42 research outputs found
A 12GHz 30mW 130nm CMOS Rotary Travelling Wave Voltage Controlled Oscillator
This paper reports a 12GHz Rotary Travelling Wave (RTW) Voltage Controlled Oscillator designed in a 130nm CMOS technology. The phase noise and power consumption
performances were compared with the literature and with telecommunication standards for broadcast satellite applications. The RTW VCO exhibits a -106dBc/Hz@1MHz and a 30mW
power consumption with a sensibility of 400 MHz/V. Finally, requirements are given for a PLL implementation of the RTW VCO and simulated results are presented
Design of 5.1 GHz ultra-low power and wide tuning range hybrid oscillator
The objective of the proposed work is to demonstrate the use of a hybrid approach for the design of a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) which can lead to higher performance. The performance is improved in terms of the tuning range, frequency of oscillation, voltage swing, and power consumption. The proposed hybrid VCO is designed using an active load common source amplifier and current starved inverter that are cascaded alternatively to achieve low power consumption. The proposed VCO achieves a measured phase noise of -74 dBc/Hz and a figure of merit (FOM) of -152.6 dBc/Hz at a 1 MHz offset when running at 5.1 GHz frequency. The hybrid current starved-current starved VCO (CS-CS VCO) consumes a power of 289 µW using a 1.8 V supply and attains a wide tuning range of 96.98%. Hybrid VCO is designed using 0.09 µm complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technology. To justify the robustness, reliability, and scalability of the circuit different corner analysis is performed through 500 runs of Monte-Carlo simulation
In-pixel Voltage-Controlled Ring-Oscillator for Phase Interpolation in ToF Image Sensors
The design and measurements of a CMOS pseudodifferential
voltage-controlled ring-oscillator (VCRO) are
presented. It is aimed to act as time interpolator for arrayable
picosecond time-to-digital convertors (TDC). This design is
incorporated into a 64×64 array of TDCs for time-of-flight (ToF)
measurement. It has been fabricated in a 0.18μm standard
CMOS technology. Small occupation area of 28×29μm2 and low
average power consumption of 1.17mW at 850MHz are
promising figures for this application field. Embedded phase
alignment and instantaneous start-up time are required to
minimize the offset of time interval measurements. The measured
gain of the VCRO is of 477MHz/V with a frequency tuning range
of 53%. Moreover it features a linearity of 99.4% over a wide
range of control frequencies, namely from 400MHz to 850MHz.
The phase noise is of 102dBc/Hz at 2MHz offset frequency from
850MHz.Junta de Andalucía, Consejería de Economía, Innovación, Ciencia y Empleo (CEICE) TIC 2012- 233
Design of Integrated Microwave Frequency Synthesizer-Based Dielectric Sensor Systems
Dielectric sensors have several biomedical and industrial applications where they are used to characterize the permittivity of materials versus frequency. Characterization at RF/microwave frequencies is particularly useful since many chemicals/bio-materials show significant changes in this band. The potential system cost and size reduction possible motivates the development of fully integrated dielectric sensor systems on CMOS with high sensitivity for point-of-care medical diagnosis platforms and for lab-on-chip industrial sensors.
Voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO)-based dielectric sensors embed the sensing capacitor within the excitation VCO to allow for self-sustained measurement of the material under test (MUT)-induced frequency shift with simple and precise readout circuits. Despite their advantages, VCO-based sensors have several design challenges. First, low frequency noise and environmental variations limit their sensitivity. Also, these systems usually place the VCO in a frequency synthesizer to control the sample excitation frequency which reduces the resolution of the read-out circuitry. Finally, conventional VCO-based systems utilizing LC oscillators have limited tuning range, and can only characterize the real part of the permittivity of the MUT. This dissertation proposes several ideas to: 1) improve the sensitivity of the system by filtering the low frequency noise and enhance the resolution of the read-out circuitry, 2) improve the tuning range, and 3) enable complex dielectric characterization in VCO/synthesizer-based dielectric spectroscopy systems.
