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Projeto e análise de moduladores sigma-delta em tempo contínuo aplicados à conversão ADAguirre, Paulo Cesar Comassetto de January 2014 (has links)
Conversores analógico-digitais (ADCs) têm papel fundamental na implementação dos sistemas-em-chip, do inglês System-on-Chip (SoC), atuais. Em razão dos requisitos destes sistemas e dos compromissos entre as características fundamentais dos ADCs, como largura de banda, consumo de energia e exatidão, diversas topologias e estratégias para sua implementação em circuitos integrados (CIs) têm sido desenvolvidas através dos tempos. Dentre estas topologias, os conversores sigma-delta (SDC) têm se destacado pela versatilidade, aliada ao baixo consumo e excelente exatidão. Inicialmente desenvolvidos e empregados para a conversão de sinais de baixa frequência e com operação em tempo discreto (DT), esta classe de conversores têm evoluído e nos últimos anos está sendo desenvolvida para operar em tempo contínuo e ser empregada na conversão de sinais com frequências de centenas de kHz a dezenas de MHz. Neste trabalho, os moduladores sigma-delta em tempo contínuo (SDMs-CT) são estudados, visando sua aplicação à conversão analógico-digital (AD). Os SDMs-CT oferecem vantagens significativas sobre seus homólogos em tempo discreto, como menor consumo de energia, maior largura de banda do sinal de entrada e filtro anti-alias, do inglês anti-alias filter (AAF), implícito. Entretanto, os SDMs-CT apresentam limitações adicionais, responsáveis pela degradação de seu desempenho, como os efeitos do jitter do sinal de relógio, o atraso excessivo do laço de realimentação, do inglês Excess Loop Delay (ELD), e as limitações impostas aos integradores analógicos. Após o estudo e análise de SDMs-CT e de suas limitações, foi desenvolvido um modelo comportamental no ambiente Matlab/Simulink R , que permite a simulação do impacto destas limitações no modulador, possibilitando a obtenção de uma estimativa mais aproximada do seu desempenho. Com base nestas simulações foi possível a determinação das especificações mínimas de cada bloco analógico que compõe o modulador (como o slew rate, a frequência de ganho unitário (fu) e o ganho DC dos amplificadores operacionais utilizados nos integradores) e os valores toleráveis de ELD e jitter do sinal de relógio. Adicionalmente, neste trabalho foi desenvolvida uma metodologia para simulação de SDMs-CT compostos por DACs a capacitor chaveado e resistor, do inglês Switched-Capacitor-Resistor (SCR). Com base neste modelo e no estudo das diferentes topologias de SDMs, um circuito foi desenvolvido para aplicação em receptores de RF, sendo do tipo passa-baixas de laço único, do inglês single-loop, single-bit, de terceira ordem, voltado ao baixo consumo de energia. Este circuito foi desenvolvido em tecnologia CMOS IBM de 130 nanômetros, tendo sido enviado para fabricação. Através das simulações pós-leiaute realizadas espera-se que seu desempenho fique próximo ao que tem sido publicado recentemente sobre SDMs-CT passa-baixas de laço único e single-bit. / Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs) play a fundamental role in the implementation of current systems-on-chip (SoC). Due to the requirements of these systems and the tradeoffs between the main ADCs characteristics, such as signal bandwidth, power consumption and accuracy, many topologies and strategies for their implementation in integrated circuits (ICs) have been developed through the ages. Among these topologies, the sigmadelta converters (SDC) have highlighted the versatility combined with low power consumption and excellent accuracy. Initially developed and used for the conversion of low frequency signals and operation in the discrete time (DT) domain, this class of converters have been evolved and developed over the past to operate in continuous time domain for the conversion of signals with frequencies of hundreds of kHz up to tens of MHz. In this work, continuous time sigma-delta modulators (CT-SDMs) are studied focusing its application to the analog-to-digital (AD) conversion. CT-SDMs offer significant advantages over their discrete-time counterparts, such as lower power consumption, higher input signal bandwidth and implicit anti-alias filter (AAF). However, CT-SDMs present additional limitations that are responsible for their performance degradation, such as the clock jitter, Excess Loop Delay (ELD) and the limitations imposed on the analog integrators. After the study and analysis of CT-SDMs and their performance limitations, a behavioral model approach was developed in the Matlab/Simulink R environment, which allows the simulation of the limitations impact on the modulator, allowing the obteinment of a more accurate estimate of its performance. Based on these simulations it was possible to determine the minimum specifications for each block that composes the analog modulator (such as slew rate, the unity gain frequency (fu) and the DC gain of the operational amplifiers used in integrators) and tolerable values of ELD and clock jitter. Additionally, it was developed in this work a methodology for simulate CT-SDMs with Switched-Capacitor- Resistor (SCR) DACs that provide exponential waveforms. Based on this model and the study of different SDMs topologies, it was developed a low-pass, single-loop, single-bit, third order circuit focused on low-power intended for application in RF receivers. This circuit was developed in an IBM 130 nanometers CMOS technology, and was send to manufacturing. Based on the post-layout simulations it is expected to have performance close to what has been recently published of low-pass, single-loop, single-bit CT-SDMs.
