52 research outputs found

    Technology aware circuit design for smart sensors on plastic foils

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    Advances in Solid State Circuit Technologies

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    This book brings together contributions from experts in the fields to describe the current status of important topics in solid-state circuit technologies. It consists of 20 chapters which are grouped under the following categories: general information, circuits and devices, materials, and characterization techniques. These chapters have been written by renowned experts in the respective fields making this book valuable to the integrated circuits and materials science communities. It is intended for a diverse readership including electrical engineers and material scientists in the industry and academic institutions. Readers will be able to familiarize themselves with the latest technologies in the various fields

    Low Power CMOS Interface Circuitry for Sensors and Actuators

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    Available Techniques for Magnetic Hard Disk Drive Read Channel Equalization

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    This paper presents an extensive, non-exhaustive, study of available hard disk drive read channel equalization techniques used in the storage and readback of magnetically stored information. The physical elements and basic principles of the storage processes are introduced together with the basic theoretical definitions and models. Both read and write processes in magnetic storage are explained along with the definition of simple key concepts such as user bit density, intersymbol interference, linear and areal density, read head pulse response models, and coding algorithm

    Design and debugging of multi-step analog to digital converters

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    With the fast advancement of CMOS fabrication technology, more and more signal-processing functions are implemented in the digital domain for a lower cost, lower power consumption, higher yield, and higher re-configurability. The trend of increasing integration level for integrated circuits has forced the A/D converter interface to reside on the same silicon in complex mixed-signal ICs containing mostly digital blocks for DSP and control. However, specifications of the converters in various applications emphasize high dynamic range and low spurious spectral performance. It is nontrivial to achieve this level of linearity in a monolithic environment where post-fabrication component trimming or calibration is cumbersome to implement for certain applications or/and for cost and manufacturability reasons. Additionally, as CMOS integrated circuits are accomplishing unprecedented integration levels, potential problems associated with device scaling – the short-channel effects – are also looming large as technology strides into the deep-submicron regime. The A/D conversion process involves sampling the applied analog input signal and quantizing it to its digital representation by comparing it to reference voltages before further signal processing in subsequent digital systems. Depending on how these functions are combined, different A/D converter architectures can be implemented with different requirements on each function. Practical realizations show the trend that to a first order, converter power is directly proportional to sampling rate. However, power dissipation required becomes nonlinear as the speed capabilities of a process technology are pushed to the limit. Pipeline and two-step/multi-step converters tend to be the most efficient at achieving a given resolution and sampling rate specification. This thesis is in a sense unique work as it covers the whole spectrum of design, test, debugging and calibration of multi-step A/D converters; it incorporates development of circuit techniques and algorithms to enhance the resolution and attainable sample rate of an A/D converter and to enhance testing and debugging potential to detect errors dynamically, to isolate and confine faults, and to recover and compensate for the errors continuously. The power proficiency for high resolution of multi-step converter by combining parallelism and calibration and exploiting low-voltage circuit techniques is demonstrated with a 1.8 V, 12-bit, 80 MS/s, 100 mW analog to-digital converter fabricated in five-metal layers 0.18-µm CMOS process. Lower power supply voltages significantly reduce noise margins and increase variations in process, device and design parameters. Consequently, it is steadily more difficult to control the fabrication process precisely enough to maintain uniformity. Microscopic particles present in the manufacturing environment and slight variations in the parameters of manufacturing steps can all lead to the geometrical and electrical properties of an IC to deviate from those generated at the end of the design process. Those defects can cause various types of malfunctioning, depending on the IC topology and the nature of the defect. To relive the burden placed on IC design and manufacturing originated with ever-increasing costs associated with testing and debugging of complex mixed-signal electronic systems, several circuit techniques and algorithms are developed and incorporated in proposed ATPG, DfT and BIST methodologies. Process variation cannot be solved by improving manufacturing tolerances; variability must be reduced by new device technology or managed by design in order for scaling to continue. Similarly, within-die performance variation also imposes new challenges for test methods. With the use of dedicated sensors, which exploit knowledge of the circuit structure and the specific defect mechanisms, the method described in this thesis facilitates early and fast identification of excessive process parameter variation effects. The expectation-maximization algorithm makes the estimation problem more tractable and also yields good estimates of the parameters for small sample sizes. To allow the test guidance with the information obtained through monitoring process variations implemented adjusted support vector machine classifier simultaneously minimize the empirical classification error and maximize the geometric margin. On a positive note, the use of digital enhancing calibration techniques reduces the need for expensive technologies with special fabrication steps. Indeed, the extra cost of digital processing is normally affordable as the use of submicron mixed signal technologies allows for efficient usage of silicon area even for relatively complex algorithms. Employed adaptive filtering algorithm for error estimation offers the small number of operations per iteration and does not require correlation function calculation nor matrix inversions. The presented foreground calibration algorithm does not need any dedicated test signal and does not require a part of the conversion time. It works continuously and with every signal applied to the A/D converter. The feasibility of the method for on-line and off-line debugging and calibration has been verified by experimental measurements from the silicon prototype fabricated in standard single poly, six metal 0.09-µm CMOS process

