15 research outputs found

    Robust sigma delta converters : and their application in low-power highly-digitized flexible receivers

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    In wireless communication industry, the convergence of stand-alone, single application transceiver IC’s into scalable, programmable and platform based transceiver ICs, has led to the possibility to create sophisticated mobile devices within a limited volume. These multi-standard (multi-mode), MIMO, SDR and cognitive radios, ask for more adaptability and flexibility on every abstraction level of the transceiver. The adaptability and flexibility of the receive paths require a digitized receiver architecture in which most of the adaptability and flexibility is shifted in the digital domain. This trend to ask for more adaptability and flexibility, but also more performance, higher efficiency and an increasing functionality per volume, has a major impact on the IP blocks such systems are built with. At the same time the increasing requirement for more digital processing in the same volume and for the same power has led to mainstream CMOS feature size scaling, leading to smaller, faster and more efficient transistors, optimized to increase processing efficiency per volume (smaller area, lower power consumption, faster digital processing). As wireless receivers is a comparably small market compared to digital processors, the receivers also have to be designed in a digitally optimized technology, as the processor and transceiver are on the same chip to reduce device volume. This asks for a generalized approach, which maps application requirements of complex systems (such as wireless receivers) on the advantages these digitally optimized technologies bring. First, the application trends are gathered in five quality indicators being: (algorithmic) accuracy, robustness, flexibility, efficiency, and emission, of which the last one is not further analyzed in this thesis. Secondly, using the quality indicators, it is identified that by introducing (or increasing) digitization at every abstraction level of a system, the advantages of modern digitally optimized technologies can be exploited. For a system on a chip, these abstraction levels are: system/application level, analog IP architecture level, circuit topology level and layout level. In this thesis, the quality indicators together with the digitization at different abstraction levels are applied to S¿ modulators. S¿ modulator performance properties are categorized into the proposed quality indicators. Next, it is identified what determines the accuracy, robustness, flexibility and efficiency of a S¿ modulator. Important modulator performance parameters, design parameter relations, and performance-cost relations are derived. Finally, several implementations are presented, which are designed using the found relations. At least one implementation example is shown for each level of digitization. At system level, a flexible (N)ZIF receiver architecture is digitized by shifting the ADC closer to the antenna, reducing the amount of analog signal conditioning required in front of the ADC, and shifting the re-configurability of such a receiver into the digital domain as much as possible. Being closer to the antenna, and because of the increased receiver flexibility, a high performance, multi-mode ADC is required. In this thesis, it is proven that such multi-mode ADCs can be made at low area and power consumption. At analog IP architecture level, a smarter S¿ modulator architecture is found, which combines the advantages of 1-bit and multi-bit modulators. The analog loop filter is partly digitized, and analog circuit blocks are replaced by a digital filter, leading to an area and power efficient design, which above all is very portable, and has the potential to become a good candidate for the ADC in multimode receivers. At circuit and layout level, analog circuits are designed in the same way as digital circuits are. Analog IP blocks are split up in analog unit cells, which are put in a library. For each analog unit cell, a p-cell layout view is created. Once such a library is available, different IP blocks can be created using the same unit cells and using the automatic routing tools normally used for digital circuits. The library of unit cells can be ported to a next technology very quickly, as the unit cells are very simple circuits, increasing portability of IP blocks made with these unit cells. In this thesis, several modulators are presented that are designed using this digital design methodology. A high clock frequency in the giga-hertz range is used to test technology speed. The presented modulators have a small area and low power consumption. A modulator is ported from a 65nm to a 45nm technology in one month without making changes to the unit cells, or IP architecture, proving that this design methodology leads to very portable designs. The generalized system property categorization in quality indicators, and the digitization at different levels of system design, is named the digital design methodology. In this thesis this methodology is successfully applied to S¿ modulators, leading to high quality, mixed-signal S¿ modulator IP, which is more accurate, more robust, more flexible and/or more efficient

    Robust sigma delta converters : and their application in low-power highly-digitized flexible receivers

