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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Desenvolvimento de um sintetizador de freqüência de baixo custo em tecnologia CMOS

Oliveira, Vlademir de Jesus Silva [UNESP] 25 November 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:30:32Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2009-11-25Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T21:01:20Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 oliveira_vjs_dr_ilha.pdf: 2584742 bytes, checksum: ae7b3113a196a5051a808dbb371dece4 (MD5) / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) / Nesta tese, propõe-se um sintetizador de freqüência baseado em phase locked loops (PLL) usando uma arquitetura que utiliza um dual-path loop filter, constituído de componentes passivos e um integrador digital. A proposta é empregar técnicas digitais, para reduzir o custo da implementação do sintetizador de freqüência, e flexibilizar o projeto do loop filter, para possibilitar que a arquitetura opere em uma faixa de freqüência larga de operação e com redução de tons espúrios. O loop filter digital é constituído de um contador crescente/ decrescente cujo clock é proveniente da amostragem da diferença de fase de entrada. As técnicas digitais aplicadas ao loop filter se baseiam em alterações da operação do contador, em tempos pré-estabelecidos, os quais são controlados digitalmente. Essas técnicas possibilitam reduzir o tempo de estabelecimento do PLL ao mesmo tempo em que problemas de estabilidade são resolvidos. No desenvolvimento da técnica de dual-path foi realizado o estudo de sua estabilidade, primeiramente, considerando a aproximação do PLL para um sistema linear e depois usando controle digital. Nesse estudo foram deduzidas as equações do sistema, no domínio contínuo e discreto, tanto para o projeto da estabilidade, quanto para descrever o comportamento do PLL. A metodologia top-down é usada no projeto do circuito integrado. As simulações em nível de sistema são usadas, primeiramente, para as criações das técnicas e posteriormente para a verificação do seu comportamento, usando modelos calibrados com os blocos projetados em nível de transistor. O circuito integrado é proposto para ser aplicado em identificação por rádio freqüência (RFID) na banda de UHF (Ultra High Frequency), usando multi-standard, e deve operar na faixa de 850 MHz a 1010 MHz. O sintetizador de freqüência foi projetado na tecnologia CMOS... / In this thesis, a frequency synthesizers phase locked loops (PLL) based with an architecture that uses a dual-path loop filter consisting of passive components and a digital integrator are proposed. The objective is to employ digital techniques to reduce the implementation cost and get loop filter design flexibility to enable the architecture to have a large tuning range operation and spurious reduction. The digital loop filter is based in an up/down counter where the phase difference is sampled to generate the clock of the counter. The techniques applied in the digital path are based in digitally controlled changes in the counter operation in predefined time points. These techniques provide PLL settling time reductions whiling the stability issues are solved. The stability study of the proposed dual path has been developed. First the linear system approximation for the PLL has been assumed and then employing digital control. The continuous and discrete time equations of architecture were derived in that study applied to stability design as well as to describe the architecture behavior. The top-down methodology has been applied to the integrated circuit design. In the beginning, the system level simulations are used for the techniques creation and then the behavioral models that were calibrated with transistor level blocks are simulated. The application of the circuit is proposed to Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) using UHF (Ultra High Frequency) band for multi-standards application and will operate in range of 850 MHz to 1010 MHz. The proposed frequency synthesizer has been designed in the AMS 0.35 μm CMOS technology with 2V power supply. A 300 μs of settling time and 140 Hz of resolution was obtained in simulations. The proposed frequency synthesizer have low complexity and shown a reference noise suppression about 45.6 dB better than the conventional architecture
52

Oscillation Control in CMOS Phase-Locked Loops

Terlemez, Bortecene 22 November 2004 (has links)
Recent advances in voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) design and the trend of CMOS processing indicate that the oscillator control is quickly becoming one of the forefront problems in high-frequency and low-phase-noise phase-locked loop (PLL) design. This control centric study explores the limitations and challenges in high-performance analog charge-pump PLLs when they are extended to multiple gigahertz applications. Several problems with performance enhancement and precise oscillator control using analog circuits in low-voltage submicron CMOS processes, coupled with the fact that analog (or semi-digital) oscillators having various advantages over their digitally controlled counterparts, prompted the proposal of the digitally-controlled phase-locked loop. This research, then, investigates a class of otherwise analog PLLs that use a digital control path for driving a current-controlled oscillator. For this purpose, a novel method for control digitization is described where trains of pulses code the phase/frequency comparison information rather than the duration of the pulses: Pulse-Stream Coded Phase-Locked Loop (psc-PLL). This work addresses issues significant to the design of future PLLs through a comparative study of the proposed digital control path topology and improved cutting-edge charge-pump PLLs.
53

