50 research outputs found

    Switched-Capacitor Voltage Doubler Design Using 0.5 ÎŒm Technology

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    While integrated circuit (IC) power management has been an eternal topic for chip designers, inductor based DC-DC converters have been dominant in the field for years. However, because of the natures of inductors: large electro-magnetic interference, high coupling noise, and difficult silicon fabrication process, they are not favorable to on-chip solutions. Switched-capacitor (SC) DC-DC converters, which adopt capacitors for their energy storage components, have become increasingly popular among both the academia and the industry, because, apparently, they avoid the drawbacks of the inductor counterparts, and can be directly implemented on-chip without additional fabrication process. In this paper, we will investigate one of the most famous SC voltage doubler topologies, which is known as Favrat Cell . By designing a chip, which converts 1.5 V voltage input to 2.5 V voltage output at 1 mA current load, we will walk through the details of a SC DC-DC converter design, including the switch cell, timing system, regulation loop and efficiency analysis. The design uses two 200 pF pumping capacitors and a 400 pF output capacitor in On-Semi half-micron technology. Four-way interleaved phase structure is adopted to reduce the output voltage ripple. The gate-drive strategy of the switches has been improved to further reduce the reverse current injections during transitions. A new high-ratio voltage booster topology based on the cross-coupled topology has been introduced and will be discussed in comparison with the Dickson charge pump topology

    Energy Efficient Pipeline ADCs Using Ring Amplifiers

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    Pipeline ADCs require accurate amplification. Traditionally, an operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) configured as a switched-capacitor (SC) amplifier performs such amplification. However, traditional OTAs limit the power efficiency of ADCs since they require high quiescent current for slewing and bandwidth. In addition, it is difficult to design low-voltage OTAs in modern, scaled CMOS. The ring amplifier is an energy efficient and high output swing alternative to an OTA for SC circuits which is basically a three-stage inverter amplifier stabilized in a feedback configuration. However, the conventional ring amplifier requires external biases, which makes the ring amplifier less practical when we consider process, supply voltage, and temperature (PVT) variation. In this dissertation, three types of innovative ring amplifiers are presented and verified with state-of-the-art energy efficient pipeline ADCs. These new ring amplifiers overcome the limitations of the conventional ring amplifier and further improve energy efficiency. The first topic of this dissertation is a self-biased ring amplifier that makes the ring amplifier more practical and power efficient, while maintaining the benefits of efficient slew-based charging and an almost rail-to-rail output swing. In addition, the ring amplifiers are also used as comparators in the 1.5b sub-ADCs by utilizing the unique characteristics of the ring amplifier. This removes the need for dedicated comparators in sub-ADCs, thus further reducing the power consumption of the ADC. The prototype 10.5b 100 MS/s comparator-less pipeline ADC with the self-biased ring amplifiers has measured SNDR, SNR and SFDR of 56.6 dB (9.11b), 57.5 dB and 64.7 dB, respectively, and consumes 2.46 mW, which results in Walden Figure-of-Merit (FoM) of 46.1 fJ/ conversion∙step. The second topic is a fully-differential ring amplifier, which solves the problems of single-ended ring amplifiers while maintaining the benefits of the single-ended ring amplifiers. This differential ring-amplifier is applied in a 13b 50 MS/s SAR-assisted pipeline ADC. Furthermore, an improved capacitive DAC switching method for the first stage SAR reduces the DAC linearity errors and switching energy. The prototype ADC achieves measured SNDR, SNR and SFDR of 70.9 dB (11.5b), 71.3 dB and 84.6 dB, respectively, and consumes 1 mW. This measured performance is equivalent to Walden and Schreier FoMs of 6.9 fJ/conversion∙step and 174.9 dB, respectively. Finally, a four-stage fully-differential ring amplifier improves the small-signal gain to over 90 dB without compromising speed. In addition, a new auto-zero noise filtering method reduces noise without consuming additional power. This is more area efficient than the conventional auto-zero noise folding reduction technique. A systematic mismatch free SAR CDAC layout method is also presented. The prototype 15b 100 MS/s calibration-free SAR-assisted pipeline ADC using the four-stage ring amplifier achieves 73.2 dB SNDR (11.9b) and 90.4 dB SFDR with a 1.1 V supply. It consumes 2.3 mW resulting in Schreier FoM of 176.6 dB.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138759/1/yonglim_1.pd

