1,079 research outputs found

    Data Conversion Within Energy Constrained Environments

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    Within scientific research, engineering, and consumer electronics, there is a multitude of new discrete sensor-interfaced devices. Maintaining high accuracy in signal quantization while staying within the strict power-budget of these devices is a very challenging problem. Traditional paths to solving this problem include researching more energy-efficient digital topologies as well as digital scaling.;This work offers an alternative path to lower-energy expenditure in the quantization stage --- content-dependent sampling of a signal. Instead of sampling at a constant rate, this work explores techniques which allow sampling based upon features of the signal itself through the use of application-dependent analog processing. This work presents an asynchronous sampling paradigm, based off the use of floating-gate-enabled analog circuitry. The basis of this work is developed through the mathematical models necessary for asynchronous sampling, as well the SPICE-compatible models necessary for simulating floating-gate enabled analog circuitry. These base techniques and circuitry are then extended to systems and applications utilizing novel analog-to-digital converter topologies capable of leveraging the non-constant sampling rates for significant sample and power savings

    Continuous-Time and Companding Digital Signal Processors Using Adaptivity and Asynchronous Techniques

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    The fully synchronous approach has been the norm for digital signal processors (DSPs) for many decades. Due to its simplicity, the classical DSP structure has been used in many applications. However, due to its rigid discrete-time operation, a classical DSP has limited efficiency or inadequate resolution for some emerging applications, such as processing of multimedia and biological signals. This thesis proposes fundamentally new approaches to designing DSPs, which are different from the classical scheme. The defining characteristic of all new DSPs examined in this thesis is the notion of "adaptivity" or "adaptability." Adaptive DSPs dynamically change their behavior to adjust to some property of their input stream, for example the rate of change of the input. This thesis presents both enhancements to existing adaptive DSPs, as well as new adaptive DSPs. The main class of DSPs that are examined throughout the thesis are continuous-time (CT) DSPs. CT DSPs are clock-less and event-driven; they naturally adapt their activity and power consumption to the rate of their inputs. The absence of a clock also provides a complete avoidance of aliasing in the frequency domain, hence improved signal fidelity. The core of this thesis deals with the complete and systematic design of a truly general-purpose CT DSP. A scalable design methodology for CT DSPs is presented. This leads to the main contribution of this thesis, namely a new CT DSP chip. This chip is the first general-purpose CT DSP chip, able to process many different classes of CT and synchronous signals. The chip has the property of handling various types of signals, i.e. various different digital modulations, both synchronous and asynchronous, without requiring any reconfiguration; such property is presented for the first time CT DSPs and is impossible for classical DSPs. As opposed to previous CT DSPs, which were limited to using only one type of digital format, and whose design was hard to scale for different bandwidths and bit-widths, this chip has a formal, robust and scalable design, due to the systematic usage of asynchronous design techniques. The second contribution of this thesis is a complete methodology to design adaptive delay lines. In particular, it is shown how to make the granularity, i.e. the number of stages, adaptive in a real-time delay line. Adaptive granularity brings about a significant improvement in the line's power consumption, up to 70% as reported by simulations on two design examples. This enhancement can have a direct large power impact on any CT DSP, since a delay line consumes the majority of a CT DSP's power. The robust methodology presented in this thesis allows safe dynamic reconfiguration of the line's granularity, on-the-fly and according to the input traffic. As a final contribution, the thesis also examines two additional DSPs: one operating the CT domain and one using the companding technique. The former operates only on level-crossing samples; the proposed methodology shows a potential for high-quality outputs by using a complex interpolation function. Finally, a companding DSP is presented for MPEG audio. Companding DSPs adapt their dynamic range to the amplitude of their input; the resulting can offer high-quality outputs even for small inputs. By applying companding to MPEG DSPs, it is shown how the DSP distortion can be made almost inaudible, without requiring complex arithmetic hardware

    Power efficient, event driven data acquisition and processing using asynchronous techniques

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    PhD ThesisData acquisition systems used in remote environmental monitoring equipment and biological sensor nodes rely on limited energy supply soured from either energy harvesters or battery to perform their functions. Among the building blocks of these systems are power hungry Analogue to Digital Converters and Digital Signal Processors which acquire and process samples at predetermined rates regardless of the monitored signal’s behavior. In this work we investigate power efficient event driven data acquisition and processing techniques by implementing an asynchronous ADC and an event driven power gated Finite Impulse Response (FIR) filter. We present an event driven single slope ADC capable of generating asynchronous digital samples based on the input signal’s rate of change. It utilizes a rate of change detection circuit known as the slope detector to determine at what point the input signal is to be sampled. After a sample has been obtained it’s absolute voltage value is time encoded and passed on to a Time to Digital Converter (TDC) as part of a pulse stream. The resulting digital samples generated by the TDC are produced at a rate that exhibits the same rate of change profile as that of the input signal. The ADC is realized in 0.35mm CMOS process, covers a silicon area of 340mm by 218mm and consumes power based on the input signal’s frequency. The samples from the ADC are asynchronous in nature and exhibit random time periods between adjacent samples. In order to process such asynchronous samples we present a FIR filter that is able to successfully operate on the samples and produce the desired result. The filter also poses the ability to turn itself off in-between samples that have longer sample periods in effect saving power in the process

