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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.
1

Design of a Low Power Cyclic/Algorithmic Analog-to-Digital Converter in a 130nm CMOS Process

Puppala, Ajith kumar January 2012 (has links)
Analog-to-digital converters are inevitable in the modern communication systems and there is always a need for the design of low-power converters. There are different A/D architectures to achieve medium resolution at medium speeds and among all those Cyclic/Algorithmic structure stands out due to its low hardware complexity and less die area costs. This thesis aims at discussing the ongoing trend in Cyclic/Algorithmic ADCs and their functionality. Some design techniques are studied on how to implement low power high resolution A/D converters. Also, non-ideal effects of SC implementation for Cyclic A/D converters are explored. Two kinds of Cyclic A/D architectures are compared. One is the conventional Cyclic ADC with RSD technique and the other is Cyclic ADC with Correlated Level Shift (CLS) technique. This ADC is a part of IMST Design + Systems International GmbH project work and was designed and simulated at IMST GmbH. This thesis presents the design of a 12-bit, 1 Msps, Cyclic/Algorithmic Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) using the “Redundant Signed Digit (RSD)” algorithm or 1.5-bit/stage architecture with switched-capacitor (SC) implementation. The design was carried out in 130nm CMOS process with a 1.5 V power supply. This ADC dissipates a power of 1.6  mW when run at full speed and works for full-scale input dynamic range. The op-amp used in the Cyclic ADC is a two-stage folded cascode structure with Class A output stage. This op-amp in typical corner dissipates 631 uW power at 1.5 V power supply and achieves a gain of 77 dB with a phase margin of 64° and a GBW of 54 MHz at 2 pF load.
2

Low Power Elliptic Curve Cryptography

Ozturk, Erdinc 04 May 2005 (has links)
This M.S. thesis introduces new modulus scaling techniques for transforming a class of primes into special forms which enable efficient arithmetic. The scaling technique may be used to improve multiplication and inversion in finite fields. We present an efficient inversion algorithm that utilizes the structure of a scaled modulus. Our inversion algorithm exhibits superior performance to the Euclidean algorithm and lends itself to efficient hardware implementation due to its simplicity. Using the scaled modulus technique and our specialized inversion algorithm we develop an elliptic curve processor architecture. The resulting architecture successfully utilizes redundant representation of elements in GF(p) and provides a low-power, high speed, and small footprint specialized elliptic curve implementation. We also introduce a unified Montgomery multiplier architecture working on the extension fields GF(p), GF(2) and GF(3). With the increasing research activity for identity based encryption schemes, there has been an increasing need for arithmetic operations in field GF(3). Since we based our research on low-power and small footprint applications, we designed a unified architecture rather than having a seperate hardware for GF{3}. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a unified architecture was built working on three different extension fields.
3

Direktsamplande digital transciever / Direct sampling digital transceiver

Karlsson, Magnus January 2002 (has links)
<p>Master thesis work at ITN (Department of Science and Technology) in the areas of A/D-construction and RF-circuit design. Major goal of project were to research suitable possibilities for implementations of direct conversion in transceivers operating in the 160MHz band, theoretic study followed by development of components in the construction environment Cadence. Suitable A/D- converter and other important parts were selected at the end of the theoretic study. Subsampling technique was applied to make A/D sample requirements more realistic to achieve. Besides lowering requirements on A/D-converter it allows a more simple construction, which saves more components than subsampling adds. Subsampling add extra noise, because of that an A/D-converter based on the RSD algorithm was chosen to improve error rate. To achieve high bit-processing rate compared to the used number of transistors, pipeline structure were selected as conversion method. The receiver was that part which gained largest attention because it’s the part which is most interesting to optimise. A/D-conversion is more difficult to construct than D/A conversion, besides there’s more to gain from eliminating mixers in the receiver than in the transmitter.</p>
4

Direktsamplande digital transciever / Direct sampling digital transceiver

Karlsson, Magnus January 2002 (has links)
Master thesis work at ITN (Department of Science and Technology) in the areas of A/D-construction and RF-circuit design. Major goal of project were to research suitable possibilities for implementations of direct conversion in transceivers operating in the 160MHz band, theoretic study followed by development of components in the construction environment Cadence. Suitable A/D- converter and other important parts were selected at the end of the theoretic study. Subsampling technique was applied to make A/D sample requirements more realistic to achieve. Besides lowering requirements on A/D-converter it allows a more simple construction, which saves more components than subsampling adds. Subsampling add extra noise, because of that an A/D-converter based on the RSD algorithm was chosen to improve error rate. To achieve high bit-processing rate compared to the used number of transistors, pipeline structure were selected as conversion method. The receiver was that part which gained largest attention because it’s the part which is most interesting to optimise. A/D-conversion is more difficult to construct than D/A conversion, besides there’s more to gain from eliminating mixers in the receiver than in the transmitter.

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