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A switched-capacitor circuit technique used to measure capacitor mismatch and explore capacitor and opamp nonlinearity.Bereza, Bill, Carleton University. Dissertation. Engineering, Electrical. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (M. Eng.)--Carleton University, 1989. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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A new small-signal model for current-mode controlRidley, Raymond Bryan, January 1990 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1990. / Chairman: Fred C. Lee. Includes bibliographical references.
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Multimode switched-capacitor delta-sigma analog-to-digital converter /Lok, Chi Fung. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Phil.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 146-149). Also available in electronic version.
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Accuracy enhancement techniques in low-voltage high-speed pipelined ADC designLi, Jipeng 03 October 2003 (has links)
Pipelined analog to digital converters (ADCs) are very important building
blocks in many electronic systems such as high quality video systems, high
performance digital communication systems and high speed data acquisition systems.
The rapid development of these applications is driving the design of pipeline ADCs
towards higher speed, higher dynamic range, lower power consumption and lower
power supply voltage with the CMOS technology scaling. This trend poses great
challenges to conventional pipelined ADC designs which rely on high-gain
operational amplifiers (opamps) and well matched capacitors to achieve high accuracy. In this thesis, two novel accuracy improvement techniques to overcome the
accuracy limit set by analog building blocks (opamps and capacitors) in the context of
low-voltage and high-speed pipelined ADC design are presented. One is the time-shifted
correlated double sampling (CDS) technique which addresses the finite opamp
gain effect and the other is the radix-based background digital calibration technique
which can take care of both finite opamp gain and capacitor mismatch. These methods
are simple, easy to implement and power efficient. The effectiveness of the proposed
techniques is demonstrated in simulation as well as in experiment.
Two prototype ADCs have been designed and fabricated in 0.18μm CMOS
technology as the experimental verification of the proposed techniques. The first ADC
is a 1.8V 10-bit pipeline ADC which incorporated the time-shifted CDS technique to
boost the effective gain of the amplifiers. Much better gain-bandwidth tradeoff in
amplifier design is achieved with this gain boosting. Measurement results show total
power consumption of 67mW at 1.8V when operating at 100MSPS. The SNR, SNDR
and SFDR are 55dB, 54dB and 65dB respectively given a 1MHz input signal. The
second one is a 0.9V 12-bit two-stage cyclic ADC which employed a novel
correlation-based background calibration to enhance the linearity. The linearity limit
set by the capacitor mismatches, finite opamp gain effects is exceeded. After
calibration, the SFDR is improved by about 33dB and exceeds 80dB. The power
consumption is 12mW from 0.9V supply when operating at 2MSPS. / Graduation date: 2004
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Fast opamp-free delta sigma modulatorThomas, Daniel E. 23 August 2001 (has links)
Switched-capacitor (SC) circuits are commonly used for analog signal processing
because they can be used to realize precision filters and data converters on an
integrated circuit (IC). However, for high speed applications SC circuit operating
speeds are limited by the internally-compensated opamps found in SC integrators,
a common building block of these circuits. This thesis studies gain stages that
eliminate the internal compensation, thus allowing the SC circuits to operate at
significantly higher operating speeds. An inverter-based SC integrator is presented.
The proposed SC integrator is built with a pseudo-differential structure to improve
its rejection of common-mode noise, such as charge injection and clock feedthrough.
The proposed integrator also incorporates correlated double sampling (CDS) to
boost its effective DC gain. Clock-boosting and switch bootstrapping techniques
are not used in the proposed circuit, even though it uses a low supply voltage.
To verify the speed advantage of the proposed circuit, a high speed delta sigma
(Δ∑) modulator was designed in a 1.8V, 0.18μm CMOS technology. The designed
Δ∑ modulator operates at a clock frequency of 500MHz. Circuit implementation
and layout floorplan are described. The design is based on MATLAB and SpectreS
simulations. / Graduation date: 2002
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Design of high efficiency step-down switched capacitor DC/DC converterMa, Mengzhe 21 May 2003 (has links)
Recently, switched capacitor DC/DC converters are extensively used in
portable electronic devices because they feature many advantages, such as high
efficiency, small package, low quiescent current, minimal external components and
low cost.
