13 research outputs found

    A 0.9-Nyquist-Band Digital Timing Mismatch Correction for Time-Interleaved ADCs Achieving Delay Tuning Range of 0.12-Sample-Period

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    Time-interleaved analog-to-digital converters (TIADC) require channel matching in terms of offset, gain, and sampling clock skew to achieve best data conversion performance. Conventionally, correction of skew mismatch is realized with analog delay lines, making it challenging for high-speed ADC designs to achieve fine delay resolution over wide tuning range while maintaining low clock jitter. Digital skew correction allows greater flexibility than analog solutions, but is hindered by a significant hardware footprint. This paper demonstrates digital filter-based timing skew correction approach suitable for on-chip implementation. In a 10-bit 8-channel TI-ADC the proposed structure corrects mismatch magnitudes up to 0.12 sample period across 0.9 Nyquist band while requiring only 65% hardware of similar architectures of equivalent performance. The presented digital circuit uses reduced combinational paths and operates at a clock rate of single ADC channel, making it applicable for digitally-assisted high-speed TI-ADCs.acceptedVersionPeer reviewe

    A Research on High-Performance Analog-to-Digital Converters in Wireless Communication Systems

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    博士(工学)法政大学 (Hosei University

    Eye Diagram Assessment Platform for Fiber-Optic Communications

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    The basic idea of this thesis is to provide a simple, easy to use and cost-effective eye-diagram analysis kit for educational lab environment. Mostly eye-diagram analysis is done on high-end oscilloscopes or with LabView as a source-code; this research uses Flashy board (Pluto 3 and ADC) a small FPGA kit from a company called KNJN, for acquiring signals and then gives those signals to python for analysis. The main reason for considering Flashy board was because it was cost-effective, and it operates in our frequency range of operation i.e. between 10MHz to 100MHz. This thesis is developed with python as the main source language for doing the analysis, which not only reduces the cost as it is open-source, but it also adds flexibility in the analysis with the help of which we can add many more features to the current setup. There are 2 main parts to this thesis code i.e. eye-diagram construction and eye-diagram analysis, which I have both done with the help of python. Along with providing the results for eye-diagram analysis and comparing it with the existing system, this research also tends to focus on the effect of changing certain parameters during eye-diagram analysis and provides some recommendations for those parameters

    Amplifier Design for a Pipeline ADC in 90nm Technology

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    This paper explains the choices taken for the design of two full differential operational amplifiers. These op amp have been designed for the third and the fifth stage of a pipelined A/D Converter. It shows also the solutions found to reach high gain, wide bandwidth and short settling time, without degrading too much the output swing. First the operational amplifier specification are extracted starting from the ADC architecture, then the issues related to the sub-micrometrical design are analysed; the different structures tested are then presented and the motivation of the final topology choice are shown. It presents then the op amp schematic implementation, the simulation results and the layout with the 90nm TSMC design ki

    Power and area efficient reconfigurable delta sigma ADCs

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    Low Power CMOS Interface Circuitry for Sensors and Actuators

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    Design of high speed folding and interpolating analog-to-digital converter

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    High-speed and low resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADC) are key elements in the read channel of optical and magnetic data storage systems. The required resolution is about 6-7 bits while the sampling rate and effective resolution bandwidth requirements increase with each generation of storage system. Folding is a technique to reduce the number of comparators used in the flash architecture. By means of an analog preprocessing circuit in folding A/D converters the number of comparators can be reduced significantly. Folding architectures exhibit low power and low latency as well as the ability to run at high sampling rates. Folding ADCs employing interpolation schemes to generate extra folding waveforms are called "Folding and Interpolating ADC" (F&I ADC). The aim of this research is to increase the input bandwidth of high speed conversion, and low latency F&I ADC. Behavioral models are developed to analyze the bandwidth limitation at the architecture level. A front-end sample-and-hold unit is employed to tackle the frequency multiplication problem, which is intrinsic for all F&I ADCs. Current-mode signal processing is adopted to increase the bandwidth of the folding amplifiers and interpolators, which are the bottleneck of the whole system. An operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) based folding amplifier, current mirror-based interpolator, very low impedance fast current comparator are proposed and designed to carry out the current-mode signal processing. A new bit synchronization scheme is proposed to correct the error caused by the delay difference between the coarse and fine channels. A prototype chip was designed and fabricated in 0.35μm CMOS process to verify the ideas. The S/H and F&I ADC prototype is realized in 0.35μm double-poly CMOS process (only one poly is used). Integral nonlinearity (INL) is 1.0 LSB and Differential nonlinearity (DNL) is 0.6 LSB at 110 KHz. The ADC occupies 1.2mm2 active area and dissipates 200mW (excluding 70mW of S/H) from 3.3V supply. At 300MSPS sampling rate, the ADC achieves no less than 6 ENOB with input signal lower than 60MHz. It has the highest input bandwidth of 60MHz reported in the literature for this type of CMOS ADC with similar resolution and sample rate

