8 research outputs found

    High-speed nested cascaded MASH Digital Delta-Sigma Modulator-based divider controller

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    The MASH Digital Delta-Sigma Modulator (DDSM) based divider controller represents a speed bottleneck in state of the art commercial PLL-based fractional-N frequency synthesizers. As next generation systems require higher phase detector frequencies, there is a need to make ever faster divider controllers. This paper describes a fine-grained nested cascaded MASH DDSM which is significantly faster than state of the art divider controllers, thereby eliminating the current speed bottleneck

    Wandering spur suppression in a 4.9-GHz fractional-N frequency synthesizer

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    Fractional-N frequency synthesizers that use a digital Δ-Σ modulator (DDSM) to control the feedback divider can exhibit spurious tones that move about in the frequency domain; these are known colloquially as ``walking'' or wandering spurs. Building upon a theoretical explanation of the origin of wandering spurs, this article presents two methods to suppress them. It describes a 4.9-GHz 180-nm SiGe BiCMOS charge-pump phase-locked loop (CP-PLL) fractional-N frequency synthesizer platform with a divider controller that can function as: 1) a standard MASH 1-1-1; 2) a MASH 1-1-1 with high-amplitude dither; and 3) a MASH 1-1-1 with a modified third stage. Measurements confirm the effectiveness of the wandering spur suppression strategies

    A superconducting bandpass delta-sigma modulator for direct analog-to-digital conversion of microwave radio

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2003.Includes bibliographical references (p. 291-305).This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Direct analog-to-digital conversion of multi-GHz radio frequency (RF) signals is the ultimate goal in software radio receiver design but remains a daunting challenge for any technology. This thesis examines the potential of superconducting technology for realizing RF analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) with improved performance. A bandpass delta-sigma (AE) modulator is an attractive architecture for digitizing narrowband signals with high linearity and a large signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The design of a superconducting bandpass AE modulator presented here exploits several advantages of superconducting electronics: the high quality factor of resonators, the high sampling rates of comparators realized with Josephson junctions, natural quantization of voltage pulses, and high circuit sensitivity. Demonstration of a superconducting circuit operating at clock rates in the tens of GHz is often hindered by the difficulty of high speed interfacing with room-temperature test equipment. In this work, a test chip with integrated acquisition memory is used to simplify high speed testing in a cryogenic environment. The small size (256 bits) of the on-chip memory severely limits the frequency resolution of spectra based on standard fast Fourier transforms. Higher resolution spectra are obtained by "segmented correlation", a new method for testing ADCs. Two different techniques have been found for clocking the superconducting modulator at frequencies in the tens of GHz. In the first approach, an optical clocking technique was developed, in which picosecond laser pulses are delivered via optical fiber to an on-chip metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) photodiode, whose output current pulses trigger the Josephson circuitry. In the second approach, the superconducting modulator is clocked by an on-chip Josephson oscillator.(cont.) These testing methods have been applied in the successful demonstration of a super-conducting bandpass AE modulator fabricated in a niobium integrated circuit process with 1 kA/cm2 critical current density for the Josephson junctions. At a 42.6 GHz sampling rate, the center frequency of the experimental modulator is 2.23 GHz, the measured SNR is 49 dB over a 20.8 MHz bandwidth, and a full-scale (FS) input is -17.4 dBm. At a 40.2 GHz sampling rate, the measured in-band noise is -57 dBFS over a 19.6 MHz bandwidth.by John Francis Bulzacchelli.Ph.D

    Design of a 16-bit 50-kHz low-power SC delta-sigma modulator for ADC in 0.18um CMOS technology

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    This Master Thesis work aims to design a low power high-resolution Delta-Sigma modulator for ADC in a low-cost standard mixed-mode CMOS technology. For this purpose, a single-bit single loop Delta-Sigma architecture will be selected in order to mitigate distortion issues caused by technology mismatching. Also, the switched capacitor (SC) circuit implementation of the Delta-Sigma modulator will avoid the use of any internal voltage supply bootstrapping for biasing critical switches in favor of extending IC lifetime. The designer will take benefit of the low-power Class-AB OpA general purpose 16 Bits Sigma-Delta modulator ADC for double precision audio 50 kHz bandwidth, targeted for Low-power operation, involving no additional digital circuit compensation, no bootstrapping techniques and resistor-less topologies, and relaying on Switched Capacitor Sigma-Delta modulator topologies for robust operation and insensitivity to process and temperature variations, is presented in this work. Designed in a commercial 180 nm technology, the whole circuit static current is calculated in 620 uA with a nominal voltage supply of 1.8 V, performing a Schreier FOM of 174.16 dB. This outstanding state-of-the-art forseen FOM is achieved by the use of architectural and circuital Low-power techniques. At the architectural level a single loop Low-distortion topology with the optimum order and coefficients have been chosen, while at circuit level very novel OTA based on Variable Mirror Amplifiers allows an efficient Class-AB operation. Specially optimized switched variable mirror amplifiers with a novel design methodology based on Bottom-up approach, allows faster design stages ensuring feasable circuit performance at architectural level without the need of large iterative simulations of the complete SC Sigma-Delta modulator. Simulation results confirms the complete optimization process and the metioned advantages with respect to the tradicional approach

