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Mixed signal design flow, a mixed signal PLL case studyShariat Yazdi, Ramin January 2001 (has links)
Mixed-signal designs are becoming more and more complex every day. In order to adapt to the new market requirements, a formal process for design and verification of mixed signal systems i. e. top-down design and bottom-up verification methodology is required. This methodology has already been established for digital design. The goal of this research is to propose a new design methodology for mixed signal systems. In the first two chapters of this thesis, the need for a mixed signal design flow based on top-down design methodology will be discussed. The proposed design flow is based on behavioral modeling of the mixed signal system using one of the mixed signal behavioral modeling languages. These models can be used for design and verification through different steps of the design from system level modeling to final physical design. The other advantage of the proposed flow is analog and digital co-design. In the remaining chapters of this thesis, the proposed design flow was verified by designing an 800 MHz mixed signal PLL. The PLL uses a charge pump phase frequency detector, a single capacitor loop filter, and a feed forward error correction architecture using an active damping control circuit instead of passive resistor in loop filter. The design was done in 0. 18- <i>??</i> m CMOS process technology.
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Nyquist-Rate Switched-Capacitor Analog-to-Digital ConvertersLarsson, Andreas 1978- 14 March 2013 (has links)
The miniaturization and digitization of modern microelectronic systems have made Analog-to-Digital converters (ADC) key building components in many applications. Internet and entertainment technologies demand higher and higher performance from the hardware components in many communication and multimedia systems, but at the same time increased mobility demands less and less power consumption. Many applications, such as instrumentation, video, radar and communications, require very high accuracy and speed and with resolutions up to 16 bits and sampling rates in the 100s of MHz, pipelined ADCs are very suitable for such purposes. Resolutions above 10 bits often require very high power consumption and silicon area if no error correction technique is employed. Calibration relaxes the accuracy requirement of the individual building blocks of the ADC and enables power and area savings. Digital calibration is preferred over analog calibration due to higher robustness and accuracy. Furthermore, the microprocessors that process the digital information from the ADCs have constantly reduced cost and power consumption and improved performance due to technology scaling and innovative microprocessor architectures.
The work in this dissertation presents a novel digital background calibration technique for high-speed, high-resolution pipelined ADCs. The technique is implemented in a 14 bit, 100 MS/s pipelined ADC fabricated in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) 0.13µm Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) digital technology. The prototype ADC achieves better than 11.5 bits linearity at 100 MS/s and achieves a best-in-class figure of merit of 360 fJ/conversion-step. The core ADC has a power consumption of 105 mW and occupies an active area of 1.25 mm^2.
The work in this dissertation also presents a low-power, 8-bit algorithmic ADC. This ADC reduces power consumption at system level by minimizing voltage reference generation and ADC input capacitance. This ADC is implemented in International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) 90nm digital CMOS technology and achieves around 7.5 bits linearity at 0.25 MS/s with a power consumption of 300 µW and an active area of 0.27 mm^2.
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Mixed signal design flow, a mixed signal PLL case studyShariat Yazdi, Ramin January 2001 (has links)
Mixed-signal designs are becoming more and more complex every day. In order to adapt to the new market requirements, a formal process for design and verification of mixed signal systems i. e. top-down design and bottom-up verification methodology is required. This methodology has already been established for digital design. The goal of this research is to propose a new design methodology for mixed signal systems. In the first two chapters of this thesis, the need for a mixed signal design flow based on top-down design methodology will be discussed. The proposed design flow is based on behavioral modeling of the mixed signal system using one of the mixed signal behavioral modeling languages. These models can be used for design and verification through different steps of the design from system level modeling to final physical design. The other advantage of the proposed flow is analog and digital co-design. In the remaining chapters of this thesis, the proposed design flow was verified by designing an 800 MHz mixed signal PLL. The PLL uses a charge pump phase frequency detector, a single capacitor loop filter, and a feed forward error correction architecture using an active damping control circuit instead of passive resistor in loop filter. The design was done in 0. 18- <i>µ</i> m CMOS process technology.
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Analog Baseband Filters and Mixed Signal Circuits for Broadband Receiver SystemsKulkarni, Raghavendra Laxman 2011 December 1900 (has links)
Data transfer rates of communication systems continue to rise fueled by aggressive demand for voice, video and Internet data. Device scaling enabled by modern lithography has paved way for System-on-Chip solutions integrating compute intensive digital signal processing. This trend coupled with demand for low power, battery-operated consumer devices offers extensive research opportunities in analog and mixed-signal designs that enable modern communication systems.