    Ultra-low power mixed-signal frontend for wearable EEGs

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    Electronics circuits are ubiquitous in daily life, aided by advancements in the chip design industry, leading to miniaturised solutions for typical day to day problems. One of the critical healthcare areas helped by this advancement in technology is electroencephalography (EEG). EEG is a non-invasive method of tracking a person's brain waves, and a crucial tool in several healthcare contexts, including epilepsy and sleep disorders. Current ambulatory EEG systems still suffer from limitations that affect their usability. Furthermore, many patients admitted to emergency departments (ED) for a neurological disorder like altered mental status or seizures, would remain undiagnosed hours to days after admission, which leads to an elevated rate of death compared to other conditions. Conducting a thorough EEG monitoring in early-stage could prevent further damage to the brain and avoid high mortality. But lack of portability and ease of access results in a long wait time for the prescribed patients. All real signals are analogue in nature, including brainwaves sensed by EEG systems. For converting the EEG signal into digital for further processing, a truly wearable EEG has to have an analogue mixed-signal front-end (AFE). This research aims to define the specifications for building a custom AFE for the EEG recording and use that to review the suitability of the architectures available in the literature. Another critical task is to provide new architectures that can meet the developed specifications for EEG monitoring and can be used in epilepsy diagnosis, sleep monitoring, drowsiness detection and depression study. The thesis starts with a preview on EEG technology and available methods of brainwaves recording. It further expands to design requirements for the AFE, with a discussion about critical issues that need resolving. Three new continuous-time capacitive feedback chopped amplifier designs are proposed. A novel calibration loop for setting the accurate value for a pseudo-resistor, which is a crucial block in the proposed topology, is also discussed. This pseudoresistor calibration loop achieved the resistor variation of under 8.25%. The thesis also presents a new design of a curvature corrected bandgap, as well as a novel DDA based fourth-order Sallen-Key filter. A modified sensor frontend architecture is then proposed, along with a detailed analysis of its implementation. Measurement results of the AFE are finally presented. The AFE consumed a total power of 3.2A (including ADC, amplifier, filter, and current generation circuitry) with the overall integrated input-referred noise of 0.87V-rms in the frequency band of 0.5-50Hz. Measurement results confirmed that only the proposed AFE achieved all defined specifications for the wearable EEG system with the smallest power consumption than state-of-art architectures that meet few but not all specifications. The AFE also achieved a CMRR of 131.62dB, which is higher than any studied architectures.Open Acces

    Integrated circuits for wearable systems based on flexible electronics

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    Integrated circuits for wearable systems based on flexible electronics

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    Architectural & circuit level techniques to improve energy efficiency of high speed serial links

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    High performance computing and communication are two key aspects of all information processing systems. With aggressive scaling of silicon technology enabling integration of a large number of transistors in a small area, managing power and thermal reliability has become very challenging. While lowering the power needed for performing computation has been the prime focus for decades, energy consumed for data transfer has recently become a major bottleneck especially in high performance applications. The focus of this thesis is on improving energy efficiency of communication links by exploring design techniques at both the architectural and circuit levels. In the first part of this work, we propose a time-based equalization scheme to implement transmit de-emphasis in voltage-mode output drivers. Using two-level pulse-width modulation, it overcomes the tradeoff between impedance matching, output swing, and de-emphasis resolution in conventional voltage-mode drivers. A prototype PWM-based 5 \,Gb/s voltage-mode transmitter was implemented in a 90 \,nm CMOS process and characterized across different channels and output swings to demonstrate the effectiveness of proposed techniques. The horizontal/vertical eye openings (BER=10−12\rm 10^{-12}) at the ends of 60 \,inch and 96 \,inch stripline channels are 78 \,mV/0.6 \,UI and 8 \,mV/0.3 \,UI, respectively. This transmitter achieves an energy efficiency of 3.1 \,mW/Gb/s while compensating for 16-28 \,dB channel loss, which compares favorably with the state-of-the-art. In the second part, techniques to improve energy efficiency of a complete transceiver are presented. The transmitter employs a novel partially segmented voltage-mode output driver to lower power consumption in pre-drivers during 2-tap FIR equalization. The receiver implements a low power half-rate clock and data recovery with the proposed ring PLL based multi-phase sampling clock generation in CDR loop and charge-based sampling and deserialization. These techniques are verified using the measured results obtained from a 14Gb/s transceiver prototype. Transmitter achieves an energy efficiency of 0.89 \,mW/Gb/s while securing a 0.36 \,UI sampling time margin with BER=10−12\rm{BER=10^{-12}} at the end of the channel with 11 \,dB loss at Nyquist frequency. The receiver recovers sampling clock with 1.8 \,psrms\rm{ps_{rms}} long term absolute jitter while recovering 14 \,Gb/s data at BER=10−12\rm{BER=10^{-12}}. The receiver achieves an energy efficiency of 1.69 \,mW/Gb/s. Transmitter and receiver share an LC PLL, which achieves 0.605 \,psrms\rm{ps_{rms}} integrated jitter at 7 \,GHz output with an energy efficiency of 0.5 \,mW/GHz. The transceiver as a whole achieves an energy efficiency of 2.8 \,mW/Gb/s

    Nano-Watt Modular Integrated Circuits for Wireless Neural Interface.

