10 research outputs found

    Fully differential implementation of a delta-sigma modulator based on the pseudo-pseudo differential technique

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    Flicker noise and distortion are the main limitations in biomedical applications, especially for Switched Capacitor implementations, where the flicker noise is folded into the signal band. To remove the flicker noise and increase the linearity, the Pseudo-Pseudo Differential (P2D) technique has been proposed, where a single-ended signal is processed in a differential way. This paper presents the first silicon implementation of a second order Comparator-Based Switched-Capacitor (CBSC) delta-sigma modulator based on a variation of the P2D technique. Experimental results in a standard 180 nm CMOS technology show an improvement of 10 dB in the Peak SNDR, 5 dB in the DR, and 9 dB in the SFDR over its pseudo differential counterpart, which is the preferred differential implementation for CBSC circuits. Moreover, it is achieved with a reduction in the power consumption

    Analysis of Current Conveyor based Switched Capacitor Circuits for Application in ∆Σ Modulators

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    The reduction in supply voltage, loss of dynamic range and increased noise prevent the analog circuits from taking advantage of advanced technologies. Therefore the trend is to move all signal processing tasks to digital domain where advantages of technology scaling can be used. Due to this, there exists a need for data converters with large signal bandwidths, higher speeds and greater dynamic range to act as an interface between real world analog and digital signals. The Delta Sigma (∆Σ) modulator is a data converter that makes use of large sampling rates and noise shaping techniques to achieve high resolution in the band of interest. The modulator consists of analog integrators and comparators which create a modulated digital bit stream whose average represents the input value. Due to their simplicity, they are popular in narrow band receivers, medical and sensor applications. However Operational Amplifiers (Op-Amps) or Operational Transconductance Amplifiers (OTAs), which are commonly used in data converters, present a bottleneck. Due to low supply voltages, designers rely on folded cascode, multistage cascade and bulk driven topologies for their designs. Although the two stage or multistage cascade topologies offer good gain and bandwidth, they suffer from stability problems due to multiple stages and feedback requiring large compensation capacitors. Therefore other low voltage Switched-Capacitor (SC) circuit techniques were developed to overcome these problems, based on inverters, comparators and unity gain buffers. In this thesis we present an alternative approach to design of ∆Σ modulators using Second Generation Current Conveyors (CCIIs). The important feature of these modulators is the replacement of the traditional Op-Amp based SC integrators with CCII based SC integrators. The main design issues such as the effect of the non-idealities in the CCIIs are considered in the operation of SC circuits and solutions are proposed to cancel them. Design tradeoffs and guidelines for various components of the circuit are presented through analysis of existing and the proposed SC circuits. A two step adaptive calibration technique is presented which uses few additional components to measure the integrator input output characteristic and linearize it for providing optimum performance over a wide range of sampling frequencies while maintaining low power and area. The presented CCII integrator and calibration circuit are used in the design of a 4th order (2-2 cascade) ∆Σ modulator which has been fabricated in UMC 90nm/1V technology through Europractice. Experimental values for Signal to Noise+Distortion Ratio (SNDR), Dynamic Range (DR) and Figure Of Merit (FOM) show that the modulator can compete with state of art reconfigurable Discrete-Time (DT) architectures while using lower gain stages and less design complexity

    Low-Voltage Ultra-Low-Power Current Conveyor Based on Quasi-Floating Gate Transistors

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    The field of low-voltage low-power CMOS technology has grown rapidly in recent years; it is an essential prerequisite particularly for portable electronic equipment and implantable medical devices due to its influence on battery lifetime. Recently, significant improvements in implementing circuits working in the low-voltage low-power area have been achieved, but circuit designers face severe challenges when trying to improve or even maintain the circuit performance with reduced supply voltage. In this paper, a low-voltage ultra-low-power current conveyor second generation CCII based on quasi-floating gate transistors is presented. The proposed circuit operates at a very low supply voltage of only ±0.4 V with rail-to-rail voltage swing capability and a total quiescent power consumption of mere 9.5 ”W. Further, the proposed circuit is not only able to process the AC signal as it's usual at quasi-floating gate transistors but also the DC which extends the applicability of the proposed circuit. In conclusion, an application example of the current-mode quadrature oscillator is presented. PSpice simulation results using the 0.18 ”m TSMC CMOS technology are included to confirm the attractive properties of the proposed circuit

    Low Power CMOS Interface Circuitry for Sensors and Actuators

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    Robust low power CMOS methodologies for ISFETs instrumentation