    Get PDF
    In wireless communication industry, the convergence of stand-alone, single application transceiver IC’s into scalable, programmable and platform based transceiver ICs, has led to the possibility to create sophisticated mobile devices within a limited volume. These multi-standard (multi-mode), MIMO, SDR and cognitive radios, ask for more adaptability and flexibility on every abstraction level of the transceiver. The adaptability and flexibility of the receive paths require a digitized receiver architecture in which most of the adaptability and flexibility is shifted in the digital domain. This trend to ask for more adaptability and flexibility, but also more performance, higher efficiency and an increasing functionality per volume, has a major impact on the IP blocks such systems are built with. At the same time the increasing requirement for more digital processing in the same volume and for the same power has led to mainstream CMOS feature size scaling, leading to smaller, faster and more efficient transistors, optimized to increase processing efficiency per volume (smaller area, lower power consumption, faster digital processing). As wireless receivers is a comparably small market compared to digital processors, the receivers also have to be designed in a digitally optimized technology, as the processor and transceiver are on the same chip to reduce device volume. This asks for a generalized approach, which maps application requirements of complex systems (such as wireless receivers) on the advantages these digitally optimized technologies bring. First, the application trends are gathered in five quality indicators being: (algorithmic) accuracy, robustness, flexibility, efficiency, and emission, of which the last one is not further analyzed in this thesis. Secondly, using the quality indicators, it is identified that by introducing (or increasing) digitization at every abstraction level of a system, the advantages of modern digitally optimized technologies can be exploited. For a system on a chip, these abstraction levels are: system/application level, analog IP architecture level, circuit topology level and layout level. In this thesis, the quality indicators together with the digitization at different abstraction levels are applied to S¿ modulators. S¿ modulator performance properties are categorized into the proposed quality indicators. Next, it is identified what determines the accuracy, robustness, flexibility and efficiency of a S¿ modulator. Important modulator performance parameters, design parameter relations, and performance-cost relations are derived. Finally, several implementations are presented, which are designed using the found relations. At least one implementation example is shown for each level of digitization. At system level, a flexible (N)ZIF receiver architecture is digitized by shifting the ADC closer to the antenna, reducing the amount of analog signal conditioning required in front of the ADC, and shifting the re-configurability of such a receiver into the digital domain as much as possible. Being closer to the antenna, and because of the increased receiver flexibility, a high performance, multi-mode ADC is required. In this thesis, it is proven that such multi-mode ADCs can be made at low area and power consumption. At analog IP architecture level, a smarter S¿ modulator architecture is found, which combines the advantages of 1-bit and multi-bit modulators. The analog loop filter is partly digitized, and analog circuit blocks are replaced by a digital filter, leading to an area and power efficient design, which above all is very portable, and has the potential to become a good candidate for the ADC in multimode receivers. At circuit and layout level, analog circuits are designed in the same way as digital circuits are. Analog IP blocks are split up in analog unit cells, which are put in a library. For each analog unit cell, a p-cell layout view is created. Once such a library is available, different IP blocks can be created using the same unit cells and using the automatic routing tools normally used for digital circuits. The library of unit cells can be ported to a next technology very quickly, as the unit cells are very simple circuits, increasing portability of IP blocks made with these unit cells. In this thesis, several modulators are presented that are designed using this digital design methodology. A high clock frequency in the giga-hertz range is used to test technology speed. The presented modulators have a small area and low power consumption. A modulator is ported from a 65nm to a 45nm technology in one month without making changes to the unit cells, or IP architecture, proving that this design methodology leads to very portable designs. The generalized system property categorization in quality indicators, and the digitization at different levels of system design, is named the digital design methodology. In this thesis this methodology is successfully applied to S¿ modulators, leading to high quality, mixed-signal S¿ modulator IP, which is more accurate, more robust, more flexible and/or more efficient

    A 14b 200MS/s DAC with SFDR>78dBc, IM3

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    A 14-bit 200MS/s current-steering DAC with a novel digital calibration technique called dynamic-mismatch mapping (DMM) is presented. Compared to traditional static-mismatch mapping and dynamic element matching, DMM reduces the nonlinearities caused by both amplitude and timing errors, without noise penalty. This 0.14µm CMOS DAC achieves a state-of-the-art performance of SFDR>78dBc, IM

    Robust sigma delta converters : and their application in low-power highly-digitized flexible receivers