The first part of the research deals with broadband wireless receivers. With an objective to gain insight, we quantify the impact of undesired out-band blockers on analog baseband in a broadband radio. We present a systematic evaluation of the dynamic range requirements at the baseband and A/D conversion boundary. A prototype UHF receiver designed using RFCMOS 0.18[mu]m technology to support this research integrates a hybrid continuous- and discrete-time analog baseband along with the RF front-end. The chip consumes 120mW from a 1.8V/2.5V dual supply and achieves a noise figure of 7.9dB, an IIP3 of -8dBm (+2dbm) at maximum gain (at 9dB RF attenuation).
High linearity active RC filters are indispensable in wireless radios. A novel feed-forward OTA applicable to active RC filters in analog baseband is presented.
Simulation results from the chip prototype designed in RFCMOS 0.18[mu]m technology show an improvement in the out-band linearity performance that translates to increased dynamic range in the presence of strong adjacent blockers.
The second part of the research presents an adaptive clock-recovery system suitable for high-speed wireline transceivers. The main objective is to improve the jitter-tracking and jitter-filtering trade-off in serial link clock-recovery applications. A digital state-machine that enables the proposed mixed-signal adaptation solution to achieve this objective is presented. The advantages of the proposed mixed-signal solution operating at 10Gb/s are supported by experimental results from the prototype in RFCMOS 0.18[mu]m technology.
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Application of model driven architecture design methodologies to mixed-signal system design projectsFisher, John Sheridan 14 July 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Layout-accurate Ultra-fast System-level Design Exploration Through Verilog-amsZheng, Geng 05 1900 (has links)
This research addresses problems in designing analog and mixed-signal (AMS) systems by bridging the gap between system-level and circuit-level simulation by making simulations fast like system-level and accurate like circuit-level. The tools proposed include metamodel integrated Verilog-AMS based design exploration flows. The research involves design centering, metamodel generation flows for creating efficient behavioral models, and Verilog-AMS integration techniques for model realization. The core of the proposed solution is transistor-level and layout-level metamodeling and their incorporation in Verilog-AMS. Metamodeling is used to construct efficient and layout-accurate surrogate models for AMS system building blocks. Verilog-AMS, an AMS hardware description language, is employed to build surrogate model implementations that can be simulated with industrial standard simulators. The case-study circuits and systems include an operational amplifier (OP-AMP), a voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO), a charge-pump phase-locked loop (PLL), and a continuous-time delta-sigma modulator (DSM). The minimum and maximum error rates of the proposed OP-AMP model are 0.11 % and 2.86 %, respectively. The error rates for the PLL lock time and power estimation are 0.7 % and 3.0 %, respectively. The OP-AMP optimization using the proposed approach is ~17000× faster than the transistor-level model based approach. The optimization achieves a ~4× power reduction for the OP-AMP design. The PLL parasitic-aware optimization achieves a 10× speedup and a 147 µW power reduction. Thus the experimental results validate the effectiveness of the proposed solution.
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Architecture, Modeling, and Analysis of a Plasma Impedance ProbeJayaram, Magathi 01 December 2010 (has links)
Variations in ionospheric plasma density can cause large amplitude and phase changes in the radio waves passing through this region. Ionospheric weather can have detrimental effects on several communication systems, including radars, navigation systems such as the Global Positioning Sytem (GPS), and high-frequency communications. As a result, creating models of the ionospheric density is of paramount interest to scientists working in the field of satellite communication.
Numerous empirical and theoretical models have been developed to study the upper atmosphere climatology and weather. Multiple measurements of plasma density over a region are of marked importance while creating these models. The lack of spatially distributed observations in the upper atmosphere is currently a major limitation in space weather research. A constellation of CubeSat platforms would be ideal to take such distributed measurements. The use of miniaturized instruments that can be accommodated on small satellites, such as CubeSats, would be key to acheiving these science goals for space weather.
The accepted instrumentation techniques for measuring the electron density are the Langmuir probes and the Plasma Impedance Probe (PIP). While Langmuir probes are able to provide higher resolution measurements of relative electron density, the Plasma Impedance Probes provide absolute electron density measurements irrespective of spacecraft charging.
