62 research outputs found
A re-configurable pipeline ADC architecture with built-in self-test techniques
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
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Accuracy enhancement techniques in low-voltage high-speed pipelined ADC design
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
Design of a low power switched-capacitor pipeline analog-to-digital converter
An Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) is a circuit which converts an analog signal into digital signal. Real world is analog, and the data processed by the computer or by other signal processing systems is digital. Therefore, the need for ADCs is obvious.
In this thesis, several novel designs used to improve ADCs operation speed and reduce ADC power consumption are proposed. First, a high speed switched source follower (SSF) sample and hold amplifier without feedthrough penalty is implemented and simulated. The SSF sample and hold amplifier can achieve 6 Bit resolution with sampling rate at 10Gs/s.
Second, a novel rail-to-rail time domain comparator used in successive approximation register ADC (SAR ADC) is implemented and simulated. The simulation results show that the proposed SAR ADC can only consume 1.3 muW with a 0.7 V power supply.
Finally, a prototype pipeline ADC is implemented and fabricated in an IBM 90nm CMOS process. The proposed design is validated using measurement on a fabricated silicon IC, and the proposed 10-bit ADC achieves a peak signal-to-noise- and-distortion-ratio (SNDR) of 47 dB. This SNDR translates to a figure of merit (FOM) of 2.6N/conversion-step with a 1.2 V power supply
Design techniques and implementations of high-speed analog communication circuits: two analog-to-digital converters and a 3.125Gb/s receiver
Low-cost and high performance analog building blocks are essentials to the realization of today\u27s high-speed networking and communications systems. Two such building blocks are analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) and multi-gigabit per second transceivers. This thesis addresses two different ADC architectures and a 3.125Gb/s receiver Architecture;The first ADC architecture is a 10-bit, 100MS/s pipeline ADC. Techniques that enhance the gain-bandwidth of the operational amplifier, a key building block in analog-to-digital converters, as well as to increase its do gain are presented. Layout techniques to reduce the effect of parasitics on the performance of the ADC are also discussed. Since any ADC will have inherent errors in it, two calibration techniques that reduce the effect of these errors on the performance of the ADC are also presented.;For the second ADC, a new architecture is proposed that is capable of achieving higher performance than many current ADC architectures. The new architecture is based on a voltage controlled oscillator and a frequency detector. One reason for the high performance of the new ADC is the novel architecture of the frequency detector. This thesis includes detailed analysis as well as examples to illustrate the operation of the frequency detector.;Designing high-speed CMOS transceivers is a challenging process, especially, when using digital CMOS process that exhibits poor analog performance. Circuit implementation and design techniques that are used to design and enhance the performance of the receiver block of a 3.125Gb/s transceiver in a 0.18u digital CMOS process are presented and fully explained in this thesis. Silicon results have shown that these techniques have resulted in outstanding and very robust receiver performance under different operating conditions
Deterministic dynamic element matching: an enabling technology for SoC built-in-self-test
The analog-to-digital converter (ADC) is a key building block of today\u27s high-volume systems-on-a-chip (SoCs). Built-in-self-test (BIST) is the most promising solution to testing deeply-embedded ADCs. Cost-effective stimulus source with on-chip integrability has been viewed as the bottleneck of ADC BIST, and consequentially the bottleneck of SoC BIST and BIST-based self-calibration. The deterministic dynamic element matching (DDEM) technique has been proposed as a solution to this problem;In this work, rigorous theoretical analysis is presented to show the performance of a DDEM digital-to-analog converter (DAC) as an ADC linearity test stimulus source. Guided by the insight obtained this analysis, a systematic approach for cost-effective DDEM DAC design is proposed. Two generations of DDEM DACs have been designed, fabricated, and measured. 12-bit equivalent linearity was achieved from the first DDEM DAC with 8-bit apparent resolution and less than 5-bit raw linearity after systematic error compensation. The achieved 12-bit linearity outperforms any on-chip stimulus source in literature. Based on the first design, a new DDEM DAC with 12-bit apparent resolution, 10-bit raw linearity, and 9-bit DDEM switching was designed with improved design technique. This DAC was fabricated in standard 0.5-pm CMOS technology with a core die area of 2 mm2. Clear ramp signals could be observed on an oscilloscope when the DDEM DAC was clocked at 100 MHz. Laboratory testing results confirmed that the new DDEM DAC achieved at least a 16-bit equivalent linearity; this was limited by the available instrumentation, which has 18-bit linearity. It outperforms any previously reported on-chip stimulus source in terms of ADC BIST performance by 5 bits. The robust performance, low cost, and short design cycle for on-chip implementation make DDEM an enabling technology for SoC BIST and self-calibration;Two new approaches based on DDEM are developed to further boost the die area efficiency, improving the basic DDEM approach. The first is termed segmented DDEM, and the second is dither-incorporated DDEM (DiDDEM). It has been shown through mathematical analysis and simulation that these can maintain the performance of the basic DDEM approach while greatly reducing the implementation cost