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Projeto e análise de moduladores sigma-delta em tempo contínuo aplicados à conversão ADAguirre, Paulo Cesar Comassetto de January 2014 (has links)
Conversores analógico-digitais (ADCs) têm papel fundamental na implementação dos sistemas-em-chip, do inglês System-on-Chip (SoC), atuais. Em razão dos requisitos destes sistemas e dos compromissos entre as características fundamentais dos ADCs, como largura de banda, consumo de energia e exatidão, diversas topologias e estratégias para sua implementação em circuitos integrados (CIs) têm sido desenvolvidas através dos tempos. Dentre estas topologias, os conversores sigma-delta (SDC) têm se destacado pela versatilidade, aliada ao baixo consumo e excelente exatidão. Inicialmente desenvolvidos e empregados para a conversão de sinais de baixa frequência e com operação em tempo discreto (DT), esta classe de conversores têm evoluído e nos últimos anos está sendo desenvolvida para operar em tempo contínuo e ser empregada na conversão de sinais com frequências de centenas de kHz a dezenas de MHz. Neste trabalho, os moduladores sigma-delta em tempo contínuo (SDMs-CT) são estudados, visando sua aplicação à conversão analógico-digital (AD). Os SDMs-CT oferecem vantagens significativas sobre seus homólogos em tempo discreto, como menor consumo de energia, maior largura de banda do sinal de entrada e filtro anti-alias, do inglês anti-alias filter (AAF), implícito. Entretanto, os SDMs-CT apresentam limitações adicionais, responsáveis pela degradação de seu desempenho, como os efeitos do jitter do sinal de relógio, o atraso excessivo do laço de realimentação, do inglês Excess Loop Delay (ELD), e as limitações impostas aos integradores analógicos. Após o estudo e análise de SDMs-CT e de suas limitações, foi desenvolvido um modelo comportamental no ambiente Matlab/Simulink R , que permite a simulação do impacto destas limitações no modulador, possibilitando a obtenção de uma estimativa mais aproximada do seu desempenho. Com base nestas simulações foi possível a determinação das especificações mínimas de cada bloco analógico que compõe o modulador (como o slew rate, a frequência de ganho unitário (fu) e o ganho DC dos amplificadores operacionais utilizados nos integradores) e os valores toleráveis de ELD e jitter do sinal de relógio. Adicionalmente, neste trabalho foi desenvolvida uma metodologia para simulação de SDMs-CT compostos por DACs a capacitor chaveado e resistor, do inglês Switched-Capacitor-Resistor (SCR). Com base neste modelo e no estudo das diferentes topologias de SDMs, um circuito foi desenvolvido para aplicação em receptores de RF, sendo do tipo passa-baixas de laço único, do inglês single-loop, single-bit, de terceira ordem, voltado ao baixo consumo de energia. Este circuito foi desenvolvido em tecnologia CMOS IBM de 130 nanômetros, tendo sido enviado para fabricação. Através das simulações pós-leiaute realizadas espera-se que seu desempenho fique próximo ao que tem sido publicado recentemente sobre SDMs-CT passa-baixas de laço único e single-bit. / Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs) play a fundamental role in the implementation of current systems-on-chip (SoC). Due to the requirements of these systems and the tradeoffs between the main ADCs characteristics, such as signal bandwidth, power consumption and accuracy, many topologies and strategies for their implementation in integrated circuits (ICs) have been developed through the ages. Among these topologies, the sigmadelta converters (SDC) have highlighted the versatility combined with low power consumption and excellent accuracy. Initially developed and used