209 research outputs found

    Equalization Architectures for High Speed ADC-Based Serial I/O Receivers

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    The growth in worldwide network traffic due to the rise of cloud computing and wireless video consumption has required servers and routers to support increased serial I/O data rates over legacy channels with significant frequency-dependent attenuation. For these high-loss channel applications, ADC-based high-speed links are being considered due to their ability to enable powerful digital signal processing (DSP) algorithms for equalization and symbol detection. Relative to mixed-signal equalizers, digital implementations offer robustness to process, voltage and temperature (PVT) variations, are easier to reconfigure, and can leverage CMOS technology scaling in a straight-forward manner. Despite these advantages, ADC-based receivers are generally more complex and have higher power consumption relative to mixed-signal receivers. The ensuing digital equalization can also consume a significant amount of power which is comparable to the ADC contribution. Novel techniques to reduce complexity and improve power efficiency, both for the ADC and the subsequent digital equalization, are necessary. This dissertation presents efficient modeling and implementation approaches for ADC-based serial I/O receivers. A statistical modeling framework is developed, which is able to capture ADC related errors, including quantization noise, INL/DNL errors and time interleaving mismatch errors. A novel 10GS/s hybrid ADC-based receiver, which combines both embedded and digital equalization, is then presented. Leveraging a time-interleaved asynchronous successive approximation ADC architecture, a new structure for 3-tap embedded FFE inside the ADC with low power/area overhead is used. In addition, a dynamically-enabled digital 4-tap FFE + 3-tap DFE equalizer architecture is introduced, which uses reliable symbol detection to achieve remarkable savings in the digital equalization power. Measurement results over several FR4 channels verify the accuracy of the modeling approach and the effectiveness of the proposed receiver. The comparison of the fabricated prototype against state-of-the-art ADC-based receivers shows the ability of the proposed archi-tecture to compensate for the highest loss channel, while achieving the best power efficiency among other works

    All Digital, Background Calibration for Time-Interleaved and Successive Approximation Register Analog-to-Digital Converters

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    The growth of digital systems underscores the need to convert analog information to the digital domain at high speeds and with great accuracy. Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) calibration is often a limiting factor, requiring longer calibration times to achieve higher accuracy. The goal of this dissertation is to perform a fully digital background calibration using an arbitrary input signal for A/D converters. The work presented here adapts the cyclic Split-ADC calibration method to the time interleaved (TI) and successive approximation register (SAR) architectures. The TI architecture has three types of linear mismatch errors: offset, gain and aperture time delay. By correcting all three mismatch errors in the digital domain, each converter is capable of operating at the fastest speed allowed by the process technology. The total number of correction parameters required for calibration is dependent on the interleaving ratio, M. To adapt the Split-ADC method to a TI system, 2M+1 half-sized converters are required to estimate 3(2M+1) correction parameters. This thesis presents a 4:1 Split-TI converter that achieves full convergence in less than 400,000 samples. The SAR architecture employs a binary weight capacitor array to convert analog inputs into digital output codes. Mismatch in the capacitor weights results in non-linear distortion error. By adding redundant bits and dividing the array into individual unit capacitors, the Split-SAR method can estimate the mismatch and correct the digital output code. The results from this work show a reduction in the non-linear distortion with the ability to converge in less than 750,000 samples

    Time-Interleaved Analog-to-Digital Converter (TIADC) Compensation Using Multichannel Filters

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    Published methods that employ a filter bank for compensating the timing and bandwidth mismatches of an M-channel time-interleaved analog-to-digital converter (TIADC) were developed based on the fact that each sub-ADC channel is a downsampled version of the analog input. The output of each sub-ADC is filtered in such a way that, when all the filter outputs are summed, the aliasing components are minimized. If each channel of the filter bank has N coefficients, the optimization of the coefficients requires computing the inverse of an MN times MN matrix if the weighted least squares (WLS) technique is used as the optimization tool. In this paper, we present a multichannel filtering approach for TIADC mismatch compensation. We apply the generalized sampling theorem to directly estimate the ideal output of each sub-ADC using the outputs of all the sub-ADCs. If the WLS technique is used as the optimization tool, the dimension of the matrix to be inversed is N times N. For the same number of coefficients (and also the same spurious component performance given sufficient arithmetic precision), our technique is computationally less complex and more robust than the filter-bank approach. If mixed integer linear programming is used as the optimization tool to produce filters with coefficient values that are integer powers of two, our technique produces a saving in computing resources by a factor of approximately (100.2N(M- 1)/(M-1) in the TIADC filter design.published_or_final_versio