    Design of event-driven automatic gain control and high-speed data path for multichannel optical receiver arrays

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    The internet has become the ubiquitous tool that has transformed the lives of all of us. New broadband applications in the field of entertainment, commerce, industry, healthcare and social interactions demand increasingly higher data rates and quality of the networks and ICT infrastructure. In addition, high definition video streaming and cloud services will continue to push the demand for bandwidth. These applications are reshaping the internet into a content-centric network. The challenge is to transform the telecom optical networks and data centers such that they can be scaled efficiently, at low cost. Furthermore, from both an environmental and economic perspective, this scaling should go hand in hand with reduced power consumption. This stems from the desire to reduce CO2 emission and to reduce network operating costs while offering the same service level as today. In the current architecture of the internet, end-users connect to the public network using the access network of an internet service provider (ISP). Today, this access network either reuses the legacy copper or coaxial network or uses passive optical network (PON) technologies, among which the PON is the most energy efficient and provides the highest data rates. Traffic from the access network is aggregated with Ethernet switches and routed to the core network through the provider edge routers, with broadband network gateways (BNGs) to regulate access and usage. These regional links are collectively called the metro network. Data centers connect to the core network using their own dedicated gateway router. The problem of increasing data rates, while reducing the economic and environmental impact, has attracted considerable attention. The research described in this work has been performed in the context of two projects part of the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7), which both aim for higher data rates and tight integration while keeping power consumption low. Mirage targets data center applications while C3PO focuses on medium-reach networks, such as the metro network. Specifically, this research considers two aspects of the high-speed optical receivers used in the communication networks: increasing dynamic range of a linear receiver for multilevel modulation through automatic gain control (AGC) and integration of multiple channels on a single chip with a small area footprint. The data centers of today are high-density computing facilities that provide storage, processing and software as a service to the end-user. They are comprised of gateway routers, a local area network, servers and storage. All of this is organized in racks. The largest units contain over 100 000 servers. The major challenges regarding data centers are scalability and keeping up with increasing amounts of traffic while reducing power consumption (of the devices as well as the associated cooling) and keeping cost minimal. Presently, racks are primarily interconnected with active optical cables (AOCs) which employ signal rates up to 25 Gb/s per lane with non-return-to-zero (NRZ) modulation. A number of technological developments can be employed in AOCs of the future to provide terabit-capacity optical interconnects over longer distances. One such innovation is the use of multilevel modulation formats, which are more bandwidth-efficient than traditional NRZ modulation. Multilevel modulation requires a linear amplifier as front-end of the optical receiver. The greater part of this dissertation discusses the design and implementation of an AGC system for the data path of a linear transimpedance amplifier (TIA). The metro network is the intermediate regional network between the access and core network of the internet architecture, with link lengths up to 500 km. It is estimated that in the near future metro-traffic will increase massively. This growth is attributed mainly to increasing traffic from content delivery networks (CDNs) and data centers, which bypass the core network and directly connect to the metro network. Internet video growth is the major reason for traffic increase. This evolution demands increasingly higher data rates. Today, dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) is widely recognized as being necessary to provide data capacity scalability for future optical networks, as it allows for much higher combined data rates over a single fiber. At the receiver, each wavelength of the demultiplexed incoming light is coupled to a photo diode in a photo diode array which is connected to a dedicated lane of a multichannel receiver. The high number of channels requires small physical channel spacing and tight integration of the diode array with the receiver. In addition, active cooling should be avoided, such that power consumption per receiver lane must be kept low in order not to exceed thermal operation limits. The second component of this work presents the development of an integrated four-channel receiver, targeting 4 × 25 Gb/s data rate, with low power consumption and small footprint to support tight integration with a p-i-n photo diode array with a 250 μm channel pitch. Chapter 1 discusses the impact of increasing data rates and the desire to reduce power consumption on the design of the optical receiver component, in wide metropolitan area networks as well as in short-reach point-to-point links in data centers. In addition, some aspects of integrated analog circuit design are highlighted: the design flow, transistor hand models, a software design tool. Also, an overview of the process technology is given. Chapter 2 provides essential optical receiver concepts, which are required to understand the remainder of the work. Fundamentals of feedback AGC systems are discussed in the first part of Chapter 3. A basic system model is presented in the continuous-time domain, in which the variable gain amplifier (VGA) constitutes the multistage datapath of a linear optical receiver. To enable reliable reception of multilevel modulation formats, the VGA requires controlled frequency response and in particular limited time-domain overshoot across the gain range. It is argued that this control is hard to achieve with fully analog building blocks. Therefore, an event-driven approach is proposed as an extension of the continuous-time system. Both the structural and behavioral aspects are discussed. The result is a system model of a quantized AGC loop, upon which the system-level design, presented in Chapter 4, is based. In turn, Chapter 5 discusses the detailed implementation of the various building blocks on the circuit level and presents experimental results that confirm the feasibility of the proposed approach. Chapter 6 discusses the design and implementation of a 4 × 25 Gb/s optical receiver array for NRZ modulation with a small area footprint. The focus lies on the input stages and techniques to extend bandwidth and dynamic range are presented. Measurement results for NRZ and optical duobinary (ODB) modulation are presented, as well as the influence of crosstalk on the performance. Finally, Chapter 7 provides an overview of the foremost conclusions of the presented research and includes suggestions for future research. Two appendices are included. Appendix A gives an overview of the general network theorem (GNT), which is used throughout this work and which has been implemented numerically. The results from Appendix B, the analysis of a two-stage opamp compensated with capacitance multipliers, were used to design a building block for the AGC system

