72 research outputs found

    A novel digital background calibration technique for 16 bit SHA-less multibit pipelined ADC

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    In this paper, a high resolution of 16 bit and high speed of 125MS/s, multibit Pipelined ADC with digital background calibration is presented. In order to achieve low power, SHA-less front end is used with multibit stages. The first and second stages are used here as a 3.5 bit and the stages from third to seventh are of 2.5 bit and last stage is of 3-bit flash ADC. After bit alignment and truncation of total 19 bits, 16 bits are used as final digital output. To precise the remove linear gain error of the residue amplifier and capacitor mismatching error, a digital background calibration technique is used, which is a combination of signal dependent dithering (SDD) and butterfly shuffler. To improve settling time of residue amplifier, a special circuit of voltage separation is used. With the proposed digital background calibration technique, the spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) has been improved to 97.74 dB @30 MHz and 88.9 dB @150 MHz, and the signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) has been improved to 79.77 dB @ 30 MHz, and 73.5 dB @ 150 MHz. The implementation of the Pipelined ADC has been completed with technology parameters of 0.18μm CMOS process with 1.8 V supply. Total power consumption is 300 mW by the proposed ADC

    A 14-bit 250 MS/s IF Sampling Pipelined ADC in 180 nm CMOS Process

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    This paper presents a 14-bit 250 MS/s ADC fabricated in a 180 nm CMOS process, which aims at optimizing its linearity, operating speed, and power efficiency. The implemented ADC employs an improved SHA with parasitic optimized bootstrapped switches to achieve high sampling linearity over a wide input frequency range. It also explores a dedicated foreground calibration to correct the capacitor mismatches and the gain error of residue amplifier, where a novel configuration scheme with little cost for analog front-end is developed. Moreover, a partial non-overlapping clock scheme associated with a high-speed reference buffer and fast comparators is proposed to maximize the residue settling time. The implemented ADC is measured under different input frequencies with a sampling rate of 250 MS/s and it consumes 300 mW from a 1.8 V supply. For 30 MHz input, the measured SFDR and SNDR of the ADC is 94.7 dB and 68.5 dB, which can remain over 84.3 dB and 65.4 dB for up to 400 MHz. The measured DNL and INL after calibration are optimized to 0.15 LSB and 1.00 LSB, respectively, while the Walden FOM at Nyquist frequency is 0.57 pJ/step

    The design of calibration circuit for analog-to-digital converter (ADC).