for the conversion of low frequency signals and operation in the discrete time (DT) domain, this class of converters have been evolved and developed over the past to operate in continuous time domain for the conversion of signals with frequencies of hundreds of kHz up to tens of MHz. In this work, continuous time sigma-delta modulators (CT-SDMs) are studied focusing its application to the analog-to-digital (AD) conversion. CT-SDMs offer significant advantages over their discrete-time counterparts, such as lower power consumption, higher input signal bandwidth and implicit anti-alias filter (AAF). However, CT-SDMs present additional limitations that are responsible for their performance degradation, such as the clock jitter, Excess Loop Delay (ELD) and the limitations imposed on the analog integrators. After the study and analysis of CT-SDMs and their performance limitations, a behavioral model approach was developed in the Matlab/Simulink R environment, which allows the simulation of the limitations impact on the modulator, allowing the obteinment of a more accurate estimate of its performance. Based on these simulations it was possible to determine the minimum specifications for each block that composes the analog modulator (such as slew rate, the unity gain frequency (fu) and the DC gain of the operational amplifiers used in integrators) and tolerable values of ELD and clock jitter. Additionally, it was developed in this work a methodology for simulate CT-SDMs with Switched-Capacitor- Resistor (SCR) DACs that provide exponential waveforms. Based on this model and the study of different SDMs topologies, it was developed a low-pass, single-loop, single-bit, third order circuit focused on low-power intended for application in RF receivers. This circuit was developed in an IBM 130 nanometers CMOS technology, and was send to manufacturing. Based on the post-layout simulations it is expected to have performance close to what has been recently published of low-pass, single-loop, single-bit CT-SDMs.
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DESENVOLVIMENTO DE UM CONVERSOR A/D INTEGRADOR COM FAIXA DE ENTRADA E RESOLUÇÃO PROGRAMÁVEL A CAPACITOR CHAVEADO / DEVELOPMENT OF AN A / D CONVERTER INTEGRATOR WITH TRACK OF ENTRY AND PROGRAMMABLE RESOLUTION TO SWITCHED CAPACITORBezerra, Thiago Brito 13 April 2012 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2012-04-13 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / Programmable integrated circuits enable its adjustment after fabrication to fit more than one
application within a certain set of applications. A programmable measurement system can be
applied to the measurement of different quantities involving a set of sensors with different
signal characteristics and employing a single analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The output
signal range for each sensor should be adjusted to be as close to the input range of the ADC as
possible, to ensure maximum measurement quality. One solution to implement the adjustment
on the signal range is the use of a measurement system with programmable conditioning
circuit. In this work, it is proposed to design an ADC integrated circuit whose input range is
adjusted to the signal level at the output of the sensor in order to avoid amplification stages in
a signal conditioning circuit. For this adjustment, the input of the converter should be
programmable, making it more compatible with various sensors with different characteristics.
The developed ADC also allows the configuration of the converter resolution, enabling the
designer to exploit trade-offs between resolution and conversion speed for a given application.