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    In this work, a nano-watt modular neural interface circuit is proposed for ECoG neuroprosthetics. The main purposes of this work are threefold: (1) optimizing the power-performance of the neural interface circuits based on ECoG signal characteristics, (2) equipping a stimulation capability, and (3) providing a modular system solution to expand functionality. To achieve these aims, the proposed system introduces the following contributions/innovations: (1) power-noise optimization based on the ECoG signal driven analysis, (2) extreme low-power analog front-ends, (3) Manchester clock-edge modulation clock data recovery, (4) power-efficient data compression, (5) integrated stimulator with fully programmable waveform, (6) wireless signal transmission through skin, and (7) modular expandable design. Towards these challenges and contributions, three different ECoG neural interface systems, ENI-1, ENI-16, and ENI-32, have been designed, fabricated, and tested. The first ENI system(ENI-1) is a one-channel analog front-end and fabricated in a 0.25”m CMOS process with chopper stabilized pseudo open-loop preamplifier and area-efficient SAR ADC. The measured channel power, noise and area are 1.68”W at 2.5V power-supply, 1.69”Vrms (NEF=2.43), and 0.0694mm^2, respectively. The fabricated IC is packaged with customized miniaturized package. In-vivo human EEG is successfully measured with the fabricated ENI-1-IC. To demonstrate a system expandability and wireless link, ENI-16 IC is fabricated in 0.25”m CMOS process and has sixteen channels with a push-pull preamplifier, asynchronous SAR ADC, and intra-skin communication(ISCOM) which is a new way of transmitting the signal through skin. The measured channel power, noise and area are 780nW, 4.26”Vrms (NEF=5.2), and 2.88mm^2, respectively. With the fabricated ENI-16-IC, in-vivo epidural ECoG from monkey is successfully measured. As a closed-loop system, ENI-32 focuses on optimizing the power performance based on a bio-signal property and integrating stimulator. ENI-32 is fabricated in 0.18”m CMOS process and has thirty-two recording channels and four stimulation channels with a cyclic preamplifier, data compression, asymmetric wireless transceiver (Tx/Rx). The measured channel power, noise and area are 140nW (680nW including ISCOM), 3.26”Vrms (NEF=1.6), and 5.76mm^2, respectively. The ENI-32 achieves an order of magnitude power reduction while maintaining the system performance. The proposed nano-watt ENI-32 can be the first practical wireless closed-loop solution with a practically miniaturized implantable device.PhDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98064/1/schang_1.pd

    Techniques for Wideband All Digital Polar Transmission

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    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

    A Ringamp-Assisted, Output Capacitor-less Analog CMOS Low-Dropout Voltage Regulator

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    Continued advancements in state-of-the-art integrated circuits have furthered trends toward higher computational performance and increased functionality within smaller circuit area footprints, all while improving power efficiencies to meet the demands of mobile and battery-powered applications. A significant portion of these advancements have been enabled by continued scaling of CMOS technology into smaller process node sizes, facilitating faster digital systems and power optimized computation. However, this scaling has degraded classic analog amplifying circuit structures with reduced voltage headroom and lower device output resistance; and thus, lower available intrinsic gain. This work investigates these trends and their impact for fine-grain Low-Dropout (LDO) Voltage Regulators, leading to a presented design methodology and implementation of a state-of-the-art Ringamp-Assisted, Output Capacitor-less Analog CMOS LDO Voltage Regulator capable of both power scaling and process node scaling for general SoC applications

    Adaptation in Standard CMOS Processes with Floating Gate Structures and Techniques

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    We apply adaptation into ordinary circuits and systems to achieve high performance, high quality results. Mismatch in manufactured VLSI devices has been the main limiting factor in quality for many analog and mixed-signal designs. Traditional compensation methods are generally costly. A few examples include enlarging the device size, averaging signals, and trimming with laser. By applying floating gate adaptation to standard CMOS circuits, we demonstrate here that we are able to trim CMOS comparator offset to a precision of 0.7mV, reduce CMOS image sensor fixed-pattern noise power by a factor of 100, and achieve 5.8 effective number of bits (ENOB) in a 6-bit flash analog-to-digital converter (ADC) operating at 750MHz. The adaptive circuits generally exhibit special features in addition to an improved performance. These special features are generally beyond the capabilities of traditional CMOS design approaches and they open exciting opportunities in novel circuit designs. Specifically, the adaptive comparator has the ability to store an accurate arbitrary offset, the image sensor can be set up to memorize previously captured scenes like a human retina, and the ADC can be configured to adapt to the incoming analog signal distribution and perform an efficient signal conversion that minimizes distortion and maximizes output entropy
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