71 research outputs found

    Design and Implementation of a Novel Flash ADC for Ultra Wide Band Applications

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    This dissertation presents a design and implementation of a novel flash ADC architecture for ultra wide band applications. The advancement in wireless technology takes us in to a world without wires. Most of the wireless communication systems use digital signal processing to transmit as well as receive the information. The real world signals are analog. Due to the processing complexity of the analog signal, it is converted to digital form so that processing becomes easier. The development in the digital signal processor field is rapid due to the advancement in the integrated circuit technology over the last decade. Therefore, analog-to -digital converter acts as an interface in between analog signal and digital signal processing systems. The continuous speed enhancement of the wireless communication systems brings out huge demands in speed and power specifications of high-speed low-resolution analog-to -digital converters. Even though wired technology is a primary mode of communication, the quality and efficiency of the wireless technology allows us to apply to biomedical applications, in home services and even to radar applications. These applications are highly relying on wireless technology to send and receive information at high speed with great accuracy. Ultra Wideband (UWB) technology is the best method to these applications. A UWB signal has a bandwidth of minimum 500MHz or a fractional bandwidth of 25 percentage of its centre frequency. The two different technology standards that are used in UWB are multiband orthogonal frequency division multiplexing ultra wideband technology (MB-OFDM) and carrier free direct sequence ultra wideband technology (DS-UWB). ADC is the core of any UWB receiver. Generally a high speed flash ADC is used in DS-UWB receiver. Two different flash ADC architectures are proposed in this thesis for DS-UWB applications. The first design is a high speed five bit flash ADC architecture with a sampling rate of 5 GS/s. The design is verified using CADENCE tool with CMOS 90 nm technology. The total power dissipation of the ADC is 8.381 mW from power supply of 1.2 V. The die area of the proposed flash ADC is 186 μm × 210 μm (0.039 mm2). The proposed flash ADC is analysed and compared with other papers in the literature having same resolution and it is concluded that it has the highest speed of operation with medium power dissipation. iii The second design is a reconfigurable five bit flash ADC architecture with a sampling rate of 1.25 GS/s. The design is verified using CADENCE tool with UMC 180 nm technology. The total power dissipation of the ADC is 11.71 mW from power supply of 1.8 V. The die area of the implementation is 432 μm × 720 μm (0.31104 mm2). The chip tape out of the proposed reconfigurable flash ADC is made for fabrication

    Joint implementation of the sharing OTA and bias current regulation techniques in a 11-bit 10 MS/s pipelined ADC

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    The power dissipation of a pipeline analog to digital converter (ADC) depends on different design strategies. In this brief communication, an 11-bit pipeline ADC consisting of five stages with 2.5 effective bit resolution is described. The circuit combines two main techniques to improve power dissipation, such as sharing OTAs between adjacent ADC stages and dynamic regulation of the OTA biasing according to the stage and subcycle of operation. To reduce the charge injection effect caused by the OTA sharing added circuitry, the ADC uses a topology based on four-input OTAs to reduce the number of transmission gates. The ADC has been fabricated using a standard 0.35 µm CMOS process. It consumes 17.85 mW at 10 MSample/s sampling rate. With this resolution and sampling rate, the measurement results show that it achieves 58.20 dB SNDR and 9.38 bit ENOB at 1 MHz input frequency.This work has been partially funded by Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovaci´on (MCI), Agencia Estatal de Investigaci´on (AEI) and European Region Development Fund (ERDF/FEDER) under grant RTI2018-097088-BC3

    Baseband analog front-end and digital back-end for reconfigurable multi-standard terminals

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    Multimedia applications are driving wireless network operators to add high-speed data services such as Edge (E-GPRS), WCDMA (UMTS) and WLAN (IEEE 802.11a,b,g) to the existing GSM network. This creates the need for multi-mode cellular handsets that support a wide range of communication standards, each with a different RF frequency, signal bandwidth, modulation scheme etc. This in turn generates several design challenges for the analog and digital building blocks of the physical layer. In addition to the above-mentioned protocols, mobile devices often include Bluetooth, GPS, FM-radio and TV services that can work concurrently with data and voice communication. Multi-mode, multi-band, and multi-standard mobile terminals must satisfy all these different requirements. Sharing and/or switching transceiver building blocks in these handsets is mandatory in order to extend battery life and/or reduce cost. Only adaptive circuits that are able to reconfigure themselves within the handover time can meet the design requirements of a single receiver or transmitter covering all the different standards while ensuring seamless inter-interoperability. This paper presents analog and digital base-band circuits that are able to support GSM (with Edge), WCDMA (UMTS), WLAN and Bluetooth using reconfigurable building blocks. The blocks can trade off power consumption for performance on the fly, depending on the standard to be supported and the required QoS (Quality of Service) leve