    LOW POWER AND HIGH SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO BIO-MEDICAL AFE DESIGN TECHNIQUES

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    The research work described in this thesis was focused on finding novel techniques to implement a low-power and noise Bio-Medical Analog Front End (BMEF) circuit technique to enable high-quality Electrocardiography (ECG) sensing. Usually, an ECG signal and several bio-medical signals are sensed from the human body through a pair of electrodes. The electrical characteristics of the very small amplitude (1u-10mV) signals are corrupted by random noise and have a significant dc offset. 50/60Hz power supply coupling noise is one of the biggest cross-talk signals compared to the thermally generated random noise. These signals are even AFE composed of an Instrumentation Amplifier (IA), which will have a better Common Mode rejection ratio (CMRR). The main function of the AFE is to convert the weak electrical Signal into large signals whose amplitude is large enough for an Analog Digital Converter (ADC) to detect without having any errors. A Variable Gain Amplifier (VGA) is sometimes required to adjust signal amplitude to maintain the dynamic range of the ADC. Also, the Bio-medical transceiver needs an accurate and temperature-independent reference voltage and current for the ADC, commonly known as Bandgap Reference Circuit (BGR). These circuits need to consume as low power as possible to enable these circuits to be powered from the battery. The work started with analysing the existing circuit techniques for the circuits mentioned above and finding the key important improvements required to reach the target specifications. Previously proposed IA is generated based on voltage mode signal processing. To improve the CMRR (119dB), we proposed a current mode-based IA with an embedded DC cancellation technique. State-of-the-art VGA circuits were built based on the degeneration principle of the differential pair, which will enable the variable gain purpose, but none of these techniques discussed linearity improvement, which is very important in modern CMOS technologies. This work enhances the total Harmonic distortion (THD) by 21dB in the worst case by exploiting the feedback techniques around the differential pair. Also, this work proposes a low power curvature compensated bandgap with 2ppm/0C temperature sensitivity while consuming 12.5uW power from a 1.2V dc power supply. All circuits were built in 45nm TSMC-CMOS technology and simulated with all the performance metrics with Cadence (spectre) simulator. The circuit layout was carried out to study post-layout parasitic effect sensitivity

    Time interleaved counter analog to digital converters

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    The work explores extending time interleaving in A/D converters, by applying a high-level of parallelism to one of the slowest and simplest types of data-converters, the counter ADC. The motivation for the work is to realise high-performance re-configurable A/D converters for use in multi-standard and multi-PHY communication receivers with signal bandwidths in the 10s to 100s of MHz. The counter ADC requires only a comparator, a ramp signal, and a digital counter, where the comparator compares the sampled input against all possible quantisation levels sequentially. This work explores arranging counter ADCs in large time-interleaved arrays, building a Time Interleaved Counter (TIC) ADC. The key to realising a TIC ADC is distributed sampling and a global multi-phase ramp generator realised with a novel figure-of-8 rotating resistor ring. Furthermore Counter ADCs allow for re-configurability between effective sampling rate and resolution due to their sequential comparison of reference levels in conversion. A prototype TIC ADC of 128-channels was fabricated and measured in 0.13μm CMOS technology, where the same block can be configured to operate as a 7-bit 1GS/s, 8-bit 500MS/s, or 9-bit 250MS/s dataconverter. The ADC achieves a sub 400fJ/step FOM in all modes of configuration

    Bibliography of Lewis Research Center technical publications announced in 1992

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    This compilation of abstracts describes and indexes the technical reporting that resulted from the scientific and engineering work performed and managed by the Lewis Research Center in 1992. All the publications were announced in the 1992 issues of STAR (Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports) and/or IAA (International Aerospace Abstracts). Included are research reports, journal articles, conference presentations, patents and patent applications, and theses
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