The first prototype proposes a highly-sensitive CMOS-based sensing system for permittivity detection and mixture characterization of organic chemicals at microwave frequencies. The system determines permittivity by measuring the frequency difference between two VCOs; a sensor oscillator with an operating frequency that shifts with the change in tank capacitance due to exposure to the MUT and a reference oscillator insensitive to the MUT. This relative measurement approach improves sensor accuracy by tracking frequency drifts due to environmental variations. Embedding the sensor and reference VCOs in a fractional-N phase-locked loop (PLL) frequency synthesizer enables material characterization at a precise frequency and provides an efficient material-induced frequency shift read-out mechanism with a low-complexity bang-bang control loop that adjusts a fractional frequency divider. The majority of the PLL-based sensor system, except for an external fractional frequency divider, is implemented with a 90 nm CMOS prototype that consumes 22 mW when characterizing material near 10 GHz. Material-induced frequency shifts are detected at an accuracy level of 15 ppmrms and binary mixture characterization of organic chemicals yield maximum errors in permittivity of <1.5%.
The second prototype proposes a fully-integrated sensing system for wideband complex dielectric detection of MUT. The system utilizes a ring oscillator-based PLL for wide tuning range and precise control of the sensor's excitation frequency. Characterization of both real and imaginary MUT permittivity is achieved by measuring the frequency difference between two VCOs: a sensing oscillator, with a frequency that varies with MUT-induced changes in capacitance and conductance of a delay-cells' sensing capacitor loads, and a MUT-insensitive reference oscillator that is controlled by an amplitude-locked loop (ALL). The fully integrated system is fabricated in 0.18 μm CMOS, and occupies 6.25 mm2 area. When tested with common organic chemicals (ε`r < 30), the system operates between 0.7-6 GHz and achieves 3.7% maximum permittivity error. Characterization is also performed with higher ε`r water-methanol mixtures and phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solutions, with 5.4% maximum permittivity error achieved over a 0.7-4.77 GHz range
Data acquisition techniques based on frequency-encoding applied to capacitive MEMS microphones
Mención Internacional en el título de doctorThis thesis focuses on the development of capacitive sensor readout circuits
and data converters based on frequency-encoding. This research
has been motivated by the needs of consumer electronics industry, which
constantly demands more compact readout circuit for MEMS microphones
and other sensors. Nowadays, data acquisition is mainly based
on encoding signals in voltage or current domains, which is becoming
more challenging in modern deep submicron CMOS technologies.
Frequency-encoding is an emerging signal processing technique based
on encoding signals in the frequency domain. The key advantage of
this approach is that systems can be implemented using mostly-digital
circuitry, which benefits from CMOS technology scaling. Frequencyencoding
can be used to build phase referenced integrators, which can
replace classical integrators (such as switched-capacitor based integrators)
in the implementation of efficient analog-to-digital converters and
sensor interfaces. The core of the phase referenced integrators studied in
this thesis consists of the combination of different oscillator topologies
with counters and highly-digital circuitry.
This work addresses two related problems: the development of capacitive
MEMS sensor readout circuits based on frequency-encoding, and the
design and implementation of compact oscillator-based data converters
for audio applications.
In the first problem, the target is the integration of the MEMS sensor
into an oscillator circuit, making the oscillation frequency dependent on
the sensor capacitance. This way, the sound can be digitized by measuring
the oscillation frequency, using digital circuitry. However, a MEMS
microphone is a complex structure on which several parasitic effects can
influence the operation of the oscillator. This work presents a feasibility
analysis of the integration of a MEMS microphone into different oscillator
topologies. The conclusion of this study is that the parasitics of the
MEMS limit the performance of the microphone, making it inefficient.
In contrast, replacing conventional ADCs with frequency-encoding based
ADCs has proven a very efficient solution, which motivates the next
problem.
In the second problem, the focus is on the development of high-order
oscillator-based Sigma-Delta modulators. Firstly, the equivalence between classical
integrators and phase referenced integrators has been studied, followed
by an overview of state-of-art oscillator-based converters. Then,
a procedure to replace classical integrators by phase referenced integrators
is presented, including a design example of a second-order oscillator based
Sigma-Delta modulator. Subsequently, the main circuit impairments that
limit the performance of this kind of implementations, such as phase
noise, jitter or metastability, are described.