    Iterative correction of frequency response mismatches in time-interleaved ADCs: A novel framework and case study in OFDM systems

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    In this paper, we study a versatile iterative framework for the correction of frequency response mismatch in time-interleaved ADCs. Based on a general time varying linear system model, we establish a flexible iterative framework, which enables the development of various efficient iterative correction algorithms. In particular, we study the Gauss-Seidel iteration in detail to illustrate how the correction problem can be solved iteratively, and show that the iterative structure can be efficiently implemented using Farrow-based variable digital filters with few general-purpose multipliers. Simulation results show that the proposed iterative structure performs better than conventional compensation structures. Moreover, a preliminary study on the BER performance of OFDM systems due to TI ADC mismatch is conducted. © 2010 IEEE.published_or_final_versionThe 1st International Conference on Green Circuits and Systems (ICGCS 2010), Shanghai, China, 21-23 June 2010. In Proceedings of the 1st ICGCS, 2010, p. 253-25

    Pilot-Based TI-ADC Mismatch Error Calibration for IR-UWB Receivers

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    In this work, we rst provide an overviewof the state of the art in mismatch error estimation and correction for time-interleaved analog to digital converters (TI-ADCs). Then, we present a novel pilot-based on-line adaptive timing mismatch error estimation approach for TI-ADCs in the context of an impulse radio ultra wideband (IR-UWB) receiver with correlation-based detection. We introduce the developed method and derive the expressions for both additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) and Rayleigh multipath fading (RMPF) channels. We also derive a lower bound on the required ADC resolution to attain a certainestimation precision. Simulations show the effectiveness of the technique when combined with an adequate compensator. We analyze the estimation error behavior as a function of signal to noise ratio (SNR) and investigate the ADC performance before and after compensation. While all mismatches combined cause the effective number of bits (ENOB) to drop to 3 bits and to 6 bits when considering only timing mismatch, estimation and correction of these errors with the proposed technique can restore a close to ideal behavior.We also show the performance loss at the receiver in terms of bit error rate (BER) and how compensation is able to signicantly improve performance.Fil: Schmidt, Christian Andrés. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages". Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages"; ArgentinaFil: Figueroa, Jose Luis. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages". Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages"; ArgentinaFil: Cousseau, Juan Edmundo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages". Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica y de Computadoras. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Eléctrica "Alfredo Desages"; ArgentinaFil: Lopez Tonellotto, Mariana Andrea. University Of Klagenfurt; Austri

    Pilot-Based TI-ADC Mismatch Error Calibration for IR-UWB Receivers

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    4openopenSchmidt C.A.; Figueroa J.L.; Cousseau J.E.; Tonello A.M.Schmidt, C. A.; Figueroa, J. L.; Cousseau, J. E.; Tonello, A. M

    A Novel Iterative Structure for Online Calibration of M-Channel Time-Interleaved ADCs

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    Nonlinear models and algorithms for RF systems digital calibration