Conception pour la testabilité des systèmes biomédicaux implantables
Architecture générale des systèmes implantables -- Principes de stimulation électrique -- Champs d'application des systèmes implantables -- Les particularités des circuits implantables -- Tendance future -- Conception pour la testabilité de la partie numérique des circuits implantables -- "Desigh and realization of an accurate built-in current sensor for Iddq testing and power dissipation measurement -- Conception pour la testabilité de la partie analogique des circuits implantables -- BIST for digital-to-analog and Analogo-to-digital converters -- Efficient and accurate testing of analog-to-digital converters using oscillation test method -- Design for testability of Embedded integrated operational amplifiers -- Vérification des interfaces bioélectroniques des systèmes implantables -- Monitorin the electrode and lead failures in implanted microstimulators and sensors -- Capteurs de température intégrés pour la vérification de l'état thermique des puces dédiées -- Built-in temperature sensors for on-line thermal monitoring of microelectronic structures -- Un protocole de communication fiable pour la programmation et la télémétrie des système implantables -- A reliable communication protoco for externally controlled biomedical implanted devices
A Low-Power, Reconfigurable, Pipelined ADC with Automatic Adaptation for Implantable Bioimpedance Applications
Biomedical monitoring systems that observe various physiological parameters or electrochemical reactions typically cannot expect signals with fixed amplitude or frequency as signal properties can vary greatly even among similar biosignals. Furthermore, advancements in biomedical research have resulted in more elaborate biosignal monitoring schemes which allow the continuous acquisition of important patient information. Conventional ADCs with a fixed resolution and sampling rate are not able to adapt to signals with a wide range of variation. As a result, reconfigurable analog-to-digital converters (ADC) have become increasingly more attractive for implantable biosensor systems. These converters are able to change their operable resolution, sampling rate, or both in order convert changing signals with increased power efficiency.
Traditionally, biomedical sensing applications were limited to low frequencies. Therefore, much of the research on ADCs for biomedical applications focused on minimizing power consumption with smaller bias currents resulting in low sampling rates. However, recently bioimpedance monitoring has become more popular because of its healthcare possibilities. Bioimpedance monitoring involves injecting an AC current into a biosample and measuring the corresponding voltage drop. The frequency of the injected current greatly affects the amplitude and phase of the voltage drop as biological tissue is comprised of resistive and capacitive elements. For this reason, a full spectrum of measurements from 100 Hz to 10-100 MHz is required to gain a full understanding of the impedance. For this type of implantable biomedical application, the typical low power, low sampling rate analog-to-digital converter is insufficient. A different optimization of power and performance must be achieved.
Since SAR ADC power consumption scales heavily with sampling rate, the converters that sample fast enough to be attractive for bioimpedance monitoring do not have a figure-of-merit that is comparable to the slower converters. Therefore, an auto-adapting, reconfigurable pipelined analog-to-digital converter is proposed. The converter can operate with either 8 or 10 bits of resolution and with a sampling rate of 0.1 or 20 MS/s. Additionally, the resolution and sampling rate are automatically determined by the converter itself based on the input signal. This way, power efficiency is increased for input signals of varying frequency and amplitude
DEVELOPMENT OF AN UWB RADAR SYSTEM
An ultra-wideband radar system is built at the University of Tennessee with the goal to develop a ground penetrating radar (GPR). The radar is required to transmit and receive a very narrow pulse signal in the time domain. The bistatic radar transmits a pulse through an ultrawide spiral antenna and receives the pulse by a similar antenna. Direct sampling is used to improve the performance of the impulse radar allowing up to 1.5 GHz of bandwidth to be used for signal processing and target detection with high resolution. Using direct sampling offers a less complex system design than traditional lower sample rate, super-heterodyne systems using continuous wave or step frequency methods while offering faster results than conventional equivalent time sampling techniques that require multiple data sets and significant post-processing. These two points are particularly important for a system that may be used in the field in potentially dangerous environments. Direct sampling radar systems, while still frequency limited, are continually improving their upper frequencies boundaries due to more power efficient, higher sampling rate analog to digital converters (ADCs) which relates directly to better subsurface resolution for potential target detection
Researcher's guide to the NASA Ames Flight Simulator for Advanced Aircraft (FSAA)
Performance, limitations, supporting software, and current checkout and operating procedures are presented for the flight simulator, in terms useful to the researcher who intends to use it. Suggestions to help the researcher prepare the experimental plan are also given. The FSAA's central computer, cockpit, and visual and motion systems are addressed individually but their interaction is considered as well. Data required, available options, user responsibilities, and occupancy procedures are given in a form that facilitates the initial communication required with the NASA operations' group
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