    Analogue filter networks: developments in theory, design and analyses

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    Realization of Integrable Low- Voltage Companding Filters for Portable System Applications

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    Undoubtedly, today’s integrated electronic systems owe their remarkable performance primarily to the rapid advancements of digital technology since 1970s. The various important advantages of digital circuits are: its abstraction from the physical details of the actual circuit implementation, its comparative insensitiveness to variations in the manufacturing process, and the operating conditions besides allowing functional complexity that would not be possible using analog technology. As a result, digital circuits usually offer a more robust behaviour than their analog counterparts, though often with area, power and speed drawbacks. Due to these and other benefits, analog functionality has increasingly been replaced by digital implementations. In spite of the advantages discussed above, analog components are far from obsolete and continue to be key components of modern electronic systems. There is a definite trend toward persistent and ubiquitous use of analog electronic circuits in day-to-day life. Portable electronic gadgets, wireless communications and the widespread application of RF tags are just a few examples of contemporary developments. While all of these electronic systems are based on digital circuitry, they heavily rely on analog components as interfaces to the real world. In fact, many modern designs combine powerful digital systems and complementary analog components on a single chip for cost and reliability reasons. Unfortunately, the design of such systems-on-chip (SOC) suffers from the vastly different design styles of analog and digital components. While mature synthesis tools are readily available for digital designs, there is hardly any such support for analog designers apart from wellestablished PSPICE-like circuit simulators. Consequently, though the analog part usually occupies only a small fraction of the entire die area of an SOC, but its design often constitutes a major bottleneck within the entire development process. Integrated continuous-time active filters are the class of continuous-time or analog circuits which are used in various applications like channel selection in radios, anti-aliasing before sampling, and hearing aids etc. One of the figures of merit of a filter is the dynamic range; this is the ratio of the largest to the smallest signal that can be applied at the input of the filter while maintaining certain specified performance. The dynamic range required in the filter varies with the application and is decided by the variation in strength of the desired signal as well as that of unwanted signals that are to be rejected by the filter. It is well known that the power dissipation and the capacitor area of an integrated active filter increases in proportion to its dynamic range. This situation is incompatible with the needs of integrated systems, especially battery operated ones. In addition to this fundamental dependence of power dissipation on dynamic range, the design of integrated active filters is further complicated by the reduction of supply voltage of integrated circuits imposed by the scaling down of technologies to attain twin objective of higher speed and lower power consumption in digital circuits. The reduction in power consumption with decreasing supply voltage does not apply to analog circuits. In fact, considerable innovation is required with a reduced supply voltage even to avoid increasing power consumption for a given signal to noise ratio (S/N). These aspects pose a great hurdle to the active filter designer. A technique which has attracted the attention of circuit designers as a possible route to filters with higher dynamic range per unit power consumption is “companding”. Companding (compression-expansion) filters are a very promising subclass of continuous-time analog filters, where the input (linear) signal is initially compressed before it will be handled by the core (non-linear) system. In order to preserve the linear operation of the whole system, the non-linear signal produced by the core system is converted back to a linear output signal by employing an appropriate output stage. The required compression and