177 research outputs found
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Noise shaping Asynchronous SAR ADC based time to digital converter
Time-to-digital converters (TDCs) are key elements for the digitization of timing information in modern mixed-signal circuits such as digital PLLs, DLLs, ADCs, and on-chip jitter-monitoring circuits. Especially, high-resolution TDCs are increasingly employed in on-chip timing tests, such as jitter and clock skew measurements, as advanced fabrication technologies allow fine on-chip time resolutions. Its main purpose is to quantize the time interval of a pulse signal or the time interval between the rising edges of two clock signals. Similarly to ADCs, the performance of TDCs are also primarily characterized by Resolution, Sampling Rate, FOM, SNDR, Dynamic Range and DNL/INL. This work proposes and demonstrates 2nd order noise shaping Asynchronous SAR ADC based TDC architecture with highest resolution of 0.25 ps among current state of art designs with respect to post-layout simulation results. This circuit is a combination of low power/High Resolution 2nd Order Noise Shaped Asynchronous SAR ADC backend with simple Time to Amplitude converter (TAC) front-end and is implemented in 40nm CMOS technology. Additionally, special emphasis is given on the discussion on various current state of art TDC architectures.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
Front-ends para LiDAR baseados em ADC e TDC
Autonomous vehicles are a promising technology to save over a million lives each
year that are lost in road accidents. However, bringing safe autonomous vehicles
to market requires massive development, starting with vision sensors. LiDAR is a
fundamental vision sensor for autonomous vehicles, as it enables high resolution
3D vision. However, automotive LiDAR is not yet a mature technology, and, also
requires massive development in many aspects.
This thesis aims to contribute to the maturity of LiDAR, focusing on sampling
architectures for LiDAR front-ends. Two architectures were developed.
The first is based on a pipelined ADC, available from an AD-FMCDAQ2-EBZ
board. The ADC is synchronized with the emitted pulse and able to sample
at 1 Gsample/s. The second architecture is based on a TDC that is directly
implemented in an FPGA. It relies on a tapped delay line topology comprising 45
delay elements and on a mux-based decoder, resulting in a resolution of 50 ps.
Preliminary test results show that both implementations operate correctly,
and are both suitable for sampling short pulses typically used by LiDARs. When
comparing both architectures, we conclude that an ADC consumes a significant
amount of power, and uses many FPGA resources. However, it samples the LiDAR
waveform without any loss of information, therefore enabling maximum range and
precision. The TDC is just the opposite: it consumes little power, and uses less
FPGA resources. However, it only captures one sample per pulse.Os veículos autónomos são uma tecnologia promissora para salvar mais de um
milhão de vidas por ano, colhidas por acidentes rodoviários. Contudo, colocar
veículos autónomos seguros no mercado requer inúmeros desenvolvimentos, a
começar por sensores de visão. O LiDAR é um sensor de visão fundamental para
veículos autónomos, pois permite uma visão 3D de alta resolução. Contudo, o
LiDAR automotivo não é uma tecnologia madura, e portanto requer também
desenvolvimento em vários aspectos.
Esta dissertação visa contribuir para a maturidade do LiDAR, com foco em
arquiteturas de amostragem para front-ends de LiDAR. Foram desenvolvidas duas
arquiteturas. A primeira assenta numa ADC pipelined, por sua vez implementada
numa placa de teste AD-FMCDAQ2-EBZ. A ADC opera em sincronismo com
o pulso emitido, e permite capturar amostras a 1 Gsample/s. A segunda
arquitetura assenta num TDC implementado diretamente numa FPGA. O
TDC baseia-se numa topologia tapped delay line com 45 linhas de atraso, e num
descodificador à base de multiplexers, permitindo uma resolução temporal de 50 ps.