    No full text
    In wireless communication industry, the convergence of stand-alone, single application transceiver IC’s into scalable, programmable and platform based transceiver ICs, has led to the possibility to create sophisticated mobile devices within a limited volume. These multi-standard (multi-mode), MIMO, SDR and cognitive radios, ask for more adaptability and flexibility on every abstraction level of the transceiver. The adaptability and flexibility of the receive paths require a digitized receiver architecture in which most of the adaptability and flexibility is shifted in the digital domain. This trend to ask for more adaptability and flexibility, but also more performance, higher efficiency and an increasing functionality per volume, has a major impact on the IP blocks such systems are built with. At the same time the increasing requirement for more digital processing in the same volume and for the same power has led to mainstream CMOS feature size scaling, leading to smaller, faster and more efficient transistors, optimized to increase processing efficiency per volume (smaller area, lower power consumption, faster digital processing). As wireless receivers is a comparably small market compared to digital processors, the receivers also have to be designed in a digitally optimized technology, as the processor and transceiver are on the same chip to reduce device volume. This asks for a generalized approach, which maps application requirements of complex systems (such as wireless receivers) on the advantages these digitally optimized technologies bring. First, the application trends are gathered in five quality indicators being: (algorithmic) accuracy, robustness, flexibility, efficiency, and emission, of which the last one is not further analyzed in this thesis. Secondly, using the quality indicators, it is identified that by introducing (or increasing) digitization at every abstraction level of a system, the advantages of modern digitally optimized technologies can be exploited. For a system on a chip, these abstraction levels are: system/application level, analog IP architecture level, circuit topology level and layout level. In this thesis, the quality indicators together with the digitization at different abstraction levels are applied to S¿ modulators. S¿ modulator performance properties are categorized into the proposed quality indicators. Next, it is identified what determines the accuracy, robustness, flexibility and efficiency of a S¿ modulator. Important modulator performance parameters, design parameter relations, and performance-cost relations are derived. Finally, several implementations are presented, which are designed using the found relations. At least one implementation example is shown for each level of digitization. At system level, a flexible (N)ZIF receiver architecture is digitized by shifting the ADC closer to the antenna, reducing the amount of analog signal conditioning required in front of the ADC, and shifting the re-configurability of such a receiver into the digital domain as much as possible. Being closer to the antenna, and because of the increased receiver flexibility, a high performance, multi-mode ADC is required. In this thesis, it is proven that such multi-mode ADCs can be made at low area and power consumption. At analog IP architecture level, a smarter S¿ modulator architecture is found, which combines the advantages of 1-bit and multi-bit modulators. The analog loop filter is partly digitized, and analog circuit blocks are replaced by a digital filter, leading to an area and power efficient design, which above all is very portable, and has the potential to become a good candidate for the ADC in multimode receivers. At circuit and layout level, analog circuits are designed in the same way as digital circuits are. Analog IP blocks are split up in analog unit cells, which are put in a library. For each analog unit cell, a p-cell layout view is created. Once such a library is available, different IP blocks can be created using the same unit cells and using the automatic routing tools normally used for digital circuits. The library of unit cells can be ported to a next technology very quickly, as the unit cells are very simple circuits, increasing portability of IP blocks made with these unit cells. In this thesis, several modulators are presented that are designed using this digital design methodology. A high clock frequency in the giga-hertz range is used to test technology speed. The presented modulators have a small area and low power consumption. A modulator is ported from a 65nm to a 45nm technology in one month without making changes to the unit cells, or IP architecture, proving that this design methodology leads to very portable designs. The generalized system property categorization in quality indicators, and the digitization at different levels of system design, is named the digital design methodology. In this thesis this methodology is successfully applied to S¿ modulators, leading to high quality, mixed-signal S¿ modulator IP, which is more accurate, more robust, more flexible and/or more efficient

    A triple-mode continuous-time sigma delta modulator with switched-capacitor feedback DAC for a GSM-EDGE/CDMA2000/UMTS Receiver

    No full text
    Time jitter in continuous-time S¿ modulators is a known limitation on the maximum achievable signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR). Analysis of time jitter in this type of converter shows that a switched-capacitor (SC) feedback digital-to-analog converter (DAC) reduces the sensitivity to time jitter significantly. In this paper, an I and Q continuous-time fifth-order S¿ modulator with 1-bit quantizer and SC feedback DAC is presented, which demonstrates the improvement in maximum achievable SNR when using an SC instead of a switched-current (SI) feedback circuit. The modulator is designed for a GSM/CDMA2000/UMTS receiver and achieves a dynamic range of 92/83/72 dB in 200/1228/3840 kHz, respectively. The intermodulation distance IM2, 3 is better than 87 dB in all modes. Both the I and Q modulator consumes a power of 3.8/4.1/4.5 mW at 1.8 V. Processed in 0.18-µm CMOS, the 0.55-mm2 integrated circuit includes a phase-locked loop, two oscillators, and a bandgap

    A triple-mode continuous-time sigma delta modulator with switched-capacitor feedback DAC for a GSM-EDGE/CDMA2000/UMTS Receiver

