7 research outputs found
Design of Low-Voltage Digital Building Blocks and ADCs for Energy-Efficient Systems
Increasing number of energy-limited applications continue to drive the demand for designing systems with high energy efficiency. This tutorial covers the main building blocks of a system implementation including digital logic, embedded memories, and analog-to-digital converters and describes the challenges and solutions to designing these blocks for low-voltage operation
Time interleaved counter analog to digital converters
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
DESIGN OF LOW-POWER LOW-VOLTAGE SUCCESSIVE-APPROXIMATION ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTERS
Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH
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Designs and calibration of delay-line based ADCs
Delay line ADCs become more and more attractive with technology scaling to smaller dimensions with lower voltages. Time domain resolution can be increased by high speed delay cells. A GHz sampling rate can be easily achieved with low power. However, linearity, which has always been an issue, becomes a problem with longer delay lines. Resolutions of reported delay-line ADCs are hardly more than 4 bits with sampling rates of hundreds of MHz. Thus, this dissertation addresses the linearity issue of delay line ADCs.
First, a novel 11-bit hybrid ADC using flash and delay line architectures, where a 4-bit flash ADC is followed by a 7-bit delay-line ADC, is proposed. In this structure, the noise/error of the second stage delay-line ADC is attenuated at the hybrid ADC output, such that the overall performance would not be limited by the poor linearity of the delay-line ADC. The achieved figure of merit (FOM) of 33.8 fJ/conversion-step is competitive with state-of-the-art ADCs. Furthermore, the proposed ADC inherits accuracy and high speed from the flash ADC and the delay-line ADC, respectively. The inherited advantages strongly support the scalability of the proposed ADC to provide a better performance with low power in further scaled fabrication processes.
Second, in order to remove the harmonic distortion of delay-line ADC, we present a technique which extends harmonic distortion correction (HDC) to digitally calibrate a delay-line ADC. In our simulation
results, digital calibration improves SNDR from 25.6 dB to 42.5 dB by averaging sample points, which corresponds to a 0.86 second calibration time.
Last, a multiple-pass delay line ADC is proposed to improve overall ADC performance in terms of speed and resolution. In this structure, a multiple-pass delay cell can be early triggered by the previous cell to increase speed. Also, phase interpolation is used to improve the effective number of bits. The design is designed and simulated in a commercial 40nm process technology. With 500MHz sampling rate, the multiple-pass delay line ADC achieves an SNDR of 37 dB and consumes 4.2 mW, which is competitive with other reported ADCs.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
An all-digital transmitter for pulsed ultra-wideband communication
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (p. 91-96).Applications like sensor networks, medical monitoring, and asset tracking have led to a demand for energy-efficient and low-cost wireless transceivers. These types of applications typically require low effective data rates, thus providing an opportunity to employ simple modulation schemes and aggressive duty-cycling. Due to their inherently duty-cycled nature, pulse-based Ultra-Wideband (UWB) systems are amenable to low-power operation by shutting off circuitry during idle mode between pulses. Furthermore, the use of non-coherent UWB signaling greatly simplifies both transmitter and receiver implementations, offering additional energy savings. This thesis presents an all-digital transmitter designed for a non-coherent pulsed UWB system. By exploiting relaxed center frequency tolerances in non-coherent wideband communication, the transmitter synthesizes UWB pulses from an energy efficient, single-ended digital ring oscillator. Dual capacitively-coupled digital power amplifiers (PAs) are used in tandem to generate bipolar phase modulated pulses for spectral scrambling purposes. By maintaining opposite common modes at the output of these PAs during idle mode (i.e. when no pulses are being transmitted), low frequency turn-on and turn-off transients typically associated with single-ended digital circuits driving single-ended antennas are attenuated by up to 12dB. Furthermore, four level digital pulse shaping is employed to attenuate RF side lobes by up to 20dB. The resulting dual power amplifiers achieve FCC compliant operation in the 3.5, 4.0, and 4.5GHz IEEE 802.15.4a bands without the use of any off-chip filters or large passive components. The transmitter is fabricated in a 90nm CMOS process and requires a core area of 0.07mm2. The entirely digital architecture consumes zero static bias current, resulting in an energy efficiency of 17.5pJ/pulse at data rates up to 15.6Mbps.by Patrick Philip Mercier.S.M
Digital ADCs and ultra-wideband RF circuits for energy constrained wireless applications by Denis Clarke Daly.
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 173-183).Ongoing advances in semiconductor technology have enabled a multitude of portable, low power devices like cellular phones and wireless sensors. Most recently, as transistor device geometries reach the nanometer scale, transistor characteristics have changed so dramatically that many traditional circuits and architectures are no longer optimal and/or feasible. As a solution, much research has focused on developing 'highly digital' circuits and architectures that are tolerant of the increased leakage, variation and degraded voltage headrooms associated with advanced CMOS processes. This thesis presents several highly digital, mixed-signal circuits and architectures designed for energy constrained wireless applications. First, as a case study, a highly digital, voltage scalable flash ADC is presented. The flash ADC, implemented in 0.18 [mu]m CMOS, leverages redundancy and calibration to achieve robust operation at supply voltages from 0.2 V to 0.9 V. Next, the thesis expands in scope to describe a pulsed, noncoherent ultra-wideband transceiver chipset, implemented in 90 nm CMOS and operating in the 3-to-5 GHz band. The all-digital transmitter employs capacitive combining and pulse shaping in the power amplifier to meet the FCC spectral mask without any off-chip filters. The noncoherent receiver system-on-chip achieves both energy efficiency and high performance by employing simple amplifier and ADC structures combined with extensive digital calibration. Finally, the transceiver chipset is integrated in a complete system for wireless insect flight control.(cont.) Through the use of a flexible PCB and 3D die stacking, the total weight of the electronics is kept to 1 g, within the carrying capacity of an adult Manduca sexta moth. Preliminary wireless flight control of a moth in a wind tunnel is demonstrated.Ph.D