2,399 research outputs found

    14-bit 2.2-MS/s sigma-delta ADC's

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    Adaptive design of delta sigma modulators

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    In this thesis, a genetic algorithm based on differential evolution (DE) is used to generate delta sigma modulator (DSM) noise transfer functions (NTFs). These NTFs outperform those generated by an iterative approach described by Schreier and implemented in the delsig Matlab toolbox. Several lowpass and bandpass DSMs, as well as DSM\u27s designed specifically for and very low intermediate frequency (VLIF) receivers are designed using the algorithm developed in this thesis and compared to designs made using the delsig toolbox. The NTFs designed using the DE algorithm always have a higher dynamic range and signal to noise ratio than those designed using the delsig toolbox

    A 13-bit, 2.2-MS/s, 55-mW multibit cascade ΣΔ modulator in CMOS 0.7-μm single-poly technology

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    This paper presents a CMOS 0.7-μm ΣΔ modulator IC that achieves 13-bit dynamic range at 2.2 MS/s with an oversampling ratio of 16. It uses fully differential switched-capacitor circuits with a clock frequency of 35.2 MHz, and has a power consumption of 55 mW. Such a low oversampling ratio has been achieved through the combined usage of fourth-order filtering and multibit quantization. To guarantee stable operation for any input signal and/or initial condition, the fourth-order shaping function has been realized using a cascade architecture with three stages; the first stage is a second-order modulator, while the others are first-order modulators - referred to as a 2-1-1mb architecture. The quantizer of the last stage is 3 bits, while the other quantizers are single bit. The modulator architecture and coefficients have been optimized for reduced sensitivity to the errors in the 3-bit quantization process. Specifically, the 3-bit digital-to-analog converter tolerates 2.8% FS nonlinearity without significant degradation of the modulator performance. This makes the use of digital calibration unnecessary, which is a key point for reduced power consumption. We show that, for a given oversampling ratio and in the presence of 0.5% mismatch, the proposed modulator obtains a larger signal-to-noise-plus-distortion ratio than previous multibit cascade architectures. On the other hand, as compared to a 2-1-1single-bit modulator previously designed for a mixed-signal asymmetrical digital subscriber line modem in the same technology, the modulator in this paper obtains one more bit resolution, enhances the operating frequency by a factor of two, and reduces the power consumption by a factor of four.Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología TIC97-0580European Commission ESPRIT 879

    Transistor-Level Synthesis of Pipeline Analog-to-Digital Converters Using a Design-Space Reduction Algorithm

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    A novel transistor-level synthesis procedure for pipeline ADCs is presented. This procedure is able to directly map high-level converter specifications onto transistor sizes and biasing conditions. It is based on the combination of behavioral models for performance evaluation, optimization routines to minimize the power and area consumption of the circuit solution, and an algorithm to efficiently constraint the converter design space. This algorithm precludes the cost of lengthy bottom-up verifications and speeds up the synthesis task. The approach is herein demonstrated via the design of a 0.13 μm CMOS 10 bits@60 MS/s pipeline ADC with energy consumption per conversion of only 0.54 pJ@1 MHz, making it one of the most energy-efficient 10-bit video-rate pipeline ADCs reported to date. The computational cost of this design is of only 25 min of CPU time, and includes the evaluation of 13 different pipeline architectures potentially feasible for the targeted specifications. The optimum design derived from the synthesis procedure has been fine tuned to support PVT variations, laid out together with other auxiliary blocks, and fabricated. The experimental results show a power consumption of 23 [email protected] V and an effective resolution of 9.47-bit@1 MHz. Bearing in mind that no specific power reduction strategy has been applied; the mentioned results confirm the reliability of the proposed approach.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación TEC2009-08447Junta de Andalucía TIC-0281

    Novel loop architectures for enhancing linearity and resolution of analog-to-digital converters

