automatic identification, asset tracking and security surveillance. This book focuses on the advances in RFID tag antenna and ASIC design, novel chipless RFID tag design, security protocol enhancements along with some novel applications of RFID