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    I have developed a robust design methodology in a 0.18 [Mu]m commercial CMOS process to circumvent the performance issues of the integrated Ions Sensitive Field Effect Transistor (ISFET) for pH detection. In circuit design, I have developed frequency domain signal processing, which transforms pH information into a frequency modulated signal. The frequency modulated signal is subsequently digitized and encoded into a bit-stream of data. The architecture of the instrumentation system consists of a) A novel front-end averaging amplifier to interface an array of ISFETs for converting pH into a voltage signal, b) A high linear voltage controlled oscillator for converting the voltage signal into a frequency modulated signal, and c) Digital gates for digitizing and differentiating the frequency modulated signal into an output bit-stream. The output bit stream is indistinguishable to a 1st order sigma delta modulation, whose noise floor is shaped by +20dB/decade. The fabricated instrumentation system has a dimension of 1565 [Mu] m 1565 [Mu] m. The chip responds linearly to the pH in a chemical solution and produces a digital output, with up to an 8-bit accuracy. Most importantly, the fabricated chips do not need any post-CMOS processing for neutralizing any trapped-charged effect, which can modulate on-chip ISFETs’ threshold voltages into atypical values. As compared to other ISFET-related works in the literature, the instrumentation system proposed in this thesis can cope with the mismatched ISFETs on chip for analogue-to-digital conversions. The design methodology is thus very accurate and robust for chemical sensing

    Interface Circuits for Microsensor Integrated Systems

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    ca. 200 words; this text will present the book in all promotional forms (e.g. flyers). Please describe the book in straightforward and consumer-friendly terms. [Recent advances in sensing technologies, especially those for Microsensor Integrated Systems, have led to several new commercial applications. Among these, low voltage and low power circuit architectures have gained growing attention, being suitable for portable long battery life devices. The aim is to improve the performances of actual interface circuits and systems, both in terms of voltage mode and current mode, in order to overcome the potential problems due to technology scaling and different technology integrations. Related problems, especially those concerning parasitics, lead to a severe interface design attention, especially concerning the analog front-end and novel and smart architecture must be explored and tested, both at simulation and prototype level. Moreover, the growing demand for autonomous systems gets even harder the interface design due to the need of energy-aware cost-effective circuit interfaces integrating, where possible, energy harvesting solutions. The objective of this Special Issue is to explore the potential solutions to overcome actual limitations in sensor interface circuits and systems, especially those for low voltage and low power Microsensor Integrated Systems. The present Special Issue aims to present and highlight the advances and the latest novel and emergent results on this topic, showing best practices, implementations and applications. The Guest Editors invite to submit original research contributions dealing with sensor interfacing related to this specific topic. Additionally, application oriented and review papers are encouraged.

    DESIGN OF SMART SENSORS FOR DETECTION OF PHYSICAL QUANTITIES

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    Microsystems and integrated smart sensors represent a flourishing business thanks to the manifold benefits of these devices with respect to their respective macroscopic counterparts. Miniaturization to micrometric scale is a turning point to obtain high sensitive and reliable devices with enhanced spatial and temporal resolution. Power consumption compatible with battery operated systems, and reduced cost per device are also pivotal for their success. All these characteristics make investigation on this filed very active nowadays. This thesis work is focused on two main themes: (i) design and development of a single chip smart flow-meter; (ii) design and development of readout interfaces for capacitive micro-electro-mechanical-systems (MEMS) based on capacitance to pulse width modulation conversion. High sensitivity integrated smart sensors for detecting very small flow rates of both gases and liquids aiming to fulfil emerging demands for this kind of devices in the industrial to environmental and medical applications. On the other hand, the prototyping of such sensor is a multidisciplinary activity involving the study of thermal and fluid dynamic phenomenon that have to be considered to obtain a correct design. Design, assisted by finite elements CAD tools, and fabrication of the sensing structures using features of a standard CMOS process is discussed in the first chapter. The packaging of fluidic sensors issue is also illustrated as it has a great importance on the overall sensor performances. The package is charged to allow optimal interaction between fluids and the sensors and protecting the latter from the external environment. As miniaturized structures allows a great spatial resolution, it is extremely challenging to fabricate low cost packages for multiple flow rate measurements on the same chip. As a final point, a compact anemometer prototype, usable for wireless sensor network nodes, is described. The design of the full custom circuitry for signal extraction and conditioning is coped in the second chapter, where insights into the design methods are given for analog basic building blocks such as amplifiers, transconductors, filters, multipliers, current drivers. A big effort has been put to find reusable design guidelines and trade-offs applicable to different design cases. This kind of rational design enabled the implementation of complex and flexible functionalities making the interface circuits able to interact both with on chip sensors and external sensors. In the third chapter, the chip floor-plan designed in the STMicroelectronics BCD6s process of the entire smart flow sensor formed by the sensing structures and the readout electronics is presented. Some preliminary tests are also covered here. Finally design and implementation of very low power interfaces for typical MEMS capacitive sensors (accelerometers, gyroscopes, pressure sensors, angular displacement and chemical species sensors) is discussed. Very original circuital topologies, based on chopper modulation technique, will be illustrated. A prototype, designed within a joint research activity is presented. Measured performances spurred the investigation of new techniques to enhance precision and accuracy capabilities of the interface. A brief introduction to the design of active pixel sensors interface for hybrid CMOS imagers is sketched in the appendix as a preliminary study done during an internship in the CNM-IMB institute of Barcelona