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    This paper proposes three mixed (analog and digital) loop architectures which involve an analog-to-digital converter and enhance its linearity and its resolution. Their benefits are discussed with mathematical models and high-level simulations (the ADC inserted in the loops is then a passive sigma-delta structure). One of the loop topologies is particularly highlighted: it is ideally able to enhance resolution by 5 bits without damaging bandwidth. The only added analog element is an active differential low-pass filter. The other operators are fully digital: a predictor and some models of the analog parts. The effect of some defaults, such as mismatch and common mode, is illustrated by high-level simulations. The needed accuracy for the digital parameters is evaluated to 16 bits. The test of a prototype realized in a 0.358m CMOS technology validates the principle and demonstrates that the critical element of the structure is the active differential filter

    Comparator Design in Sensors for Environmental Monitoring

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    This paper presents circuit design considerations of comparator in analog-to-digital converters (ADC) applied for a portable, low-cost and high performance nano-sensor chip which can be applied to detect the airborne magnetite pollution nano particulate matter (PM) for environmental monitoring. High-resolution ADC plays a vital important role in high perfor-mance nano-sensor, while high-resolution comparator is a key component in ADC. In this work, some important design issues related to comparators in analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are discussed, simulation results show that the resolution of the comparator proposed can achieve 5µV , and it is appropriate for high-resolution application

    A prototype of a new class of oversampling adc

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    Analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog (D/A) converters are important blocks in signal processing system because they provide the link between the analog world and digital systems. Compared with Nyquist-rate data converters, oversampling data converters are more desirable for modern submicron technologies with low voltage supplies. Today, all existing oversampling modulators in popular use are derived from sigma-delta modulation. Stability is the most significant problem in the sigma-delta modulator, because the ultimate accuracy is limited by stability. As the aggressiveness of the design increases, the margin of stability diminishes rapidly. This thesis presents the design and experimental results of the first prototype circuit implementation of the novel oversampling modulation scheme proposed by Dr. Takis Zourntos. This new class of oversampling modulators are theoretically stable. With less stability limitation, the new class of modulators can potentially achieve higher signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) or less power by designing the modulator more aggressively. This thesis describes the methods and procedures of how the new oversampling modulation theory is implemented into a circuit. Some novel circuit architectures are proposed in this modulator, such as a filter which can provide status outputs for the controller and realize arbitrary zeros and poles, comparators with synchronization latches to eliminate the effect of metastability, and a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) with current calibration circuits for high linearity. A third-order continuous-time oversampling modulator employing 4-bit quantization is implemented in a 0.35-µm double-poly complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology, with a chip area of 2150 à 2150 µm2. Simulation results show it achieves 83.7-dB peak SQNR, 90-dB dynamic range over a 500kHz input signal bandwidth, and 60 mW power consumption

    Continuous-time cascaded ΣΔ modulators for VDSL: A comparative study

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    This paper describes new cascaded continuous-time ΣΔ modulators intended to cope with very high-rate digital subscriber line specifications, i.e 12-bit resolution within a 20-MHz signal bandwidth. These modulators have been synthesized using a new methodology that is based on the direct synthesis of the whole cascaded architecture in the continuous-time domain instead of using a discrete-to-continuous time transformation as has been done in previous approaches. This method allows to place the zeroes/poles of the loop-filter transfer function in an optimal way and to reduce the number of analog components, namely, transconductors and/or amplifiers, resistors, capacitors and digital-to-analog converters. This leads to more efficient topologies in terms of circuitry complexity, power consumption and robustness with respect to circuit non-idealities. A comparison study of the synthesized architectures is done considering their sensitivity to most critical circuit error mechanisms. Time-domain behavioral simulations are shown to validate the presented approach.Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia TEC2004-01752/MI

    First order sigma-delta modulator of an oversampling ADC design in CMOS using floating gate MOSFETS

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    We report a new architecture for a sigma-delta oversampling analog-to-digital converter (ADC) in which the first order modulator is realized using the floating gate MOSFETs at the input stage of an integrator and the comparator. The first order modulator is designed using an 8 MHz sampling clock frequency and implemented in a standard 1.5µm n-well CMOS process. The decimator is an off-chip sinc-filter and is programmed using the VERILOG and tested with Altera Flex EPF10K70RC240 FPGA board. The ADC gives an 8-bit resolution with a 65 kHz bandwidth
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