Resultados preliminares mostram que ambas as implementações operam
corretamente, e são adequadas para amostrar pulsos curtos tipicamente associados
a LiDAR. Em termos comparativos, a arquitectura com base numa ADC tem
um consumo de potência considerável e requer uma quantidade significativa
de recursos da FPGA. Contudo, esta permite amostrar a forma de onda de
LiDAR sem nenhuma perda de informação, permitindo assim alcance e precisão
máximos. A arquitectura com base num TDC é exatamente o oposto: tem um
baixo consumo de potência e requer poucos recursos da FPGA. Contudo, permite
capturar apenas uma amostra por pulso.Mestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e Telecomunicaçõe
Aika-digitaalimuunnin laajakaistaisiin aikapohjaisiin analogia-digitaalimuuntimiin
Modern deeply scaled semiconductor processes make the design of voltage-domain circuits increasingly challenging. On the contrary, the area and power consumption of digital circuits are improving with every new process node. Consequently, digital solutions are designed in place of their purely analog counterparts in applications such as analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion. Time-based analog-to-digital converters (ADC) employ digital-intensive architectures by processing analog quantities in time-domain. The quantization step of the time-based A/D-conversion is carried out by a time-to-digital converter (TDC).
A free-running ring oscillator -based TDC design is presented for use in wideband time-based ADCs. The proposed architecture aims to maximize time resolution and full-scale range, and to achieve error resilient conversion performance with minimized power and area consumptions. The time resolution is maximized by employing a high-frequency multipath ring oscillator, and the full-scale range is extended using a high-speed gray counter. The error resilience is achieved by custom sense-amplifier -based sampling flip-flops, gray coded counter and a digital error correction algorithm for counter sampling error correction. The implemented design achieves up to 9-bit effective resolution at 250 MS/s with 4.3 milliwatt power consumption.Modernien puolijohdeteknologioiden skaalautumisen seurauksena jännitetason piirien suunnittelu tulee entistä haasteellisemmaksi. Toisaalta digitaalisten piirirakenteiden pinta-ala sekä tehonkulutus pienenevät prosessikehityksen myötä. Tästä syystä digitaalisia ratkaisuja suunnitellaan vastaavien puhtaasti analogisien rakenteiden tilalle. Analogia-digitaalimuunnos (A/D-muunnos) voidaan toteuttaa jännitetason sijaan aikatasossa käyttämällä aikapohjaisia A/D-muuntimia, jotka ovat rakenteeltaan pääosin digitaalisia. Kvantisointivaihe aikapohjaisessa A/D-muuntimessa toteutetaan aika-digitaalimuuntimella.
Työ esittelee vapaasti oskilloivaan silmukkaoskillaattoriin perustuvan aika-digitaalimuuntimen, joka on suunniteltu käytettäväksi laajakaistaisessa aikapohjaisessa A/D-muuntimessa. Esitelty rakenne pyrkii maksimoimaan muuntimen aikaresoluution sekä muunnosalueen, sekä saavuttamaan virhesietoisen muunnostoiminnan minimoidulla tehon sekä pinta-alan kulutuksella. Aikaresoluutio on maksimoitu hyödyntämällä suuritaajuista monipolkuista silmukkaoskillaattoria, ja muunnosalue on maksimoitu nopealla Gray-koodi -laskuripiirillä. Muunnosprosessin virhesietoisuus on saavutettu toteuttamalla näytteistys herkillä kiikkuelementeillä, hyödyntämällä Gray-koodattua laskuria, sekä jälkiprosessoimalla laskurin näytteistetyt arvot virheenkorjausalgoritmilla. Esitelty muunnintoteutus saavuttaa 9 bitin efektiivisen resoluution 250 MS/s näytetaajuudella ja 4.3 milliwatin tehonkulutuksella
Time-to-digital converters and histogram builders in SPAD arrays for pulsed-LiDAR
Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) is a 3D imaging technique widely used in many applications such as augmented reality, automotive, machine vision, spacecraft navigation and landing. Pulsed-LiDAR is one of the most diffused LiDAR techniques which relies on the measurement of the round-trip travel time of an optical pulse back-scattered from a distant target. Besides the light source and the detector, Time-to-Digital Converters (TDCs) are fundamental components in pulsed-LiDAR systems, since they allow to measure the back-scattered photon arrival times and their performance directly impact on LiDAR system requirements (i.e., range, precision, and measurements rate). In this work, we present a review of recent TDC architectures suitable to be integrated in SPAD-based CMOS arrays and a review of data processing solutions to derive the TOF information. Furthermore, main TDC parameters and processing techniques are described and analyzed considering pulsed-LiDAR requirements
A 7.4-Bit ENOB 600 MS/s FPGA-Based Online Calibrated Slope ADC without External Components