The ADC is a switched capacitor integrating converter and it was designed for the AMS 0.35
μm CMOS process. / Circuitos integrados programáveis possibilitam o seu ajuste após a fabricação, para se
adequarem a mais de uma aplicação dentro de um conjunto determinado de aplicações. Um
sistema de medição programável pode ser aplicado em medições que envolvam um conjunto
de sensores com características diferentes de sinais e um conversor analógico-digital. A faixa
de sinal em cada sensor deve ser ajustada o mais próximo da faixa de entrada do conversor
analógico-digital, para garantir a medição com a faixa completa do sinal. Uma solução para
realizar o ajuste da faixa do sinal é o uso de um sistema de medição com circuito de
condicionamento programável. Neste trabalho de dissertação, propõe-se o projeto de um
conversor analógico-digital em circuito integrado em que a faixa de entrada pode ser ajustada
ao nível de sinal na saída do sensor, com a finalidade de evitar estágios de amplificação do
sinal em um circuito de condicionamento. Para tal ajuste, a entrada do conversor deverá ser
programável, o que o torna mais compatível com diversos sensores com características
diferentes. O circuito proposto também possibilita a definição da resolução do conversor o
que permite a escolha de compromisso entre resolução e velocidade de conversão,
dependendo da aplicação. O conversor A/D é do tipo integrador a capacitores chaveados e foi
projetado, em nível de transistor e leiaute, para o processo AMS 0,35 m CMOS.
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Shaped Superconducting Films For Electronic FunctionsNarayana, T Badiri 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Design of Ultra-Low-Power Analog-to-Digital ConvertersZhang, Dai January 2012 (has links)
Power consumption is one of the main design constraints in today’s integrated circuits. For systems powered by small non-rechargeable batteries over their entire lifetime, such as medical implant devices, ultra-low power consumption is paramount. In these systems, analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are key components as the interface between the analog world and the digital domain. This thesis addresses the design challenges, strategies, as well as circuit techniques of ultra-low-power ADCs for medical implant devices. Medical implant devices, such as pacemakers and cardiac defibrillators, typically requirelow-speed, medium-resolution ADCs. The successive approximation register (SAR) ADC exhibits significantly high energy efficiency compared to other prevalent ADC architectures due to its good tradeoffs among power consumption, conversion accuracy, and design complexity. To design an energy-efficient SAR ADC, an understanding of its error sources as well as its power consumption bounds is essential. This thesis analyzes the power consumption bounds of SAR ADC: 1) at low resolution, the power consumption is bounded by digital switching power; 2) at medium-to-high resolution, the power consumption is bounded by thermal noise if digital assisted techniques are used to alleviate mismatch issues; otherwise it is bounded by capacitor mismatch. Conversion of the low frequency bioelectric signals does not require high speed, but ultra-low-power operation. This combined with the required conversion accuracy makes the design of such ADCs a major challenge. It is not straightforward to effectively reduce the unnecessary speed for lower power consumption using inherently fast components in advanced CMOS technologies. Moreover, the leakage current degrades the sampling accuracy during the long conversion time, and the leakage power consumption contributes to a significant portion of the total power consumption. Two SAR ADCs have been implemented in this thesis. The first ADC, implemented in a 0.13-µm CMOS process, achieves 9.1 ENOB with 53-nW power consumption at 1 kS/s. The second ADC, implemented in a 65-nm CMOS process, achieves the same resolution at 1 kS/s with a substantial (94%) improvement in power consumption, resulting in 3-nW total power consumption. Our work demonstrates that the ultra-low-power operation necessitates maximum simplicity in the ADC architecture.
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Návrh adaptivního systému na rekonfigurovatelné platformě s využitím vestavěného analogově číslicového převodníku / Adaptive System Design in a Reconfigurable Platform Using the Embedded Analog-to-Digital ConverterZamba, Martin January 2014 (has links)
This thesis has its main subject pointed on possibilities of exploiting reconfigurable digital systems on FPGA basis in mixed signal applications. Description of reconfigurable and adaptive systems in general and summary of known architectures is presented in first part of this work. Next, possibilities of exploiting configurability of FPGAs in conjunction with XADC digital to analog converter are examined. These converters are provided in 7-series FPGAs and Zynq-7000 systems from Xilinx. Concept of exploiting XADC for inductance measurements is presented as alternative to existing solution - LDC1000 integrated circuit provided by Texas Instruments. Such system utilizing FPGA and XADC would come with a lot of benefits: better system integration, better signal processing options, possibility of constructing adaptive system with numerous sensory elements and last but not least, lower system cost. Advantages and disadvantages of such approach are analyzed in the very final part of this work and possible options for extension of this work are presented.