This thesis also presents a methodology to evaluate the impact of
phase noise and distortion in oscillator-based systems. The proposed
method is based on periodic steady-state analysis, which allows the rapid
estimation of the system dynamic range without resorting to transient
simulations. In addition, a novel technique to analyze the impact of
clock jitter in Sigma-Delta modulators is described.
Two integrated circuits have been implemented in 0.13 μm CMOS
technology to demonstrate the feasibility of high-order oscillator-based Sigma-Delta modulators. Both chips have been designed to feature secondorder
noise shaping using only oscillators and digital circuitry. The first
testchip shows a malfunction in the digital circuitry due to the complexity
of the multi-bit counters. The second chip, implemented using
single-bit counters for simplicity, shows second-order noise shaping and
reaches 103 dB-A of dynamic range in the audio bandwidth, occupying
only 0.04 mm2.Esta tesis se centra en el desarrollo de conversores de datos e interfaces
para sensores capacitivos basados en codificación en frecuencia. Esta
investigación está motivada por las necesidades de la industria, que constantemente
demanda reducir el tamaño de este tipo de circuitos. Hoy en
día, la adquisición de datos está basada principalmente en la codificación
de señales en tensión o en corriente. Sin embargo, la implementación
de este tipo de soluciones en tecnologías CMOS nanométricas presenta
varias dificultades.
La codificación de frecuencia es una técnica emergente en el procesado
de señales basada en codificar señales en el dominio de la frecuencia.
La principal ventaja de esta alternativa es que los sistemas pueden implementarse
usando circuitos mayoritariamente digitales, los cuales se
benefician de los avances de la tecnología CMOS. La codificación en
frecuencia puede emplearse para construir integradores referidos a la
fase, que pueden reemplazar a los integradores clásicos (como los basados
en capacidades conmutadas) en la implementación de conversores
analógico-digital e interfaces de sensores. Los integradores referidos a la
fase estudiados en esta tesis consisten en la combinación de diferentes
topologías de osciladores con contadores y circuitos principalmente digitales.
Este trabajo aborda dos cuestiones relacionadas: el desarrollo de circuitos
de lectura para sensores MEMS capacitivos basados en codificación
temporal, y el diseño e implementación de conversores de datos
compactos para aplicaciones de audio basados en osciladores.
En el primer caso, el objetivo es la integración de un sensor MEMS
en un oscilador, haciendo que la frecuencia de oscilación depe capacidad del sensor. De esta forma, el sonido puede ser digitalizado
midiendo la frecuencia de oscilación, lo cual puede realizarse usando circuitos
en su mayor parte digitales. Sin embargo, un micrófono MEMS es
una estructura compleja en la que múltiples efectos parasíticos pueden
alterar el correcto funcionamiento del oscilador. Este trabajo presenta
un análisis de la viabilidad de integrar un micrófono MEMS en diferentes
topologías de oscilador. La conclusión de este estudio es que los parasíticos
del MEMS limitan el rendimiento del micrófono, causando que esta
solución no sea eficiente. En cambio, la implementación de conversores
analógico-digitales basados en codificación en frecuencia ha demostrado
ser una alternativa muy eficiente, lo cual motiva el estudio del siguiente
problema.
La segunda cuestión está centrada en el desarrollo de moduladores Sigma-Delta de alto orden basados en osciladores. En primer lugar se ha estudiado
la equivalencia entre los integradores clásicos y los integradores
referidos a la fase, seguido de una descripción de los conversores basados
en osciladores publicados en los últimos años. A continuación se
presenta un procedimiento para reemplazar integradores clásicos por integradores
referidos a la fase, incluyendo un ejemplo de diseño de un
modulador Sigma-Delta de segundo orden basado en osciladores. Posteriormente
se describen los principales problemas que limitan el rendimiento de este
tipo de sistemas, como el ruido de fase, el jitter o la metaestabilidad.