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    Dua jenis (Jenis 1 dan Jenis 2) litar tentukuran untuk ADC saluran maklumat telah direka bentuk menggunakan kod Verilog-A yang boleh didapati daripada arkib ahdlib dari alat simulasi perisian Cadence Virtuoso. Kod yang diguna pakai telah diubahsuai bagi memenuhi litar tentukuran yang dicadangkan. Dua blok ADC saluran maklumat yang sama (ADC saluran maklumat 1 dan ADC saluran maklumat 2) direalisasi menggunakan 130nm proses Silterra CMOS dengan setiap ADC mempunyai output digital 4-bit masing-masing. Voltan rujukan pada 600mV digunakan dalam operasi ADC saluran maklumat ini dengan bekalan kuasa 1.2V bagi Vdd dan 0V bagi Vss. ADC saluran maklumat beroperasi pada frekuensi pensampelan 2.2727MHz dengan frekuensi input dari DC ke 1.1364 MHz. Julat Voltan input ADC saluran maklumat adalah dari 300 mV ke 900 mV dengan voltan pertengahan pada 600 mV. Peringkat-peringkat saluran maklumat yang digunakan dalam pembinaan kedua-dua ADC saluran maklumat mengunakan litar Pendaraban Digital-ke-Analog Penukar (MDAC). Litar MDAC adalah berdasarkan kepada konfigurasi 1.5-bit suis-kapasitor dengan penguat kendalian (op-amp) pengamiran sepenuhnya yang mempunyai gandaan hampir 2. Pembetulan Ralat Digital (DEC) juga dicadangkan menggunakan kod Verilog-A pada dua blok, pengatur-masa dan penambah 4-bit. Tiada konsep pembetulan secara isyarat digunakan dalam litar tentukuran yang dicadangkan, membolehkan litar MDAC yang sama digunakan tanpa pengubahsuaian. Pejana palsu-rawak (PN) tidak digunakan dalam litar tentukuran yang dicadangkan. INL yang dicapai dengan tentukuran jenis litar 1 adalah dari maksimum 1 LSB ke minimum -1 LSB . Untuk tentukuran jenis litar 2 , INL yang dicapai adalah maksimum 1 LSB dan minimum 0 LSB . DNL yang dicapai dengan jenis 1 adalah dari maksimum 0 LSB ke minimum -1 LSB manakala jenis 2 mencapai 0 LSB . Two types (Type 1 and Type 2) of calibration circuits for the pipelined ADC was desgined using Verilog-A code modeling available from ahdlib Library of the Cadence Virtuoso tool. The modelling codes were modified to suit the proposed calibration circuit. Two identical pipelined ADC blocks (Pipelined ADC 1 and Pipelined ADC 2) were realized in 130nm Silterra CMOS process with each ADC having a 4-bit digital output respectively. A reference voltage of 600mV was used in the operation of the pipelined ADC with power supply connected to 1.2V for Vdd and ground GND for Vss. The pipelined ADC operates at a sampling frequency of 2.2727MHz with input frequency from DC to 1.1364MHz. The input range voltage of the pipelined ADC is 300mV to 900mV with common-mode voltage of 600mV. Stages used in the construction of each pipelined ADCs employed Multiplying Digital-to-Analog Converter (MDAC) circuit architecture. The MDAC circuit is based on the 1.5-bit switched capacitor configuration with fully-differential operational amplifier (op-amp) gain or radix of approximately 2. A Digital Error Correction (DEC) was also proposed using Verilog-A code modeling where two blocks, time-align block and 4-bit adder made up the DEC block. No dithering signal or concept was used in the proposed calibration circuit, enabling the same MDAC circuit to be used with no modifications. A DNL of 0 LSB was achieved when calibration was enabled. The INL achieved by Calibration circuit type 1 is from maximum +1 LSB to minimum -1 LSB. For the Calibration circuit type 2, INL achieved is maximum +1 LSB and minimum 0 LSB. The DNL achieved by type 1 is from maximum 0 LSB to minimum -1 LSB while type 2 achieved 0 LSB

    Design Techniques for High-Performance SAR A/D Converters

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    The design of electronics needs to account for the non-ideal characteristics of the device technologies used to realize practical circuits. This is particularly important in mixed analog-digital design since the best device technologies are very different for digital compared to analog circuits. One solution for this problem is to use a calibration correction approach to remove the errors introduced by devices, but this adds complexity and power dissipation, as well as reducing operation speed, and so must be optimised. This thesis addresses such an approach to improve the performance of certain types of analog-to-digital converter (ADC) used in advanced telecommunications, where speed, accuracy and power dissipation currently limit applications. The thesis specifically focuses on the design of compensation circuits for use in successive approximation register (SAR) ADCs. ADCs are crucial building blocks in communication systems, in general, and for mobile networks, in particular. The recently launched fifth generation of mobile networks (5G) has required new ADC circuit techniques to meet the higher speed and lower power dissipation requirements for 5G technology. The SAR has become one of the most favoured architectures for designing high-performance ADCs, but the successive nature of the circuit operation makes it difficult to reach ∼GS/s sampling rates at reasonable power consumption. Here, two calibration techniques for high-performance SAR ADCs are presented. The first uses an on-chip stochastic-based mismatch calibration technique that is able to accurately compute and compensate for the mismatch of a capacitive DAC in a SAR ADC. The stochastic nature of the proposed calibration method enables determination of the mismatch of the CAPDAC with a resolution much better than that of the DAC. This allows the unit capacitor to scale down to as low as 280aF for a 9-bit DAC. Since the CAP-DAC causes a large part of the overall dynamic power consumption and directly determines both the sizes of the driving and sampling switches and the size of the input capacitive load of the ADC and the kT/C noise power, a small CAP-DAC helps the power efficiency. To validate the proposed calibration idea, a 10-bit asynchronous SAR ADC was fabricated in 28-nm CMOS. Measurement results show that the proposed stochastic calibration improves the ADC’s SFDR and SNDR by 14.9 dB, 11.5 dB, respectively. After calibration, the fabricated SAR ADC achieves an ENOB of 9.14 bit at a sampling rate of 85 MS/s, resulting in a Walden FoM of 10.9 fJ/c-s. The second calibration technique is a timing-skew calibration for a time-interleaved (TI) SAR ADC that calibrates/computes the inter-channel timing and offset mismatch simultaneously. Simulation results show the effectiveness of this calibration method. When used together, the proposed mismatch calibration technique and the timing-skew calibration technique enables a TI SAR ADC to be designed that can achieve a sampling rate of ∼GS/s with 10-bit resolution and a power consumption as low as ∼10mW; specifications that satisfy the requirements of 5G technology

