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High-accuracy circuits for on-chip capacitor ratio testing and sensor readoutWang, Bo, 1970- 06 November 1998 (has links)
The precise measurement of a capacitance difference or ratio in a digital form is
very important for capacitive sensors, for CMOS process characterization as well as for the
realization of precise switched-capacitor data converters, amplifiers and other circuits
utilizing ratioed capacitors. This thesis introduces design techniques for on-chip capacitor
ratio testing and sensor readout that utilize sigma-delta modulation and integrate the sensor
capacitors into the modulator. Several single-ended circuits are introduced, and the
correlated-double-sampling (CDS) technique is used in the circuits to reduce the non-ideal
effects of opamps. Several simple calibration schemes for clock-feedthrough cancellation
are also introduced and discussed. A fully-differential implementation is also described and
various common-mode feedback schemes are discussed and analyzed. Simulation and
experimental results show that these circuits can provide extremely accurate results even in
the presence of non-ideal circuit effects such as finite opamp gain, opamp input offset and
noise, and clock-feedthrough effect from the switches.
To verify the effectiveness of the circuits and simulations, two prototype chips containing
a single-ended realization and a fully-differential one were designed and fabricated
in a 1.2 ��m CMOS technology. Two off-chip mica capacitors were used in the test circuits,
and the measured results show that very accurate results can be obtained using these circuit
techniques even with off-chip noise coupling and large parasitic capacitances. / Graduation date: 1999
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Novel switched-capacitor circuits for delta-sigma modulatorsYesilyurt, Ayse Gul 14 March 1997 (has links)
Oversampled delta-sigma modulation is one of the widely used A/D conversion
techniques for narrow bandwidth signals. In this study several new lowpass and
bandpass delta-sigma modulator architectures as well as novel pseudo-N-path integrators
that can be used in implementing these architectures are proposed.
By using multiplexing techniques the new lowpass delta-sigma modulator
architectures exchange higher clock rates with hardware complexity. For a given
oversampling ratio (OSR), the multiplexed first-order delta-sigma modulator achieves a
higher resolution. Guaranteed stability is a very desirable feature of these structures.
The multi-loop delta-sigma modulator architecture similarly reduces the number of
integrators needed to achieve high-resolution conversion for a given OSR. To ensure
stability a quantizer with (N+1) bits must be used, where N is the number of loops, or in
other words, the order of the delta-sigma modulator. Digital correction or randomizing
techniques can be used to eliminate the performance reduction due to digital-to-analog-
(D/A) converter nonlinearity error [59], [64].
Bandpass delta-sigma modulators are useful for applications such as AM radio
receivers, spectrum analyzers, and digital wireless systems. Using z --> -z[superscript N] or z --> z[superscript N] mapping, a low pass delta-sigma modulator can be transformed to a bandpass one. One
of the methods to implement the loop filters in bandpass delta-sigma modulators is to use Pseudo-N-Path (PNP) switched-capacitor (SC) integrators. The advantage is that the center frequency occurs exactly at an integer division of the sampling frequency because of the number of physical paths. To achieve maximum resolution, integrators that do not suffer from clock feedthrough peaks are needed. The proposed differential and single-ended novel PNP integrators address this problem [76]. To keep the opamp specifications less stringent while achieving high resolution, these PNP integrators have been further improved with gain compensation techniques [53]. / Graduation date: 1997
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A 1-m W, 14-bit [sigma] [delta] A/D converter with 10-KHz conversion rateGupta, Shivani 24 February 1995 (has links)
Graduation date: 1995
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A switched-current bandpass delta-sigma modulatorDalal, Vineet R. 16 June 1993 (has links)
Graduation date: 1994
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Effects and compensation of the analog integrator nonidealities in dual-quantization delta-sigma modulatorsYang, Yaohua, 1969- 20 February 1993 (has links)
Graduation date: 1993
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A 43mW single-channel 4GS/s 4-bit flash ADC IN 0.18um CMOSSheikhaei, Samad 05 1900 (has links)
The continued speed improvement of serial links and appearance of new communication technologies, such as ultra wideband (UWB), have introduced increasing demands on the speed and power specifications of high speed low to medium resolution analog to digital converters (ADCs). While multi channel ADCs can achieve high speeds, they often require extensive and costly post fabrication calibration.
A single channel 4 bit flash ADC, suitable for abovementioned or similar applications, implemented entirely using current mode logic (CML) blocks, is presented. CML implementation allows for high sampling rates, while typically providing low power consumption at high speeds. To improve the conversion rate, both the analog (comparator array) and the digital (encoder) parts of the ADC are fully pipelined. Furthermore, the logic functions in the encoder are reformulated to reduce wire crossings and delay and to equalize the wires lengths in the layout. To keep the design simple, inductors are avoided. As a result, a compact design with small wire parasitics is achieved. Moreover, some geometric layout techniques, including a common centroid layout for the resistor ladder, are introduced to reduce the effect of mismatches to eliminate the use of digital calibration.