Esta tesis también presenta un nuevo método para evaluar el impacto
del ruido de fase y de la distorsión en sistemas basados en osciladores. El
método propuesto está basado en simulaciones PSS, las cuales permiten
la rápida estimación del rango dinámico del sistema sin necesidad de
recurrir a simulaciones temporales. Además, este trabajo describe una
nueva técnica para analizar el impacto del jitter de reloj en moduladores Sigma-Delta.
En esta tesis se han implementado dos circuitos integrados en tecnología
CMOS de 0.13 μm, con el fin de demostrar la viabilidad de los
moduladores Sigma-Delta de alto orden basados en osciladores. Ambos chips han
sido diseñados para producir conformación espectral de ruido de segundo
orden, usando únicamente osciladores y circuitos mayoritariamente digitales.
El primer chip ha mostrado un error en el funcionamiento de los
circuitos digitales debido a la complejidad de las estructuras multi-bit
utilizadas. El segundo chip, implementado usando contadores de un solo
bit con el fin de simplificar el sistema, consigue conformación espectral
de ruido de segundo orden y alcanza 103 dB-A de rango dinámico en el
ancho de banda del audio, ocupando solo 0.04 mm2.Programa Oficial de Doctorado en Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y AutomáticaPresidente: Georges G.E. Gielen.- Secretario: José Manuel de la Rosa.- Vocal: Ana Rus
Circuits and Systems for On-Chip RF Chemical Sensors and RF FDD Duplexers
Integrating RF bio-chemical sensors and RF duplexers helps to reduce cost and area in the current applications. Furthermore, new applications can exist based on the large scale integration of these crucial blocks. This dissertation addresses the integration of RF bio-chemical sensors and RF duplexers by proposing these initiatives.
A low power integrated LC-oscillator-based broadband dielectric spectroscopy (BDS) system is presented. The real relative permittivity ε’r is measured as a shift in the oscillator frequency using an on-chip frequency-to-digital converter (FDC). The imaginary relative permittivity ε”r increases the losses of the oscillator tank which mandates a higher dc biasing current to preserve the same oscillation amplitude. An amplitude-locked loop (ALL) is used to fix the amplitude and linearize the relation between the oscillator bias current and ε”r. The proposed BDS system employs a sensing oscillator and a reference oscillator where correlated double sampling (CDS) is used to mitigate the impact of flicker noise, temperature variations and frequency drifts. A prototype is implemented in 0.18 µm CMOS process with total chip area of 6.24 mm^2 to operate in 1-6 GHz range using three dual bands LC oscillators. The achieved standard deviation in the air is 2.1 ppm for frequency reading and 110 ppm for current reading.
A tunable integrated electrical balanced duplexer (EBD) is presented as a compact alternative to multiple bulky SAW and BAW duplexers in 3G/4G cellular transceivers. A balancing network creates a replica of the transmitter signal for cancellation at the input of a single-ended low noise amplifier (LNA) to isolate the receive path from the transmitter. The proposed passive EBD is based on a cross-connected transformer topology without the need of any extra balun at the antenna side. The duplexer achieves around 50 dB TX-RX isolation within 1.6-2.2 GHz range up to 22 dBm. The cascaded noise figure of the duplexer and LNA is 6.5 dB, and TX insertion loss (TXIL) of the duplexer is about 3.2 dB. The duplexer and LNA are implemented in 0.18 µm CMOS process and occupy an active area of 0.35 mm^2
A VCO-based CMOS readout circuit for capacitive MEMS microphones
Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) microphone sensors have significantly improved in the past years, while the readout electronic is mainly implemented using switched-capacitor technology. The development of new battery powered 'always-on” applications increasingly requires a low power consumption. In this paper, we show a new readout circuit approach which is based on a mostly digital Sigma Delta (SigmaDelta) analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The operating principle of the readout circuit consists of coupling the MEMS sensor to an impedance converter that modulates the frequency of a stacked-ring oscillator—a new voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) circuit featuring a good trade-off between phase noise and power consumption. The frequency coded signal is then sampled and converted into a noise-shaped digital sequence by a time-to-digital converter (TDC). A time-efficient design methodology has been used to optimize