The central goal of this dissertation is to develop an integrated architecture for the PIP that will enable space weather research from CubeSat platforms. The proposed PIP chip integrates all of the major analog and mixed-signal components needed to perform swept-frequency impedance measurements. The design's primary innovation is the integration of matched Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADC) on a single chip for sampling the probes current and voltage signals. A Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) is performed by an off-chip Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) to compute the probes impedance. This provides a robust solution for determining the plasma impedance accurately.
The major analog errors and parametric variations affecting the PIP instrument and its effect on the accuracy and precision of the impedance measurement are also studied. The system clock is optimized in order to have a high performance ADC. In this research, an alternative clock generation scheme using C-elements is described to reduce the timing jitter and reference spurs in phase locked loops. While the jitter performance and reference spur reduction is comparable with prior state-of-the-art work, the proposed Phase Locked Loop (PLL) consumes less power with smaller area than previous designs.
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Formal Verification Of Analog And Mixed Signal Designs Using Simulation TracesLata, Kusum 01 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The conventional approach to validate the analog and mixed signal designs utilizes extensive SPICE-level simulations. The main challenge in this approach is to know when all important corner cases have been simulated. An alternate approach is to use the formal verification techniques. Formal verification techniques have gained wide spread popularity in the digital design domain; but in case of analog and mixed signal designs, a large number of test scenarios need to be designed to generate sufficient simulation traces to test out all the specified system behaviours. Analog and mixed signal designs can be formally modeled as hybrid systems and therefore techniques used for formal analysis and verification of hybrid systems can be applied to the analog and mixed signal designs.
Generally, formal verification tools for hybrid systems work at the abstract level where we model the systems in terms of differential equations or algebraic equations. However the analog and mixed signal system designers are very comfortable in designing the circuits at the transistor level. To bridge the gap between abstraction level verification and the designs validation which has been implemented at the transistor level, the very important issue we need to address is: Can we formally verify the circuits at the transistor level itself? For this we have proposed a framework for doing the formal verification of analog and mixed signal designs using SPICE simulation traces in one of the hybrid systems formal verification tools (i.e. Checkmate from CMU). An extension to a formal verification approach of hybrid systems is proposed to verify analog and mixed signal (AMS) designs. AMS designs can be formally modeled as hybrid systems and therefore lend themselves to the formal analysis and verification techniques applied to hybrid systems. The proposed approach employs simulation traces obtained from an actual design implementation of AMS circuit blocks (for example, in the form of SPICE netlists) to carry out formal analysis and verification. This enables the same platform used for formally validating an abstract model of an AMS design to be also used for validating its different refinements and design implementation, thereby providing a simple route to formal verification at different levels of implementation.
Our approach has been illustrated through the case studies using simulation traces form the different frameworks i.e. Simulink/Stateflow framework and the SPICE simulation traces. We demonstrate the feasibility of our approach around the Checkmate and the case studies for hybrid systems and the analog and mixed signal designs.
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Etude et développement d'un amplificateur audio de classe D intégré haute performance et basse consommation. / Study and design of a digital audio class D amplifierHardy, Emmanuel 27 June 2013 (has links)
De nombreux dispositifs embarqués récents comme les téléphones portables, les GPS ou encore les consoles de jeu, possèdent un ou des haut-parleurs, chacun étant piloté par un amplificateur audio sur circuit intégré. De tels amplificateurs audio doivent répondre le mieux possible à quatre contraintes : une qualité audio satisfaisante, une immunité aux perturbations induites par le système, une faible consommation et une surface de silicium minimale. Ce travail de thèse sous contrat CIFRE a pour origine la création de l’entreprise Primachip en mai 2009 par Christian Dufaza et Hassan Ihs. Cette startup a été bâtie sur une architecture innovante d’amplificateur audio de classe D intégré. Son originalité repose sur le principe de rétroaction partielle qui s’applique à une boucle contenant un modulateur numérique Delta Sigma (ΔΣ) qui pilote l’étage de puissance et un convertisseur analogique-numérique (ADC) effectuant la rétroaction. Cela permet d’obtenir la stabilité de cette boucle tout en offrant une excellente réjection des bruits de l’étage de puissance. Un prototype sur silicium de l’architecture d’amplificateur de classe D numérique a été conçu et fabriqué. Un nouvel ADC ΔΣ temps continu a été développé pour ce prototype, afin d’obtenir des performances supérieures ou égales à l’état de l’art. Les résultats obtenus sur le circuit se sont révélés encourageants, bien que toutes les spécifications n’aient pas été atteintes. L’analyse des erreurs de ce premier circuit doit permettre la réalisation d’un amplificateur intégré exploitant au mieux cette architecture de classe D numérique. / Most current embedded devices, such as smartphones, GPS or portable consoles, feature one speaker or more, those speakers being driven by an integrated audio amplifier. This type of amplifier must meet four specifications: an adequate audio quality, to be immune to system disturbances, low power consumption and the smallest silicon area. This work takes its origin from the creation of Primachip in May 2009 by Christian Dufaza and Hassan Ihs. The aim of this startup was to develop and sell an innovative audio class-D amplifier for mobile market: the digital class-D concept. A partnership with the IM2NP laboratory was decided to propose a PhD topic under CIFRE contract (PhD in an industrial environment), in order to study and improve the amplifier architecture. Its originality is in the partial feedback concept which applies to a loop made of a digital ΔΣ modulator driving the power stage, with an analogue-to-digital converter (ADC) in the feedback path. It makes it possible to achieve stability while offering an outstanding power supply rejection. An integrated prototype of the class-D amplifier was designed, fabricated and evaluated. A new continuous-time ΔΣ ADC has been added to enable the digital class-D loop to achieve performances superior or equal to state of the art. The circuit measurement results were encouraging, although not ideal. The analysis of the prototype errors was performed. The conclusions should allow the design of an integrated audio amplifier making the best of the digital class-D architecture.