The ADC is designed and fabricated in 0.18um CMOS and operates at 4GS/s. It achieves an effective number of bits (ENOB) of 3.71 (3.14, 2.75) for a 10MHz (0.501GHz, 1.491GHz) signal sampled at 4GS/s (3GS/s, 3GS/s). Differential/integral nonlinearity (DNL/INL) errors are between +/-0.35LSB and +/-0.26LSB, respectively. The ADC consumes 43mW from a 1.8V supply and occupies 0.06mm2 active area.
Due to the use of CML circuits, the ADC achieves the highest speed reported for a single channel 4 bit ADC in a 0.18um CMOS technology. It also reports the best power performance among the 4-bit ADCs with similar or higher speeds. The active area is also among the smallest reported.
In addition, in this thesis, the signal to noise ratio (SNR) of an ADC is formulated in terms of its INL performance. The related formulas in the literature are not accurate for low resolution ADCs, and yet they do not take the input waveform into account. Two standard waveforms, ramp and sinusoid, are considered here. The SNR formulas are derived and confirmed by simulation results.
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High-Speed Analog-to-Digital Converters for Broadband ApplicationsIsmail, Ayman January 2007 (has links)
Flash Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs), targeting optical
communication standards, have been reported in SiGe BiCMOS
technology. CMOS implementation of such designs faces two
challenges. The first is to achieve a high sampling speed, given the
lower gain-bandwidth (lower ft) of CMOS technology. The second
challenge is to handle the wide bandwidth of the input signal with a
certain accuracy. Although the first problem can be relaxed by using
the time-interleaved architecture, the second problem remains as a
main obstacle to CMOS implementation. As a result, the feasibility
of the CMOS implementation of ADCs for such applications, or other
wide band applications, depends primarily on achieving a very small
input capacitance (large bandwidth) at the
desired accuracy.
In the flash architecture, the input capacitance is traded off for
the achievable accuracy. This tradeoff becomes tighter with
technology scaling. An effective way to ease this tradeoff is to use
resistive offset averaging. This permits the use of smaller area
transistors, leading to a reduction in the ADC input capacitance. In
addition, interpolation can be used to decrease the input
capacitance of flash ADCs. In an interpolating architecture, the
number of ADC input preamplifiers is reduced significantly, and a
resistor network interpolates
the missing zero-crossings needed for an N-bit conversion. The resistive network also averages
out the preamplifiers offsets. Consequently, an interpolating network works also as an averaging network.
The resistor network used for averaging or interpolation causes a
systematic non-linearity at the ADC transfer characteristics edges.
The common solution to this problem is to extend the preamplifiers
array beyond the input signal voltage range by using dummy
preamplifiers. However, this demands a corresponding extension of
the flash ADC reference-voltage resistor ladder. Since the voltage
headroom of the reference ladder is considered to be a main
bottleneck in the implementation of flash ADCs in deep-submicron
technologies with reduced supply voltage, extending the reference
voltage beyond the input voltage range is highly undesirable.
The principal objective of this thesis is to develop a new circuit
technique to enhance the bandwidth-accuracy product of flash ADCs.
Thus, first, a rigorous analysis of flash ADC architectures accuracy-bandwidth tradeoff is presented.
It is demonstrated that the interpolating architecture achieves a superior accuracy compared
to that of a full flash architecture for the same input capacitance, and hence would lead to
a higher bandwidth-accuracy product, especially in deep-submicron technologies that use low power supplies. Also, the
gain obtained, when interpolation is employed, is quantified. In addition, the limitations of a previous
claim, which suggests that an interpolating architecture is equivalent to an averaging
full flash architecture that trades off accuracy for the input capacitance, is presented. Secondly, a termination
technique for the averaging/interpolation network of flash ADC preamplifiers is devised. The proposed technique maintains the linearity of the ADC at the transfer
characteristics edges and cancels out the over-range voltage, consumed by the dummy preamplifiers. This makes flash ADCs more amenable for integration in deep-submicron CMOS technologies. In addition, the
elimination of this over-range voltage allows a larger
least-significant bit. As a result, a higher input referred offset
is tolerated, and a significant reductions in the ADC input
capacitance and
power dissipation are achieved at the same accuracy. Unlike a previous solution, the proposed
technique does not introduce negative transconductance at flash ADC preamplifiers array edges.
As a result, the offset averaging technique can be used efficiently.