the sensitivity of the oscillator combined with the phase noise induced by 1/𝑓 and thermal noise. The circuit has been prototyped in a 130 nm CMOS process and directly bonded to a standard MEMS microphone. The proposed VCO-based analog-to-digital converter (VCO-ADC) has been characterized electrically and acoustically. The peak signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SNDR) obtained from measurements is 77.9 dB-A and the dynamic range (DR) is 100 dB-A. The current consumption is 750 muA at 1.8 V and the effective area is 0.12 mm2. This new readout circuit may represent an enabling advance for low-cost digital MEMS microphones.This research was funded by project TEC2017-82653-R of CICYT, Spain
Arrayable Voltage-Controlled Ring-Oscillator for Direct Time-of-Flight Image Sensors
Direct time-of-flight (d-ToF) estimation with high frame rate requires the incorporation of a time-to-digital converter (TDC) at pixel level. A feasible approach to a compact implementation of the TDC is to use the multiple phases of a voltage-controlled ring-oscillator (VCRO) for the finest bits. The VCRO becomes central in determining the performance parameters of a d-ToF image sensor. In this paper, we are covering the modeling, design, and measurement of a CMOS pseudo-differential VCRO. The oscillation frequency, the jitter due to mismatches and noise and the power consumption are analytically evaluated. This design has been incorporated into a 64x64-pixel array. It has been fabricated in a 0.18 mu m standard CMOS technology. Occupation area is 28x29 mu m(2) and power consumption is 1.17 mW at 850 MHz. The measured gain of the VCRO is of 477 MHz/V with a frequency tuning range of 53%. Moreover, it features a linearity of 99.4% over a wide range of control frequencies, namely, from 400 to 850 MHz. The phase noise is of -102 dBc/Hz at 2 MHz offset frequency from 850 MHz. The influence of these parameters in the performance of the TDC has been measured. The minimum time bin of the TDC is 147 ps with a rms DNL/INL of 0.13/1.7LSB.Office of Naval Research (USA) N000141410355Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TEC2015-66878-C3-1-RJunta de Andalucía P12-TIC 233
Recommended from our members
Phase Synthesis Using Coupled Phase-Locked Loops
Phase Synthesis is a fundamental operation in Smart Antennas and other Phased Array systems based on beamforming. There are increasing commercial applications for Integrated Phased Arrays due to their low cost, size and power and also because the RF and digital signal processing can be performed on the same chip. These low cost beamforming applications have augmented interest in Coupled Phase Locked Loop (CPLL) systems for Phase Synthesis.
Previous work on the implementation of Phase Synthesis systems using Coupled PLLs for low cost beamforming had the constraint of a limited phase range of ±90°. The idea behind the thesis is that this phase synthesis range can be increased to ±180° through the use of PLLs employing Phase Frequency Detectors(PFDs), which is a significant improvement over conventional coupled-PLL systems.
This work presents the detailed design and measurement results for a phase synthesizer using Coupled PLLs for achieving phase shift in the range of ±180°. Several Coupled PLL architectures are investigated and their advantages and limitations are evaluated in terms of frequency controllability, phase difference synthesis control and phase noise of the systems. A two-PLL system implementation using off the shelf components is presented, which generates a steady-state phase difference in the range ±180° using an adjustable DC control current. This is the proof of concept for doing an IC design for a Coupled Phase Locked Loop system. Commercial applications in the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) band motivate the design of a CPLL system in the 608-614 MHz band. The design methodology is presented which shows the flowchart of the IC design process from the system design specifications to the transistor level design. MATLAB simulations are presented to model the system performance quickly. VerilogA modeling of the CPLL system is performed followed by the IC design of the system and each block is simulated under different process and temperature corners. The transistor level design is then evaluated for its performance in terms of phase difference synthesis and phase noise and compared with the initial MATLAB analysis and improved iteratively. The CPLL system is implemented in IBM 130nm CMOS process and consumes 40mW of power from a 1.2V supply with a phase noise performance of -88 dBc/Hz for 177° phase generation