    Design and Optimization of Low-power Level-crossing ADCs

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    This thesis investigates some of the practical issues related to the implementation of level-crossing ADCs in nanometer CMOS. A level-crossing ADC targeting minimum power is designed and measured. Three techniques to circumvent performance limitations due to the zero-crossing detector at the heart of the ADC are proposed and demonstrated: an adaptive resolution algorithm, an adaptive bias current algorithm, and automatic offset cancelation. The ADC, fabricated in 130 nm CMOS, is designed to operate over a 20 kHz bandwidth while consuming a maximum of 8.5 uW. A peak SNDR of 54 dB for this 8-bit ADC demonstrates a key advantage of level-crossing sampling, namely SNDR higher than the classic Nyquist limit

    Low-Power Reconfigurable Sensing Circuitry for the Internet-of-Things Paradigm

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    With ubiquitous wireless communication via Wi-Fi and nascent 5th Generation mobile communications, more devices -- both smart and traditionally dumb -- will be interconnected than ever before. This burgeoning trend is referred to as the Internet-of-Things. These new sensing opportunities place a larger burden on the underlying circuitry that must operate on finite battery power and/or within energy-constrained environments. New developments of low-power reconfigurable analog sensing platforms like field-programmable analog arrays (FPAAs) present an attractive sensing solution by processing data in the analog domain while staying flexible in design. This work addresses some of the contemporary challenges of low-power wireless sensing via traditional application-specific sensing and with FPAAs. A large emphasis is placed on furthering the development of FPAAs by making them more accessible to designers without a strong integrated-circuit background -- much like FPGAs have done for digital designers

    Floating-Gate Design and Linearization for Reconfigurable Analog Signal Processing

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    Analog and mixed-signal integrated circuits have found a place in modern electronics design as a viable alternative to digital pre-processing. With metrics that boast high accuracy and low power consumption, analog pre-processing has opened the door to low-power state-monitoring systems when it is utilized in place of a power-hungry digital signal-processing stage. However, the complicated design process required by analog and mixed-signal systems has been a barrier to broader applications. The implementation of floating-gate transistors has begun to pave the way for a more reasonable approach to analog design. Floating-gate technology has widespread use in the digital domain. Analog and mixed-signal use of floating-gate transistors has only become a rising field of study in recent years. Analog floating gates allow for low-power implementation of mixed-signal systems, such as the field-programmable analog array, while simultaneously opening the door to complex signal-processing techniques. The field-programmable analog array, which leverages floating-gate technologies, is demonstrated as a reliable replacement to signal-processing tasks previously only solved by custom design. Living in an analog world demands the constant use and refinement of analog signal processing for the purpose of interfacing with digital systems. This work offers a comprehensive look at utilizing floating-gate transistors as the core element for analog signal-processing tasks. This work demonstrates the floating gate\u27s merit in large reconfigurable array-driven systems and in smaller-scale implementations, such as linearization techniques for oscillators and analog-to-digital converters. A study on analog floating-gate reliability is complemented with a temperature compensation scheme for implementing these systems in ever-changing, realistic environments

    A Low-Power, Reconfigurable, Pipelined ADC with Automatic Adaptation for Implantable Bioimpedance Applications

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    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

    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

    Shifting the frontiers of analog and mixed-signal electronics

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    Nowadays, analog and mixed-signal (AMS) IC designs, mainly found in the frontends of large ICs, are highly dedicated, complex, and costly. They form a bottleneck in the communication with the outside world, determine an upper bound in quality, yield, and flexibility for the IC, and require a significant part of the power dissipation. Operating very close to physical limits, serious boundaries are faced. This paper relates, from a high-level point of view, these boundaries to the Shannon channel capacity and shows how the AMS circuitry forms a matching link in transforming the external analog signals, optimized for the communication medium, to the optimal on-chip signal representation, the digital one, for the IC medium. The signals in the AMS part itself are consequently not optimally matched to the IC medium. To further shift the frontiers of AMS design, a matching-driven design approach is crucial for AMS. Four levels will be addressed: technology-driven, states-driven, redundancy-driven, and nature-driven design. This is done based on an analysis of the various classes of AMS signals and their specific properties, seen from the angle of redundancy. This generic, but abstract way of looking at the design process will be substantiated with many specific examples

    An Innovative Digital Controller for VRM Application with Negligible Quantization Effects

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    reserved5Presented in Session PET 13 on Control Method at Power Electronics Technology 2004 Conference, Navy Pier, Chicago, November 16-18, 2004.G. Garcea; S. Saggini; C. Porta; A. Geraci; M. GhioniGarcea, Giovanni; Saggini, Stefano; C., Porta; Geraci, Angelo; Ghioni, MASSIMO ANTONI
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