Electromagnetic Band Gap (EBG) synthesis and its application in analog-to-digital converter load boards

Kim, Tae Hong 06 December 2007 (has links)
With increase in frequency and convergence toward mixed signal systems, supplying stable voltages to integrated circuits and blocking noise coupling in the systems are major problems. Electromagnetic band gap (EBG) structures have been in the limelight for power/ground noise isolation in mixed signal applications due to their capability to suppress unwanted electromagnetic mode transmission in certain frequency bands. The EBG structures have proven effective in isolating the power/ground noise in systems that use a common power supply. However, while the EBG structures have the potential to present many advantages in noise suppression applications, there is no method in the prior art that enables reliable and efficient synthesis of these EBG structures. Therefore, in this research, a novel EBG synthesis method for mixed signal applications is presented. For one-dimensional periodic structures, three new approaches such as current path approximation method, border to border radius, power loss method have been introduced and combined for synthesis. For two-dimensional EBG structures, a novel EBG synthesis method using genetic algorithm (GA) has been presented. In this method, genetic algorithm (GA) is utilized as a solution-searching technique. Synthesis procedure has been automated by combining GA with multilayer finite-difference method and dispersion diagram analysis method. As a real application for EBG structures, EBG structures have been applied to a GHz ADC load board design for power/ground noise suppression.
54

Desenvolvimento de um sintetizador de freqüência de baixo custo em tecnologia CMOS /

Oliveira, Vlademir de Jesus Silva. January 2009 (has links)
Orientador: Nobuo Oki / Banca: Suely Cunha Amaro Mantovani / Banca: Jozué Vieira Filho / Banca: Marcelo Arturo Jara Perez / Banca: Paulo Augusto Dal fabbro / Resumo: Nesta tese, propõe-se um sintetizador de freqüência baseado em phase locked loops (PLL) usando uma arquitetura que utiliza um dual-path loop filter, constituído de componentes passivos e um integrador digital. A proposta é empregar técnicas digitais, para reduzir o custo da implementação do sintetizador de freqüência, e flexibilizar o projeto do loop filter, para possibilitar que a arquitetura opere em uma faixa de freqüência larga de operação e com redução de tons espúrios. O loop filter digital é constituído de um contador crescente/ decrescente cujo clock é proveniente da amostragem da diferença de fase de entrada. As técnicas digitais aplicadas ao loop filter se baseiam em alterações da operação do contador, em tempos pré-estabelecidos, os quais são controlados digitalmente. Essas técnicas possibilitam reduzir o tempo de estabelecimento do PLL ao mesmo tempo em que problemas de estabilidade são resolvidos. No desenvolvimento da técnica de dual-path foi realizado o estudo de sua estabilidade, primeiramente, considerando a aproximação do PLL para um sistema linear e depois usando controle digital. Nesse estudo foram deduzidas as equações do sistema, no domínio contínuo e discreto, tanto para o projeto da estabilidade, quanto para descrever o comportamento do PLL. A metodologia top-down é usada no projeto do circuito integrado. As simulações em nível de sistema são usadas, primeiramente, para as criações das técnicas e posteriormente para a verificação do seu comportamento, usando modelos calibrados com os blocos projetados em nível de transistor. O circuito integrado é proposto para ser aplicado em identificação por rádio freqüência (RFID) na banda de UHF (Ultra High Frequency), usando multi-standard, e deve operar na faixa de 850 MHz a 1010 MHz. O sintetizador de freqüência foi projetado na tecnologia CMOS... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstract: In this thesis, a frequency synthesizers phase locked loops (PLL) based with an architecture that uses a dual-path loop filter consisting of passive components and a digital integrator are proposed. The objective is to employ digital techniques to reduce the implementation cost and get loop filter design flexibility to enable the architecture to have a large tuning range operation and spurious reduction. The digital loop filter is based in an up/down counter where the phase difference is sampled to generate the clock of the counter. The techniques applied in the digital path are based in digitally controlled changes in the counter operation in predefined time points. These techniques provide PLL settling time reductions whiling the stability issues are solved. The stability study of the proposed dual path has been developed. First the linear system approximation for the PLL has been assumed and then employing digital control. The continuous and discrete time equations of architecture were derived in that study applied to stability design as well as to describe the architecture behavior. The top-down methodology has been applied to the integrated circuit design. In the beginning, the system level simulations are used for the techniques creation and then the behavioral models that were calibrated with transistor level blocks are simulated. The application of the circuit is proposed to Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) using UHF (Ultra High Frequency) band for multi-standards application and will operate in range of 850 MHz to 1010 MHz. The proposed frequency synthesizer has been designed in the AMS 0.35 μm CMOS technology with 2V power supply. A 300 μs of settling time and 140 Hz of resolution was obtained in simulations. The proposed frequency synthesizer have low complexity and shown a reference noise suppression about 45.6 dB better than the conventional architecture / Doutor
55