    Accuracy enhancement techniques in low-voltage high-speed pipelined ADC design

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    Pipelined analog to digital converters (ADCs) are very important building blocks in many electronic systems such as high quality video systems, high performance digital communication systems and high speed data acquisition systems. The rapid development of these applications is driving the design of pipeline ADCs towards higher speed, higher dynamic range, lower power consumption and lower power supply voltage with the CMOS technology scaling. This trend poses great challenges to conventional pipelined ADC designs which rely on high-gain operational amplifiers (opamps) and well matched capacitors to achieve high accuracy. In this thesis, two novel accuracy improvement techniques to overcome the accuracy limit set by analog building blocks (opamps and capacitors) in the context of low-voltage and high-speed pipelined ADC design are presented. One is the time-shifted correlated double sampling (CDS) technique which addresses the finite opamp gain effect and the other is the radix-based background digital calibration technique which can take care of both finite opamp gain and capacitor mismatch. These methods are simple, easy to implement and power efficient. The effectiveness of the proposed techniques is demonstrated in simulation as well as in experiment. Two prototype ADCs have been designed and fabricated in 0.18μm CMOS technology as the experimental verification of the proposed techniques. The first ADC is a 1.8V 10-bit pipeline ADC which incorporated the time-shifted CDS technique to boost the effective gain of the amplifiers. Much better gain-bandwidth tradeoff in amplifier design is achieved with this gain boosting. Measurement results show total power consumption of 67mW at 1.8V when operating at 100MSPS. The SNR, SNDR and SFDR are 55dB, 54dB and 65dB respectively given a 1MHz input signal. The second one is a 0.9V 12-bit two-stage cyclic ADC which employed a novel correlation-based background calibration to enhance the linearity. The linearity limit set by the capacitor mismatches, finite opamp gain effects is exceeded. After calibration, the SFDR is improved by about 33dB and exceeds 80dB. The power consumption is 12mW from 0.9V supply when operating at 2MSPS

    Low-Power Slew-Rate Boosting Based 12-Bit Pipeline ADC Utilizing Forecasting Technique in the Sub-ADCS

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    The dissertation presents architecture and circuit solutions to improve the power efficiency of high-speed 12-bit pipelined ADCs in advanced CMOS technologies. First, the 4.5bit algorithmic pipelined front-end stage is proposed. It is shown that the algorithmic pipelined ADC requires a simpler sub-ADC and shows lower sensitivity to the Multiplying DAC (MDAC) errors and smaller area and power dissipation in comparison to the conventional multi-bit per stage pipelined ADC. Also, it is shown that the algorithmic pipelined architecture is more tolerant to capacitive mismatch for the same input-referred thermal noise than the conventional multi-bit per stage architecture. To take full advantage of these properties, a modified residue curve for the pipelined ADC is proposed. This concept introduces better linearity compared with the conventional residue curve of the pipelined ADC; this approach is particularly attractive for the digitization of signals with large peak to average ratio such as OFDM coded signals. Moreover, the minimum total required transconductance for the different architectures of the 12-bit pipelined ADC are computed. This helps the pipelined ADC designers to find the most power-efficient architecture between different topologies based on the same input-referred thermal noise. By employing this calculation, the most power efficient architecture for realizing the 12-bit pipelined ADC is selected. Then, a technique for slew-rate (SR) boosting in switched-capacitor circuits is proposed in the order to be utilized in the proposed 12-bit pipelined ADC. This technique makes use of a class-B auxiliary amplifier that generates a compensating current only when high slew-rate is demanded by large input signal. The proposed architecture employs simple circuitry to detect the need of injecting current at the output load by implementing a Pre-Amp followed by a class-B amplifier, embedded with a pre-defined hysteresis, in parallel with the main amplifier to boost its slew phase. The proposed solution requires small static power since it does not need high dc-current at the output stage of the main amplifier. The proposed technique is suitable for high-speed low-power multi-bit/stage pipelined ADC applications. Both transistor-level simulations and experimental results in TSMC 40nm technology reduces the slew-time for more than 45% and shorts the 1% settling time by 28% when used in a 4.5bit/stage pipelined ADC; power consumption increases by 20%. In addition, the technique of inactivating and disconnecting of the sub-ADC’s comparators by forecasting the sign of the sampled input voltage is proposed in the order to reduce the dynamic power consumption of the sub-ADCs in the proposed 12-bit pipelined ADC. This technique reduces the total dynamic power consumption more than 46%. The implemented 12-bit pipelined ADC achieves an SNDR/SFDR of 65.9/82.3 dB at low input frequencies and a 64.1/75.5 dB near Nyquist frequency while running at 500 MS/s. The pipelined ADC prototype occupies an active area of 0.9 mm^2 and consumes 18.16 mW from a 1.1 V supply, resulting in a figure of merit (FOM) of 22.4 and a 27.7 fJ/conversion-step at low-frequency and Nyquist frequency, respectively