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Modelling and Analysis of Substrate Noise in Delta Sigma ADCsDarda, Abu January 2017 (has links)
The rapid development in the semiconductors industry has enabled the placement of multiple chips on a single die. This has helped boost the functionality of modernday application specific integrated circuits (ASICs). Thus, digital circuits are being increasingly placed along-side analog and RF circuits in what are known as mixed signal circuits. As a result, the noise couplings through the substrate now have an increased role in mixed-signal ASIC design. Therefore, there is a need to study the effects of substrate noise and include them in the traditional design methodology. ∆Σ analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are a perfect example of digital integration in traditionally analog circuits. ADCs, used to interface digital circuits to an analog world, are indispensable in mixed-signal systems and therefore set an interesting case study. A ∆Σ ADC is used in this thesis to study the effects of substrate noise. A background study is presented in the thesis to better understand ∆Σ modulators and substrate couplings. An intensive theoretical background on generation, propagation and reception of substrate noise is presented in light of existing researches. System and behavioural level models are proposed to include the effects of substrate noise in the design stages. A maximum decay of 10dB is seen due to injection of substrate noise system level simulations while a decay of 12dB is seen in behavioural simulations. A solution is proposed using controlled clock tree delays to overcome the effects of substrate noise. The solution is verified on both the system and behavioural levels. The noise models used to drive the studies can further be used in mixed-signal systems to design custom solutions. / Den snabba utvecklingen inom halvledarindustrin har möjliggjort placering av flera marker på en enda dö. Detta har hjälpt till att öka funktionaliteten hos moderna applikationsspecifika integrerade kretsar. Sålunda placeras digitala kretsar i allt högre grad parallella och RF-kretsar i de så kallade blandade signalkretsarna. Som ett resultat har bullerkopplingarna genom substratet nu en ökad roll i ASICdesign med blandad signal. Därför finns det behov av att studera effekterna av substratbuller och inkludera dem i den traditionella designmetoden. ∆Σ analog-till-digital omvandlare är ett perfekt exempel på digital integration i traditionellt analoga kretsar. ADC, som används för att gränssnitta digitala kretsar till en analog värld, är oumbärliga i blandningssignalsystem och är därför en intressant fallstudie. A ∆Σ arkitektur används i denna avhandling för att studera effekterna av substratstörning. En bakgrundsstudie presenteras i avhandlingen för att bättre förstå ∆Σ modulatorer och substratkopplingar. En intensiv teoretisk bakgrund på generering, förökning och mottagande av substratbuller presenteras i ljuset av befintliga undersökningar. Systemoch beteendemodellmodeller föreslås inkludera effekterna av substratbuller i konstruktionsstadiet. Ett maximalt förfall på 10dB ses på grund av injektion av substratbuller på systemnivå medan ett förfall av 12dB ses i beteende simuleringar.En lösning föreslås med hjälp av kontrollerade klockträdfördröjningar för att övervinna effekterna av substratbuller. Lösningen är verifierad på både system och beteendenivåer. De brusmodeller som används för att driva studierna kan vidare användas i blandningssignalsystem för att designa anpassade lösningar.
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