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Contribution à la conception d'un système d'acquisition de signaux biomédicaux pour la télésurveillance médicale / Contribution to the design of a biomedical signals acquisition system for medical telemonitoringTlili, Mariam 23 October 2018 (has links)
L’objectif des travaux menés dans le cadre de cette thèse est le déploiement d’un dispositif médical embarqué et portable assurant l’acquisition et la transmission du signal biomédical électrocardiogramme. Il doit intégrer des techniques de traitement avancées et un étage de communication radio. A la quête de nouvelles idées non encore explorées par la communauté scientifique, nous proposons dans notre travail d’appliquer une acquisition compressée intelligente par exploitation du caractère parcimonieux du signal électrocardiogramme à l’aide d’un convertisseur analogique-numérique à échantillonnage non-uniforme. / The objective of this thesis is the deployment of an embedded and portable medical device for acquisition and transmission of the biomedical electrocardiogram signal. The device incorporates advanced processing techniques and a radio communication module. In search of new ideas not yet explored by the scientific community, we propose in our work to apply an intelligent compressed acquisition by exploiting the sparsity character of the electrocardiogram using a non-uniform sampling analog-to-digital converter.
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Convertisseur analogique-numérique large bande avec correction mixte / Mixed calibration for high speed analog-to-digital convertersMas, Alexandre 10 July 2018 (has links)
Les besoins en débit d’information à transmettre ne cessent de croitre. Aussi la généralisation des émetteurs-récepteurs large-bande implique l’intégration de solutions sur une technologie silicium CMOS afin que leur cout soit compatible avec une application grand public. Si l’intégration massive des traitements numériques est facilitée par les dernières technologies CMOS, la fonction de conversion analogique-numérique est quant à elle plus difficile. En effet, afin d’optimiser l’étage frontal analogique, le convertisseur analogique-numérique (CAN) doit répondre à des contraintes très fortes en termes de largeur de bande (de l’ordre du GHz) et de résolution (de 10 à 14bits). Les convertisseurs analogique-numérique basés sur l’entrelacement temporel (CAN-ET) connaissent un essor remarquable car ce sont aujourd’hui les seuls à pouvoir répondre aux deux contraintes énoncées ci-dessus. Cependant, cette structure de CAN reste sensible aux défauts d’appariement entre ses différentes voies de conversion et voit ses performances limitées par la présence de raies parasites liées à des erreurs statiques (offset et gain) et dynamiques (skew et bande passante). Pour réduire l’impact des erreurs dynamiques, nous avons implémenté une calibration mixte en technologie FD-SOI 28nm. Dans une première partie, un état de l’art portant sur les différentes techniques de minimisation et de compensations analogiques des erreurs de skew et bande passante est réalisé. A partir de cette étude, nous proposons différentes techniques analogiques pour compenser les d´esappariements de bande passante et de skew. Pour compenser le skew, nous profitons des avantages de la technologie FD-SOI en modulant fortement la tension de la face arrière d’un ou plusieurs transistor(s) d’ échantillonnage. Concernant l’erreur de bande passante, nous proposons d’ajuster la résistance équivalente du T/H en adaptant la résistance à l’état passant des transistors d’échantillonnage de cinq manières différentes. Pour définir parmi toutes les compensations proposées celle qui est la plus adaptée à nos besoins, nous comparons différents critères de performance. Après avoir identifié la meilleure compensation de skew et de bande passante, nous avons, dans une dernière partie, implémenté une calibration mixte des erreurs statiques et dynamiques o`u l’estimation numérique est basée sur la méthode des Moindres Carrés. / Data transmission requirements are ever more stringent, with respect to more throughput, less power consumption and reduced cost. The cable TV market is where broadband transceivers must continuously innovate to meet these requirements. In these transceivers, the analog front-end part must be adapted to meet the increasingly tighter specifications of the newest standards. A key bottleneck is the Analogto- Digital Converter (ADC), which must reach a sampling rate of several Gigasamples per second at effective conversion resolutions in the range of 10 to 14 bits. Among the possible choices, converters based on Time-Interleaving (TI-ADC) are experiencing remarkable