expansion operations are performed by employing bipolar transistors in active region or MOS transistors in weak inversion; the systems thus derived are known as logarithmic-domain (logdomain) systems. In case MOS transistors operated in saturation region are employed, the derived structures are known as Square-root domain systems. Finally, the third class of companding filters can also be obtained by employing bipolar transistors in active region or MOS transistors in weak inversion; the derived systems are known as Sinh-domain systems. During the last several years, a significant research effort has been already carried out in the area of companding circuits. This is due to the fact that their main advantages are the capability for operation in low-voltage environment and large dynamic range originated from their companding nature, electronic tunability of the frequency characteristics, absence of resistors and the potential for operations in varied frequency regions.Thus, it is obvious that companding filters can be employed for implementing high-performance analog signal processing in diverse frequency ranges. For example, companding filters could be used for realizing subsystems in: xDSL modems, disk drive read channels, biomedical electronics, Bluetooth/ZigBee applications, phaselocked loops, FM stereo demodulator, touch-tone telephone tone decoder and crossover network used in a three-way high-fidelity loudspeaker etc. A number of design methods for companding filters and their building blocks have been introduced in the literature. Most of the proposed filter structures operate either above 1.5V or under symmetrical (1.5V) power supplies. According to data that provides information about the near future of semiconductor technology, International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS), in 2013, the supply voltage of digital circuits in 32 nm technology will be 0.5 V. Therefore, the trend for the implementation of analog integrated circuits is the usage of low-voltage building blocks that use a single 0.5-1.5V power supply. Therefore, the present investigation was primarily concerned with the study and design of low voltage and low power Companding filters. The work includes the study about: the building blocks required in implementing low voltage and low power Companding filters; the techniques used to realize low voltage and low power Companding filters and their various areas of application. Various novel low voltage and low power Companding filter designs have been developed and studied for their characteristics to be applied in a particular portable area of application. The developed designs include the N-th order universal Companding filter designs, which have been reported first time in the open literature. Further, an endeavor has been made to design Companding filters with orthogonal tuning of performance parameters so that the designs can be simultaneously used for various features. The salient features of each of the developed circuit are described. Electronic tunability is one of the major features of all of the designs. Use of grounded capacitors and resistorless designs in all the cases makes the designs suitable for IC technology. All the designs operate in a low-voltage and low-power environment essential for portable system applications. Unless specified otherwise, all the investigations on these designs are based on the PSPICE simulations using model parameters of the NR100N bipolar transistors and BSIM 0.35μm/TSMC 0.25μm /TSMC 0.18μm CMOS process MOS transistors. The performance of each circuit has been validated by comparing the characteristics obtained using simulation with the results present in the open literature. The proposed designs could not be realized in silicon due to non-availability of foundry facility at the place of study. An effort has already been started to realize some of the designs in silicon and check their applicability in practical circuits. At the basic level, one of the proposed Companding filter designs was implemented using the commercially available transistor array ICs (LM3046N) and was found to verify the theoretical predictions obtained from the simulation results

    High-frequency oscillator design for integrated transceivers

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    Bandpass electromechanical sigma-delta modulator

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