    No full text
    Time jitter in continuous-time S¿ modulators is a known limitation on the maximum achievable signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR). Analysis of time jitter in this type of converter shows that a switched-capacitor (SC) feedback digital-to-analog converter (DAC) reduces the sensitivity to time jitter significantly. In this paper, an I and Q continuous-time fifth-order S¿ modulator with 1-bit quantizer and SC feedback DAC is presented, which demonstrates the improvement in maximum achievable SNR when using an SC instead of a switched-current (SI) feedback circuit. The modulator is designed for a GSM/CDMA2000/UMTS receiver and achieves a dynamic range of 92/83/72 dB in 200/1228/3840 kHz, respectively. The intermodulation distance IM2, 3 is better than 87 dB in all modes. Both the I and Q modulator consumes a power of 3.8/4.1/4.5 mW at 1.8 V. Processed in 0.18-µm CMOS, the 0.55-mm2 integrated circuit includes a phase-locked loop, two oscillators, and a bandgap

    Robust sigma delta converters : and their application in low-power highly-digitized flexible receivers

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    Sigma Delta converters are a very popular choice for the A/D converter in multi-standard, mobile and cellular receivers. Key A/D converter specifications are high dynamic range, robustness, scalability, low-power and low EMI. Robust Sigma Delta Converters presents a requirement derivation of a Sigma Delta modulator applied in a receiver for cellular and connectivity, and shows trade-offs between RF and ADC. The book proposes to categorize these requirements in 5 quality indicators which can be used to qualify a system, namely accuracy, robustness, flexibility, efficiency and emission. In the book these quality indicators are used to categorize Sigma Delta converter theory. A few highlights on each of these quality indicators are; - Quality indicators: provide a means to quantify system quality. - Accuracy: introduction of new Sigma Delta Modulator architectures. - Robustness: a significant extension on clock jitter theory based on phase and error amplitude error models. Extension of the theory describing aliasing in Sigma Delta converters for different types of DACs in the feedback loop. - Flexibility: introduction of a Sigma Delta converter bandwidth scaling theory leading to very flexible Sigma Delta converters. - Efficiency: introduction of new Figure-of-Merits which better reflect performance-power trade-offs. - Emission: analysis of Sigma Delta modulators on emission is not part of the book The quality indicators also reveal that, to exploit nowadays advanced IC technologies, things should be done as much as possible digital up to a limit where system optimization allows reducing system margins. At the end of the book Sigma Delta converter implementations are shown which are digitized on application-, architecture-, circuit- and layout-level. Robust Sigma Delta Converters is written under the assumption that the reader has some background in receivers and in A/D conversion

    A 3.3mW SigmaDelta modulator for UMTS in 0,18 μm CMOS with 70dB dynamic range in 2MHz bandwidth

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    The authors present a 4th-order continuous-time S¿ modulator with 1.5 b quantizer and feedback DAC for a UMTS receiver. The modulator has 70 dB DNR in a 2 MHz band and -74 dB THD at full scale. An IC which includes two modulators, a PLL, and an oscillator dissipates 11.5 mW at 1.8 V. Active area is 0.41 mm2 in a 0.18 µm, 1-poly 5-metal-layer CMOS technology

    A 3.3-m W sigma delta modular for UMTS in 0.18- μm CMOS with 70-dB dynamic range in 2-MHz bandwidth

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    A quadrature fourth-order, continuous-time, S¿ modulator with 1.5-b quantizer and feedback digital-to-analog converter (DAC) for a universal mobile telecommunication system (UMTS) receiver chain is presented. It achieves a dynamic range of 70 dB in a 2-MHz bandwidth and the total harmonic distortion is -74 dB at full-scale input. When used in an integrated receiver for UMTS, the dynamic range of the modulator substantially reduces the need for analog automatic gain control and its tolerance of large out-of-band interference also permits the use of only first-order prefiltering. An IC including an I and Q S¿ modulator, phase-locked loop, oscillator, and bandgap dissipates 11.5 mW at 1.8 V. The active area is 0.41 mm2 in a 0.18-µm 1-poly 5-metal CMOS technology

    A 14bit 200 MS/s DAC with SFDR>78 dBc, IM3

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    This paper presents a 14 bit 200 MS/s current-steering DAC with a novel digital calibration technique called dynamic-mismatch mapping (DMM). By optimizing the switching sequence of current cells to reduce the dynamic integral nonlinearity in an I-Q domain, the DMM technique digitally calibrates all mismatch errors so that both the DAC static and dynamic performance can be significantly improved in a wide frequency range. Compared to traditional current source calibration techniques and static-mismatch mapping, DMM can reduce the distortion caused by both amplitude and timing mismatch errors. Compared to dynamic element matching, DMM does not increase the noise floor since the distortion is reduced, not randomized. The DMM DAC was implemented in a 0.14 µm CMOS technology and achieves a state-of-the-art performance of SFDR >; 78 dBc, IM
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