A slope analog-to-digital converter (ADC) amenable to be fully implemented on a digital field programmable gate array (FPGA) without requiring any external active or passive components is proposed in this paper. The amplitude information, encoded in the transition times of a standard LVDS differential input—driven by the analog input and by the reference slope generated by an FPGA output buffer—is retrieved by an FPGA time-to-digital converter. Along with the ADC, a new online calibration algorithm is developed to mitigate the influence of process, voltage, and temperature variations on its performance. Measurements on an ADC prototype reveal an analog input range from 0.3 V to 1.5 V, a least significant bit (LSB) of 2.6 mV, and an effective number of bits (ENOB) of 7.4-bit at 600 MS/s. The differential nonlinearity (DNL) is in the range between −0.78 and 0.70 LSB, and the integral nonlinearity (INL) is in the range from −0.72 to 0.78 LSB
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TIME-DIFFERENCE CIRCUITS: METHODOLOGY, DESIGN, AND DIGITAL REALIZATION
This thesis presents innovations for a special class of circuits called Time Difference (TD) circuits. We introduce a signal processing methodology with TD signals that alters the target signal from a magnitude perspective to time interval between two time events and systematically organizes the primary TD functions abstracted from existing TD circuits and systems. The TD circuits draw attention from a broad range of application fields. In addition, highly evolved complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology suffers from various problems related to voltage and current amplitude signal processing methods. Compared to traditional analog and digital circuits, TD circuits bring several compelling features: high-resolution, high-throughput, and low-design complexity with digital integration capability. Further, the fabrication technology is advancing into the nanometer regime; the reduction in voltage headroom limits the performance of traditional analog/mixed-signal designs. All-digital design of time-difference circuit needs to be stressed to adapt to the low-cost, low-power, and high-portability applications.
We focus on Time-to-Digital Converters (TDC), one of the crucial building blocks in TD circuits. A novel algorithmic architecture is proposed based on a binary search algorithm and validated with both simulation and fabricated silicon. An all-digital structure Time-difference Amplifier (TDA) is designed and implemented to make FPGA and other all-digital implementations for TDC and related TD circuits feasible. Besides, we propose an all-digital timing measurement circuit based on the process variation from CMOS fabrication: PVTMC, which achieves a high measurement resolution:
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
MATRIX16: A 16-Channel Low-Power TDC ASIC with 8 ps Time Resolution
This paper presents a highly configurable 16-channel TDC ASIC designed in a commercial 180 nm technology with the following features: time-of-flight and time-over-threshold measurements, 8.6 ps LSB, 7.7 ps jitter, 5.6 ps linearity error, up to 5 MHz of sustained input rate per channel, 9.1 mW of power consumption per channel, and an area of 4.57 mm2 . The main contributions of this work are the novel design of the clock interpolation circuitry based on a resistive interpolation mesh circuit and the capability to operate at different supply voltages and operating frequencies, thus providing a compromise between TDC resolution and power consumption. Keywords: TDC; time-to-digital converter; fast timing; PET; VLSI; ASIC; ToF; ToT; low power; frontend electronic
5-Bit Dual-Slope Analog-to-Digital Converter-Based Time-to-Digital Converter Chip Design in CMOS Technology
Time-to-Digital Converters (TDC) have gained increasing importance in modern implementations of mixed-signal, data-acquisition and processing interfaces and are used to perform high precision time intervals in systems that incorporate Time-of-Flight (ToF) or Time-of-Arrival (ToA) measurements. The linearity of TDCs is very crucial since most Digital Signal Processing (DSP) systems require very linear inputs to achieve high accuracy.
In this work, a TDC has been designed in the 0.5 μm n-well CMOS process that can be used for on-chip integration and in applications requiring high linearity. This TDC used a Dual-Slope-ADC-based architecture for the time-to-digital conversion and consists of the following three main sub-circuits: a time-to-voltage conversion part, an integrating part and digital circuitry. The design is operated with ±2.5V supply voltage and the digital circuitry, consisting of two digital counters and an adder, are operated with a clock frequency of 13MHz. The design of the TDC is discussed and simulated and experimental test results and linearity performance of the fabricated TDC are also presented
LOW-POWER IMPULSE-RADIO ULTRA-WIDEBAND TECHNIQUES FOR BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS.
Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH
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