growth, and today they appear to be the best candidates to rmeet the two constraints set out above. However, TI-ADCs are hampered by mismatches between its different conversion channels, which result in degraded performance due to the appearance of mismatch spurs in the frequency domain, arising both from static errors (gain and offset mismatch) and dynamic (skew and bandwidth) errors. To reduce these errors, we have investigated a mixeddomain calibration strategy for TI-ADCS in 28nm FDSOI technology. We strongly focused the analog compensation of dynamic errors. This report begins with a review of the state-of-theart w.r.t. the mismatch reduction and analog compensation techniques for both dynamic errors. Based on these results, we then introduce a variety of analog techniques aimed at compensating the bandwidth and skew mismatches. In order to compensate for the skew, we make the most of the FD-SOI technology by tightly regulating the voltage of the back gate of one or several sampling transistors. For the bandwidth error, we recommend that the T/H equivalent resistor be adjusted, adapting the on-resistor of the sampling transistors using up to five different techniques. Once the most appropriate skew and bandwidth compensations were identified, we ultimately implemented a mixed calibration of static and dynamic errors along with a digital calculation based upon the "Least- Squares" method.
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Optimisation de blocs constitutifs d'un convertisseur A/N pipeline entechnologie CMOS 0.18 µm pour utilisation en environnement spatial / Optimization of building blocks of a pipeline ADC in CMOS 0.18µm technology for space applicationsPerbet, Lucas 26 April 2017 (has links)
L’imagerie constitue un axe majeur de l’exploration de l’univers et de la Terre depuis l’espace, que l’on se trouve dans le domaine du visible ou non. Ainsi dans le domaine spatial, les données sont le plus souvent récupérées par un capteur CCD (Charge-Coupled Device, ou Dispositif à Transfert de Charge (DTC)) qui fournit des tensions analogiques vers un convertisseur analogique-numérique (CAN), dont la sortie sera transmise à une chaîne de traitement, puis envoyée sur terre. Ainsi, les CAN sont des éléments clés dans l’imagerie par satellite. De leur précision et de leur vitesse va dépendre la qualité de la représentativité de la chaîne de signaux binaires. Il est donc crucial de réaliser une conversion de données de grande qualité (vitesse, précision) tout en s’assurant de la résistance du CAN à l’environnement radiatif. L’objectif de cette thèse est d’améliorer la robustesse à l’environnement spatial, tout en optimisant les performances, de plusieurs fonctions élémentaires d’un convertisseur analogique-numérique de type pipeline 14bits,5MS/s, réalisées en technologie XFAB 0,18µm. Les trois fonctions ciblées sont les interrupteurs (notamment la résolution des problèmes liés au phénomène d’injection de charges en environnement spatial), les comparateurs (durcissement) et l’amplificateur à capacités commutées (amélioration du gain par une technique prédictive sans pénaliser la puissance consommée). / Imaging is a major issue in the observation of the Universe and the Earth from space, whether in the visible domain or not. Thus, in the spatial field, data is often gathered by a CCD (charge-Coupled Device) sensor, that supplies analog voltages to an Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC), which outputs will be delivered to a processing chain, and then sent to earth. Consequently, ADCs are key elements in satellite imaging. Their precision and speed will indeed define the quality and the representativeness of the binary signal. It is then crucial to perform a high quality (speed & precision) conversion of the data, while making sure that the ADC can cope with the harsh irradiative environment. The purpose of this thesis is to improve the robustness to the space environment (hardening), while optimizing the performances, of several elementary devices that compose a 14 bits, 5MS/s pipeline ADC, made with the XFAB 180nm technology. The three targeted functions are the switches (especially the problems linked to coping with the charge injection problems in a space environment), the comparators (hardening) and the switched-capacitor amplifier (gain boosting through a predictive architecture with no penalty on the power consumption).
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Design and Simulation of a Temperature-Insensitive Rail-to-Rail Comparator for Analog-to-Digital Converter ApplicationKollarits, Matthew David 18 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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