    Novel Bandpass Filter Design based on Synchronous Filtering

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    The design of high-performance low-noise bandpass filtering systems has been studied from several aspects: (1) applying the synchronous filtering idea to the development of externally linear, time-invariant filters which can be internally nonlinear and/or time-varying, (2) seeking solutions to improve the noise performance of these filters, from parameter configuration to architecture design, and (3) implementing the systems of interest as transistor level circuits and verifying their function.Particularly, the state space representations for a biquad AM mode synchronous bandpass filter and a biquad FM mode synchronous complex filter have been proposed and realized with ideal Gm-C networks and log-domain circuits. Both systems utilize the modulator-core filter-modulator architecture to synchronize the internal signal processing. The core filter in an AM mode synchronous filter has constant center frequency and time-variant bandwidth, and the terminal modulators perform amplitude modulation to maintain the systemñ€™s external linearity and input/output characteristics. An FM mode synchronous filter typically has time-invariant bandwidth and performs frequency modulation before and after the signal filtering. Depending on whether the center frequency and terminal modulating frequency vary with time, there are static and dynamic types of FM mode synchronous filters. They both have the advantage of being able to filter the high frequency input signals in a low frequency range, which greatly alleviates the design and integration challenge due to the high frequency limitation of active components. Moreover, some dynamic filters effectively suppress the injected single-tone noise and generate an output with much higher SNR in comparison to the output from a static filter that implements the same transfer function.As a variation of an AM mode synchronous bandpass filter, the system derived by removing its back end modulator has been verified to have impressive noise reduction capability when processing noisy AM signals. Furthermore, it inspired the development of a feedback filtering system, the effective bandwidth of which could be tuned by scaling the feedback signal that time varies the core filterñ€™s instantaneous bandwidth. It further provides an innovative approach to the design of a high-Q filter with superior immunity to internal noise, using a filter with very low Q factor. Finally, a design that combines the feedback architecture and the biquad FM mode synchronous complex filter is proposed and implemented as a log-domain filtering circuit. Appealing features of this system include wide dynamic range, flexible bandwidth and center frequency tunability. Since there is a low requirement for the high-frequency performance of active components, these filters make a good fit for monolithic integration, and greatly improved immunity to in-filter noise in comparison to that of an open loop complex filter with similar external filtering capability

    Time-Mode Analog Circuit Design for Nanometric Technologies

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    Rapid scaling in technology has introduced new challenges in the realm of traditional analog design. Scaling of supply voltage directly impacts the available voltage-dynamic-range. On the other hand, nanometric technologies with fT in the hundreds of GHz range open opportunities for time-resolution-based signal processing. With reduced available voltage-dynamic-range and improved timing resolution, it is more convenient to devise analog circuits whose performance depends on edge-timing precision rather than voltage levels. Thus, instead of representing the data/information in the voltage-mode, as a difference between two node voltages, it should be represented in time-mode as a time-difference between two rising and/or falling edges. This dissertation addresses the feasibility of employing time-mode analog circuit design in different applications. Specifically: 1) Time-mode-based quanitzer and feedback DAC of SigmaDelta ADC. 2) Time-mode-based low-THD 10MHz oscillator, 3) A Spur-Frequency Boosting PLL with -74dBc Reference-Spur Rejection in 90nm Digital CMOS. In the first project, a new architectural solution is proposed to replace the DAC and the quantizer by a Time-to-Digital converter. The architecture has been fabricated in 65nm and shows that this technology node is capable of achieving a time-matching of 800fs which has never been reported. In addition, a competitive figure-of-merit is achieved. In the low-THD oscillator, I proposed a new architectural solution for synthesizing a highly-linear sinusoidal signal using a novel harmonic rejection approach. The chip is fabricated in 130nm technology and shows an outstanding performance compared to the state of the art. The designed consumes 80% less power; consumes less area; provides much higher amplitude while being composed of purely digital circuits and passive elements. Last but not least, the spur-frequency boosting PLL employs a novel technique that eliminates the reference spurs. Instead of adding additional filtering at the reference frequency, the spur frequency is boosted to higher frequency which is, naturally, has higher filtering effects. The prototype is fabricated in 90nm digital CMOS and proved to provide the lowest normalized reference spurs ever reported

    Analysis of current conveyor non-idealities for implementation as integrator in delta sigma modulators

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