    Low-Power Slew-Rate Boosting Based 12-Bit Pipeline ADC Utilizing Forecasting Technique in the Sub-ADCS

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    The dissertation presents architecture and circuit solutions to improve the power efficiency of high-speed 12-bit pipelined ADCs in advanced CMOS technologies. First, the 4.5bit algorithmic pipelined front-end stage is proposed. It is shown that the algorithmic pipelined ADC requires a simpler sub-ADC and shows lower sensitivity to the Multiplying DAC (MDAC) errors and smaller area and power dissipation in comparison to the conventional multi-bit per stage pipelined ADC. Also, it is shown that the algorithmic pipelined architecture is more tolerant to capacitive mismatch for the same input-referred thermal noise than the conventional multi-bit per stage architecture. To take full advantage of these properties, a modified residue curve for the pipelined ADC is proposed. This concept introduces better linearity compared with the conventional residue curve of the pipelined ADC; this approach is particularly attractive for the digitization of signals with large peak to average ratio such as OFDM coded signals. Moreover, the minimum total required transconductance for the different architectures of the 12-bit pipelined ADC are computed. This helps the pipelined ADC designers to find the most power-efficient architecture between different topologies based on the same input-referred thermal noise. By employing this calculation, the most power efficient architecture for realizing the 12-bit pipelined ADC is selected. Then, a technique for slew-rate (SR) boosting in switched-capacitor circuits is proposed in the order to be utilized in the proposed 12-bit pipelined ADC. This technique makes use of a class-B auxiliary amplifier that generates a compensating current only when high slew-rate is demanded by large input signal. The proposed architecture employs simple circuitry to detect the need of injecting current at the output load by implementing a Pre-Amp followed by a class-B amplifier, embedded with a pre-defined hysteresis, in parallel with the main amplifier to boost its slew phase. The proposed solution requires small static power since it does not need high dc-current at the output stage of the main amplifier. The proposed technique is suitable for high-speed low-power multi-bit/stage pipelined ADC applications. Both transistor-level simulations and experimental results in TSMC 40nm technology reduces the slew-time for more than 45% and shorts the 1% settling time by 28% when used in a 4.5bit/stage pipelined ADC; power consumption increases by 20%. In addition, the technique of inactivating and disconnecting of the sub-ADC’s comparators by forecasting the sign of the sampled input voltage is proposed in the order to reduce the dynamic power consumption of the sub-ADCs in the proposed 12-bit pipelined ADC. This technique reduces the total dynamic power consumption more than 46%. The implemented 12-bit pipelined ADC achieves an SNDR/SFDR of 65.9/82.3 dB at low input frequencies and a 64.1/75.5 dB near Nyquist frequency while running at 500 MS/s. The pipelined ADC prototype occupies an active area of 0.9 mm^2 and consumes 18.16 mW from a 1.1 V supply, resulting in a figure of merit (FOM) of 22.4 and a 27.7 fJ/conversion-step at low-frequency and Nyquist frequency, respectively

    Pipeline ADC with a Nonlinear Gain Stage and Digital Correction

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    The goal of this work was to design a pipeline analog to digital converter that can be calibrated and corrected in the digital domain. The scope of this work included the design, simulation and layout of major analog design blocks. The design uses an open loop gain stage to reduce power consumption, increase speed and relax small process size design requirements. These nonlinearities are corrected using a digital correction algorithm implemented in MATLAB
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