    Modeling and Design of Architectures for High-Speed ADC-Based Serial Links

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    There is an ongoing dramatic rise in the volume of internet traffic. Standards such as 56Gb/s OIF very short reach (VSR), medium reach (MR) and long reach (LR) standards for chip to chip communication over channels with up to 10dB, 20dB and 30dB insertion loss at the PAM 4 Nyquist frequency, respectively, are being adopted. These standards call for the spectrally efficient PAM-4 signaling over NRZ signaling. PAM-4 signaling offers challenges such as a reduced SNR at the receiver, susceptibility to nonlinearities and increased sensitivity to residual ISI. Equalization provided by traditional mixed signal architectures can be insufficient to achieve the target BER requirements for very long reach channels. ADC-based receiver architectures for PAM-4 links take advantage of the more powerful equalization techniques, which lend themselves to easier and robust digital implementations, to extend the amount of insertion loss that the receiver can handle. However, ADC-based receivers can consume more power compared to mixed-signal implementations. Techniques that model the receiver performance to understand the various system trade-offs are necessary. This research presents a fast and accurate hybrid modeling framework to efficiently investigate system trade-offs for an ADC-based receiver. The key contribution being the addition of ADC related non-idealities such as quantization noise in the presence of integral and differential nonlinearities, and time-interleaving mismatch errors such as gain mismatch, bandwidth mismatch, offset mismatch and sampling skew. The research also presents a 52Gb/s ADC-based PAM-4 receiver prototype employing a 32-way time-interleaved, 2-bit/stage, 6-bit SAR ADC and a DSP with a 12-tap FFE and a 2-tap DFE. A new DFE architecture that reduces the complexity of a PAM-4 DFE to that of an NRZ DFE while simultaneously nearly doubling the maximum achievable data rate is presented. The receiver architecture also includes an analog front-end (AFE) consisting of a programmable two stage CTLE. A digital baud-rate CDR’s utilizing a Mueller-Muller phase detector sets the sampling phase. Measurement results show that for 32Gb/s operation a BER < 10⁻⁹ is achieved for a 30dB loss channel while for 52 Gb/s operation achieves a BER < 10⁻⁶ for a 31dB loss channel with a power efficiency of 8.06pj/bit

    Digital Background Self-Calibration Technique for Compensating Transition Offsets in Reference-less Flash ADCs

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    This Dissertation focusses on proving that background calibration using adaptive algorithms are low-cost, stable and effective methods for obtaining high accuracy in flash A/D converters. An integrated reference-less 3-bit flash ADC circuit has been successfully designed and taped out in UMC 180 nm CMOS technology in order to prove the efficiency of our proposed background calibration. References for ADC transitions have been virtually implemented built-in in the comparators dynamic-latch topology by a controlled mismatch added to each comparator input front-end. An external very simple DAC block (calibration bank) allows control the quantity of mismatch added in each comparator front-end and, therefore, compensate the offset of its effective transition with respect to the nominal value. In order to assist to the estimation of the offset of the prototype comparators, an auxiliary A/D converter with higher resolution and lower conversion speed than the flash ADC is used: a 6-bit capacitive-DAC SAR type. Special care in synchronization of analogue sampling instant in both ADCs has been taken into account. In this thesis, a criterion to identify the optimum parameters of the flash ADC design with adaptive background calibration has been set. With this criterion, the best choice for dynamic latch architecture, calibration bank resolution and flash ADC resolution are selected. The performance of the calibration algorithm have been tested, providing great programmability to the digital processor that implements the algorithm, allowing to choose the algorithm limits, accuracy and quantization errors in the arithmetic. Further, systematic controlled offset can be forced in the comparators of the flash ADC in order to have a more exhaustive test of calibration

    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

    Sub-Picosecond Jitter Clock Generation for Time Interleaved Analog to Digital Converter

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    Nowadays, Multi-GHz analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are becoming more and more popular in radar systems, software-defined radio (SDR) and wideband communications, because they can realize much higher operation speed through using many interleaved sub-ADCs to relax ADC sampling rates. Although the time interleaved ADC has some issues such as gain mismatch, offset mismatch and timing skew between each ADC channel, these deterministic errors can be solved by previous works such as digital calibration technique. However, time-interleaved ADCs require a precise sample clock to achieve an acceptable effective-numberof-bits (ENOB) which can be degraded by jitter in the sample clock. The clock generation circuits presented in this work achieves sub-picosecond jitter performance in 180nm CMOS which is suitable for time-interleaved ADC. Two different test chips were fabricated in 180nm CMOS to investigate the low jitter design technique. The low jitter delay line in two chips were designed in two different ways, but both of them utilized the low jitter design technique. In first test chip, the measured RMS jitter is 0.1061ps for each delay stage. The second chip uses the proposed low jitter Delay-Locked Loop can work from 80MHz to 120MHz, which means it can provide the time interleaved ADC with 2.4GHz to 3.6GHz low jitter sample clock, the measured delay stage jitter performance in second test chip is 0.1085ps

    An evaluation of low cost fpga-based software defined radios for education and research

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    The purpose of this study is to evaluate a low-cost Software Defined Radio (SDR) platform for educational and research purposes. An evaluation of existing SDR platforms and design techniques was performed, identifying low cost hardware and software suitable for a laboratory environment. The idea behind the project is to provide undergraduate students with a generic hardware platform so that they can perform simple radio communication experiments. This paper compares and evaluates the existing research projects and educational lab experiments done for SDR. Basic AM and FM radios are created and simulated on the hardware. The detailed procedure to create a design and download the design onto the hardware has been documented, and tutorials are created for step-by-step procedures to perform the experiments. With their ease of use and low cost, Spartan3E FPGA board and Simulink are the best choices for conducting low frequency radio communication experiments

    Programming of Floating-Gate Transistors for Nonvolatile Analog Memory Array

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    Since they were introduced, floating-gate (FG) transistors have been used as non-volatile digital memory. Recent research has shown that floating-gate transistors can be successfully used as analog memory, specifically as programmable voltage and current sources. However, their proliferation has been limited due to the complex programming procedure and the complex testing equipment. Analog applications such as field-programmable analog arrays (FPAAs) require hundreds to thousands of floating-gate transistors on a single chip which makes the programming process even more complicated and very challenging. Therefore, a simplified, compact, and low-power scheme to program FGs are necessary. This work presents an improved version of the typical methodology for FG programming. Additionally, a novel programming methodology that utilizes negative voltages is presented here. This method simplifies the programming process by eliminating the use of supplementary and complicated infrastructure circuits, which makes the FG transistor a good candidate for low-power wireless sensor nodes and portable systems

    DESIGN OF LOW-POWER LOW-VOLTAGE SUCCESSIVE-APPROXIMATION ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTERS

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