    An ultra wide temperature range R-2R based 8 bit D/A converter for 90nm CMOS technology

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    Digital-to-analog converters have a wide range of applications from converting stored digital/audio signals to data processing and to data acquisition systems. Another application area could be a supporting building block in either cooled or un-cooled Read-out integrated circuits (ROICs). For this aspect, the capability of ultra wide temperature range operation may prove useful providing freedom to the designer and the consumer. In this thesis, design of an 8-bit, fully binary R-2R based digital-to-analog converter is realized with 90nm CMOS technology to operate in a wide temperature range (-200°C to 120°C) to be used in an ongoing Digital Read-out Integrated Circuit (DROIC) for infrared (IR) imaging systems. UWT range of operation is obtained via a temperature compensated voltage reference generator circuit consisting of only MOSFETs. In order to aid the matching of the resistors, a common-centroid layout technique is applied to the resistor core of the circuit which eliminates the process gradients. TSMC's 90nm 1 poly, 9 metal Mixed – Signal RF technology and a power supply of 1.2V are used for this design. For accuracy, the best performance is obtained at the room temperature where the fastest operation is possible at cryogenic temperatures at the expense of precision. It has a DNL and INL of ±0.3LSB at room temperature and ±0.45LSB at 120°C. The DAC can operate up to 20MHz. The circuit dissipates only 0.43mW in full scale range at cryogenic temperatures where 1.1mW at room. It occupies a chip area of only 0.015mm2 [square millimetre]

    Low-power adaptive control scheme using switching activity measurement method for reconfigurable analog-to-digital converters

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    Power consumption is a critical issue for portable devices. The ever-increasing demand for multimode wireless applications and the growing concerns towards power-aware green technology make dynamically reconfigurable hardware an attractive solution for overcoming the power issue. This is due to its advantages of flexibility, reusability, and adaptability. During the last decade, reconfigurable analog-to-digital converters (ReADCs) have been used to support multimode wireless applications. With the ability to adaptively scale the power consumption according to different operation modes, reconfigurable devices utilise the power supply efficiently. This can prolong battery life and reduce unnecessary heat emission to the environment. However, current adaptive mechanisms for ReADCs rely upon external control signals generated using digital signal processors (DSPs) in the baseband. This thesis aims to provide a single-chip solution for real-time and low-power ReADC implementations that can adaptively change the converter resolution according to signal variations without the need of the baseband processing. Specifically, the thesis focuses on the analysis, design and implementation of a low-power digital controller unit for ReADCs. In this study, the following two important reconfigurability issues are investigated: i) the detection mechanism for an adaptive implementation, and ii) the measure of power and area overheads that are introduced by the adaptive control modules. This thesis outlines four main achievements to address these issues. The first achievement is the development of the switching activity measurement (SWAM) method to detect different signal components based upon the observation of the output of an ADC. The second achievement is a proposed adaptive algorithm for ReADCs to dynamically adjust the resolution depending upon the variations in the input signal. The third achievement is an ASIC implementation of the adaptive control module for ReADCs. The module achieves low reconfiguration overheads in terms of area and power compared with the main analog part of a ReADC. The fourth achievement is the development of a low-power noise detection module using a conventional ADC for signal improvement. Taken together, the findings from this study demonstrate the potential use of switching activity information of an ADC to adaptively control the circuits, and simultaneously expanding the functionality of the ADC in electronic systems
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