To prove the resulting saving in the ADC input capacitance and power
dissipation that is attained by the proposed termination technique,
a 6-bit 1.6-GS/s flash ADC test chip is designed and implemented in
0.13-$\mu$m CMOS technology. The ADC consumes 180 mW from a 1.5-V
supply and achieves a Signal-to-Noise-plus-Distortion Ratio (SNDR)
of 34.5 dB and 30 dB at 50-MHz and 1450-MHz input signal frequency,
respectively. The measured peak Integral-Non-Linearity (INL) and
Differential-Non-Linearity (DNL) are 0.42 LSB and 0.49 LSB,
respectively.
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High-Speed Analog-to-Digital Converters for Broadband ApplicationsIsmail, Ayman January 2007 (has links)
Flash Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs), targeting optical
communication standards, have been reported in SiGe BiCMOS
technology. CMOS implementation of such designs faces two
challenges. The first is to achieve a high sampling speed, given the
lower gain-bandwidth (lower ft) of CMOS technology. The second
challenge is to handle the wide bandwidth of the input signal with a
certain accuracy. Although the first problem can be relaxed by using
the time-interleaved architecture, the second problem remains as a
main obstacle to CMOS implementation. As a result, the feasibility
of the CMOS implementation of ADCs for such applications, or other
wide band applications, depends primarily on achieving a very small
input capacitance (large bandwidth) at the
desired accuracy.
In the flash architecture, the input capacitance is traded off for
the achievable accuracy. This tradeoff becomes tighter with
technology scaling. An effective way to ease this tradeoff is to use
resistive offset averaging. This permits the use of smaller area
transistors, leading to a reduction in the ADC input capacitance. In
addition, interpolation can be used to decrease the input
capacitance of flash ADCs. In an interpolating architecture, the
number of ADC input preamplifiers is reduced significantly, and a
resistor network interpolates
the missing zero-crossings needed for an N-bit conversion. The resistive network also averages
out the preamplifiers offsets. Consequently, an interpolating network works also as an averaging network.
The resistor network used for averaging or interpolation causes a
systematic non-linearity at the ADC transfer characteristics edges.
The common solution to this problem is to extend the preamplifiers
array beyond the input signal voltage range by using dummy
preamplifiers. However, this demands a corresponding extension of
the flash ADC reference-voltage resistor ladder. Since the voltage
headroom of the reference ladder is considered to be a main
bottleneck in the implementation of flash ADCs in deep-submicron
technologies with reduced supply voltage, extending the reference
voltage beyond the input voltage range is highly undesirable.
The principal objective of this thesis is to develop a new circuit
technique to enhance the bandwidth-accuracy product of flash ADCs.
Thus, first, a rigorous analysis of flash ADC architectures accuracy-bandwidth tradeoff is presented.
It is demonstrated that the interpolating architecture achieves a superior accuracy compared
to that of a full flash architecture for the same input capacitance, and hence would lead to
a higher bandwidth-accuracy product, especially in deep-submicron technologies that use low power supplies. Also, the
gain obtained, when interpolation is employed, is quantified. In addition, the limitations of a previous
claim, which suggests that an interpolating architecture is equivalent to an averaging
full flash architecture that trades off accuracy for the input capacitance, is presented. Secondly, a termination
technique for the averaging/interpolation network of flash ADC preamplifiers is devised. The proposed technique maintains the linearity of the ADC at the transfer
characteristics edges and cancels out the over-range voltage, consumed by the dummy preamplifiers. This makes flash ADCs more amenable for integration in deep-submicron CMOS technologies. In addition, the
elimination of this over-range voltage allows a larger
least-significant bit. As a result, a higher input referred offset
is tolerated, and a significant reductions in the ADC input
capacitance and
power dissipation are achieved at the same accuracy. Unlike a previous solution, the proposed
technique does not introduce negative transconductance at flash ADC preamplifiers array edges.
As a result, the offset averaging technique can be used efficiently.
To prove the resulting saving in the ADC input capacitance and power
dissipation that is attained by the proposed termination technique,
a 6-bit 1.6-GS/s flash ADC test chip is designed and implemented in
0.13-$\mu$m CMOS technology. The ADC consumes 180 mW from a 1.5-V
supply and achieves a Signal-to-Noise-plus-Distortion Ratio (SNDR)
of 34.5 dB and 30 dB at 50-MHz and 1450-MHz input signal frequency,
respectively. The measured peak Integral-Non-Linearity (INL) and
Differential-Non-Linearity (DNL) are 0.42 LSB and 0.49 LSB,
respectively.
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A tri-mode sigma-delta modulator for wireless receivers /Tam, Yiu-Ming. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available in electronic version. Access restricted to campus users.
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Design of wideband switched-capacitor delta-sigma analog-to-digital converters /Wang, Peng Chong. January 2009 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references (p. 118-120).
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