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    Focusing on the receiving side of a communication system, the current trend in pushing the digital domain ever more closer to the antenna sets heavy constraints on the accuracy and linearity of the analog front-end and the conversion devices. Moreover, mixed-signal implementations of Systems-on-Chip using nanoscale CMOS processes result in an overall poorer analog performance and a reduced yield. To cope with the impairments of the low performance analog section in this "dirty RF" scenario, two solutions exist: designing more complex analog processing architectures or to identify the errors and correct them in the digital domain using DSP algorithms. In the latter, constraints in the analog circuits' precision can be offloaded to a digital signal processor. This thesis aims at the development of a methodology for the analysis, the modeling and the compensation of the analog impairments arising in different stages of a receiving chain using digital calibration techniques. Both single and multiple channel architectures are addressed exploiting the capability of the calibration algorithm to homogenize all the channels' responses of a multi-channel system in addition to the compensation of nonlinearities in each response. The systems targeted for the application of digital post compensation are a pipeline ADC, a digital-IF sub-sampling receiver and a 4-channel TI-ADC. The research focuses on post distortion methods using nonlinear dynamic models to approximate the post-inverse of the nonlinear system and to correct the distortions arising from static and dynamic errors. Volterra model is used due to its general approximation capabilities for the compensation of nonlinear systems with memory. Digital calibration is applied to a Sample and Hold and to a pipeline ADC simulated in the 45nm process, demonstrating high linearity improvement even with incomplete settling errors enabling the use of faster clock speeds. An extended model based on the baseband Volterra series is proposed and applied to the compensation of a digital-IF sub-sampling receiver. This architecture envisages frequency selectivity carried out at IF by an active band-pass CMOS filter causing in-band and out-of-band nonlinear distortions. The improved performance of the proposed model is demonstrated with circuital simulations of a 10th-order band pass filter, realized using a five-stage Gm-C Biquad cascade, and validated using out-of-sample sinusoidal and QAM signals. The same technique is extended to an array receiver with mismatched channels' responses showing that digital calibration can compensate the loss of directivity and enhance the overall system SFDR. An iterative backward pruning is applied to the Volterra models showing that complexity can be reduced without impacting linearity, obtaining state-of-the-art accuracy/complexity performance. Calibration of Time-Interleaved ADCs, widely used in RF-to-digital wideband receivers, is carried out developing ad hoc models because the steep discontinuities generated by the imperfect canceling of aliasing would require a huge number of terms in a polynomial approximation. A closed-form solution is derived for a 4-channel TI-ADC affected by gain errors and timing skews solving the perfect reconstruction equations. A background calibration technique is presented based on cyclo-stationary filter banks architecture. Convergence speed and accuracy of the recursive algorithm are discussed and complexity reduction techniques are applied

    New iterative framework for frequency response mismatch correction in time-interleaved ADCs: Design and performance analysis

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    This paper proposes a new iterative framework for the correction of frequency response mismatch in time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters. Based on a general time-varying linear system model for the mismatch, we treat the reconstruction problem as a linear inverse problem and establish a flexible iterative framework for practical implementation. It encumbrances a number of efficient iterative correction algorithms and simplifies their design, implementation, and performance analysis. In particular, an efficient Gauss-Seidel iteration is studied in detail to illustrate how the correction problem can be solved iteratively and how the proposed structure can be efficiently implemented using Farrow-based variable digital filters with few general-purpose multipliers. We also study important issues, such as the sufficient convergence condition and reconstructed signal spectrum, derive new lower bound of signal-to-distortion-and-noise ratio in order to ensure stable operation, and predict the performance of the proposed structure. Furthermore, we propose an extended iterative structure, which is able to cope with systems involving more than one type of mismatches. Finally, the theoretical results and the effectiveness of the proposed approach are validated by means of computer simulations. © 2011 IEEE.published_or_final_versio

    A 16-b 10Msample/s Split-Interleaved Analog to Digital Converter

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    This work describes the integrated circuit design of a 16-bit, 10Msample/sec, combination ‘split’ interleaved analog to digital converter. Time interleaving of analog to digital converters has been used successfully for many years as a technique to achieve faster speeds using multiple identical converters. However, efforts to achieve higher resolutions with this technique have been difficult due to the precise matching required of the converter channels. The most troublesome errors in these types of converters are gain, offset and timing differences between channels. The ‘split ADC’ is a new concept that allows the use of a deterministic, digital, self calibrating algorithm. In this approach, an ADC is split into two paths, producing two output codes from the same input sample. The difference of these two codes is used as the calibration signal for an LMS error estimation algorithm that drives the difference error to zero. The ADC is calibrated when the codes are equal and the output is taken as the average of the two codes. The ‘split’ ADC concept and interleaved architecture are combined in this IC design to form the core of a high speed, high resolution, and self-calibrating ADC system. The dual outputs are used to drive a digital calibration engine to correct for the channel mismatch errors. This system has the speed benefits of interleaving while maintaining high resolution. The hardware for the algorithm as well as the ADC can be implemented in a standard 0.25um CMOS process, resulting in a relatively inexpensive solution. This work is supported by grants from Analog Devices Incorporated (ADI) and the National Science Foundation (NSF)
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