A Mixed-Signal Low-Noise Sigma-Delta Interface IC for Integrated Sub-Micro-Gravity Capacitive SOI Accelerometers

Vakili-Amini, Babak 12 January 2006 (has links)
This dissertation presents the design and development of a mixed-signal low noise second-order integrated circuit (IC) for the open-loop and closed-loop operation of integrated capacitive micro- and nano-gravity accelerometers. The micromechanical accelerometers are fabricated in thick (less than 100 m) silicon-on-insulator (SOI) substrates. The IC provides the 1-bit digital output stream and has the versatility of interfacing sensors with different sensitivities while maintaining minimum power consumption (less than 5 mW) and maximum dynamic range (90 dB). A fully-differential sampled-data scheme is deployed with the ability of low-frequency noise reduction through the use of correlated double sampling (CDS) scheme. In this work, the measured resolution of the closed-loop CMOS-SOI accelerometer system, in the presence of high background accelerations, is in the micro-g (g: gravity) range. In this design, a second-order SC modulator is cascaded with the accelerometer and the front-end amplifier. The accelerometer operates in air and is designed for non-peaking response with a BW-3dB of 500 Hz. A 22 dB improvement in noise and hence dynamic range is achieved with a sampling clock of 40 kHz corresponding to a low oversampling ratio (OSR) of 40. The interface IC consumed a current of 1.5 mA from a supply of 3 V.
56

Design and characterization of BiCMOS mixed-signal circuits and devices for extreme environment applications

Cardoso, Adilson Silva 12 January 2015 (has links)
State-of-the-art SiGe BiCMOS technologies leverage the maturity of deep-submicron silicon CMOS processing with bandgap-engineered SiGe HBTs in a single platform that is suitable for a wide variety of high performance and highly-integrated applications (e.g., system-on-chip (SOC), system-in-package (SiP)). Due to their bandgap-engineered base, SiGe HBTs are also naturally suited for cryogenic electronics and have the potential to replace the costly de facto technologies of choice (e.g., Gallium-Arsenide (GaAs) and Indium-Phosphide (InP)) in many cryogenic applications such as radio astronomy. This work investigates the response of mixed-signal circuits (both RF and analog circuits) when operating in extreme environments, in particular, at cryogenic temperatures and in radiation-rich environments. The ultimate goal of this work is to attempt to fill the existing gap in knowledge on the cryogenic and radiation response (both single event transients (SETs) and total ionization dose (TID)) of specific RF and analog circuit blocks (i.e., RF switches and voltage references). The design approach for different RF switch topologies and voltage references circuits are presented. Standalone Field Effect Transistors (FET) and SiGe HBTs test structures were also characterized and the results are provided to aid in the analysis and understanding of the underlying mechanisms that impact the circuits' response. Radiation mitigation strategies to counterbalance the damaging effects are investigated. A comprehensive study on the impact of cryogenic temperatures on the RF linearity of SiGe HBTs fabricated in a new 4th-generation, 90 nm SiGe BiCMOS technology is also presented.

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