357 research outputs found

    A selectable-bandwidth 3.5 mW, 0.03 mm(2) self-oscillating Sigma Delta modulator with 71 dB dynamic range at 5 MHz and 65 dB at 10 MHz bandwidth

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    In this paper we present a dual-mode third order continuous time Sigma Delta modulator that combines noise shaping and pulse-width-modulation (PWM). In our 0.18 micro-m CMOS prototype chip the clock frequency equals 1 GHz, but the PWM carrier is only around 125 MHz. By adjusting the loop filter, the ADC bandwidth can be set to 5 or 10 MHz. In the 5 MHz mode the peak SNDR equals 64 dB and the dynamic range 71 dB. In the 10 MHz mode the peak SNDR equals 58 dB and the DR 65 dB. This performance is achieved at an attractively low silicon area of 0.03 mm^2 and a power consumption of 3.5 mW

    Design of the 12-bit Delta-Sigma Modulator using SC Technique for Vibration Sensor Output Processing

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    The work deals with the design of the 12-bit Delta-Sigma modulator using switched capacitors (SC) technique. The modulator serves to vibration sensor output processing. The first part describes the Delta-Sigma modulator parameters definition. Results of the proposed topology ideal model were presented as well. Next, the Delta-Sigma modulator circuitry on the transistor level was done. The ONSemiconductor I2T100 0.7 um CMOS technology was used for design. Then, the Delta-Sigma modulator nonidealities were simulated and implemented into the MATLAB ideal model of the modulator. The model of real Delta-Sigma modulator was derived. Consequently, modulator coefficients were optimized. Finally, the corner analysis of the Delta-Sigma modulator with the optimized coefficients was simulated. The value of SNDR = 82.2 dB (ENOB = 13.4 bits) was achieved

    A 5-MHz 11-bit delay-based self-oscillating ΣΔ modulator in 0.025 mm2

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    In this paper a self-oscillating Sigma Delta modulator is presented. By introducing this self-oscillation in the system, the loop filter operates at a speed significantly lower than dictated by the clock frequency. This allows for a simple and power efficient design of the opamps used in the loop filter. The self-oscillation is induced here by introducing a controlled delay in the feedback loop of the modulator. A second order CMOS prototype was constructed in a 0.18 um technology. A clock frequency of 850MHz generates a self-oscillation mode at 106.25 MHz. The modulator achieves a dynamic range (DR) of 66 dB for a signal bandwidth of 5 MHz. The power consumption is only 6mW and the chip area of the modulator core is 0.025mm^2

    Free Level Threshold Zone (FLTZ) Logic For Mixed Analog-Digital Closed Loop Circuitry [TK7887.6. N335 2008 f rb].

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    Para penyelidik sentiasa mencari cara-cara penambahbaikan kaedah antara muka antara domain Analog dan Digital. Researchers have always look for ways to improve the interfacing method between the Analog and Digital domain

    A re-configurable pipeline ADC architecture with built-in self-test techniques

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    High-performance analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits are integral parts of today\u27s and future networking and communication systems. The main challenge facing the semiconductor industry is the ability to economically produce these analog ICs. This translates, in part, into the need to efficiently evaluate the performance of such ICs during manufacturing (production testing) and to come up with dynamic architectures that enable the performance of these ICs to be maximized during manufacturing and later when they\u27re operating in the field. On the performance evaluation side, this dissertation deals with the concept of Built-In-Self-Test (BIST) to allow the efficient and economical evaluation of certain classes of high-performance analog circuits. On the dynamic architecture side, this dissertation deals with pipeline ADCs and the use of BIST to dynamically, during production testing or in the field, re-configure them to produce better performing ICs.;In the BIST system proposed, the analog test signal is generated on-chip by sigma-delta modulation techniques. The performance of the ADC is measured on-chip by a digital narrow-band filter. When this system is used on the wafer level, significant testing time and thus testing cost can be saved.;A re-configurable pipeline ADC architecture to improve the dynamic performance is proposed. Based on dynamic performance measurements, the best performance configuration is chosen from a collection of possible pipeline configurations. This basic algorithm can be applied to many pipeline analog systems. The proposed grouping algorithm cuts down the number of evaluation permutation from thousands to 18 for a 9-bit ADC thus allowing the method to be used in real applications.;To validate the developments of this dissertation, a 40MS/s 9-bit re-configurable pipeline ADC was designed and implemented in TSMC\u27s 0.25mum single-poly CMOS digital process. This includes a fully differential folded-cascode gain-boosting operational amplifier with high gain and high unity-gain bandwidth. The experimental results strongly support the effectiveness of reconfiguration algorithm, which provides an average of 0.5bit ENOB improvement among the set of configurations. For many applications, this is a very significant performance improvement.;The BIST and re-configurability techniques proposed are not limited to pipeline ADCs only. The BIST methodology is applicable to many analog systems and the re-configurability is applicable to any analog pipeline system

    Multirate cascaded discrete-time low-pass ΔΣ modulator for GSM/Bluetooth/UMTS

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    This paper shows that multirate processing in a cascaded discrete-time ΔΣ modulator allows to reduce the power consumption by up to 35%. Multirate processing is possible in a discrete-time ΔΣ modulator by its adaptibility with the sampling frequency. The power reduction can be achieved by relaxing the sampling speed of the first stage and increasing it appropriately in the second stage. Furthermore, a cascaded ΔΣ modulator enables the power efficient implementation of multiple communication standards.@The advantages of multirate cascaded ΔΣ modulators are demonstrated by comparing the performance of single-rate and multirate implementations using behavioral-level and circuit-level simulations. This analysis has been further validated with the design of a multirate cascaded triple-mode discrete-time ΔΣ modulator. A 2-1 multirate low-pass cascade, with a sampling frequency of 80 MHz in the first stage and 320 MHz in the second stage, meets the requirements for UMTS. The first stage alone is suitable for digitizing Bluetooth and GSM with a sampling frequency of 90 and 50 MHz respectively. This multimode ΔΣ modulator is implemented in a 1.2 V 90 nm CMOS technology with a core area of 0.076 mm2. Measurement results show a dynamic range of 66/77/85 dB for UMTS/ Bluetooth/GSM with a power consumption of 6.8/3.7/3.4 mW. This results in an energy per conversion step of 1.2/0.74/2.86 pJ

    A Low-Power Single-Bit Continuous-Time ΔΣ Converter with 92.5 dB Dynamic Range for Biomedical Applications

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    A third-order single-bit CT-ΔΣ modulator for generic biomedical applications is implemented in a 0.15 µm FDSOI CMOS process. The overall power efficiency is attained by employing a single-bit ΔΣ and a subthreshold FDSOI process. The loop-filter coefficients are determined using a systematic design centering approach by accounting for the integrator non-idealities. The single-bit CT-ΔΣ modulator consumes 110 µW power from a 1.5 V power supply when clocked at 6.144 MHz. The simulation results for the modulator exhibit a dynamic range of 94.4 dB and peak SNDR of 92.4 dB for 6 kHz signal bandwidth. The figure of merit (FoM) for the third-order, single-bit CT-ΔΣ modulator is 0.271 pJ/level
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