In this thesis, two step-down switched capacitor DC/DC converters are
designed. One has the fixed output options 1.5V, 1.8V and 2.0V. The other one has the
output 1.2V. These two converters are implemented in 0.5��m CMOS process through
National Semiconductor Corporation. The design is verified by the circuit-level
simulations, and design issues are discussed. / Graduation date: 2004
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Compensation techniques for cascaded delta-sigma A/D converters and high-performance switched-capacitor circuitsSun, Tao 21 September 1998 (has links)
This thesis describes compensation techniques for cascaded delta-sigma A/D
converters (ADCs) and high-performance switched-capacitor (SC) circuits. Various
correlated-double-sampling (CDS) techniques are presented to reduce the effects of the
nonidealities, such as clock feedthrough, charge injection, opamp input-referred noise and
offset, and finite opamp gain, in SC circuits. A CDS technique for the compensation of
opamp input-referred offset and clock-feedthrough effect is examined and improved to
achieve continuous operation. Experimental results show that after the compensation, the
SC integrator's output signal swing is greatly increased.
The effects of the analog circuitry nonidealities in delta-sigma ADCs are also analyzed.
The analysis shows that the nonidealities in cascaded delta-sigma ADCs cause
noise leakage, which limits the overall performance of the cascaded modulators. In order
to reduce the noise leakage, a novel adaptive compensation technique is proposed. To
verify the effectiveness of the proposed compensation techniques, a prototype 2-0 cascaded
modulator was designed. Its first stage, a second-order delta-sigma modulator with
test signal input circuit, was designed and fabricated in 1.2 ��m CMOS technology. The
measurement results show that the noise leakage is reduced effectively by the compensation,
and the performance of the cascaded delta-sigma modulator is greatly improved. / Graduation date: 1999
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Low voltage techniques for pipelined analog-to-digital converters /Carnes, Joshua Kenneth. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2007. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 82-86). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Design Techniques for High Speed Low Voltage and Low Power Non-Calibrated Pipeline Analog to Digital ConvertersAssaad, Rida Shawky 2009 December 1900 (has links)
The profound digitization of modern microelectronic modules made Analog-to-
Digital converters (ADC) key components in many systems. With resolutions up to
14bits and sampling rates in the 100s of MHz, the pipeline ADC is a prime candidate for
a wide range of applications such as instrumentation, communications and consumer
electronics. However, while past work focused on enhancing the performance of the
pipeline ADC from an architectural standpoint, little has been done to individually
address its fundamental building blocks. This work aims to achieve the latter by
proposing design techniques to improve the performance of these blocks with minimal
power consumption in low voltage environments, such that collectively high
performance is achieved in the pipeline ADC.
Towards this goal, a Recycling Folded Cascode (RFC) amplifier is proposed as
an enhancement to the general performance of the conventional folded cascode. Tested
in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) 0.18?m Complementary
Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology, the RFC provides twice the
bandwidth, 8-10dB additional gain, more than twice the slew rate and improved noise performance over the conventional folded cascode-all at no additional power or silicon
area. The direct auto-zeroing offset cancellation scheme is optimized for low voltage
environments using a dual level common mode feedback (CMFB) circuit, and amplifier
differential offsets up to 50mV are effectively cancelled. Together with the RFC, the
dual level CMFB was used to implement a sample and hold amplifier driving a singleended
load of 1.4pF and using only 2.6mA; at 200MS/s better than 9bit linearity is
achieved. Finally a power conscious technique is proposed to reduce the kickback noise
of dynamic comparators without resorting to the use of pre-amplifiers. When all
techniques are collectively used to implement a 1Vpp 10bit 160MS/s pipeline ADC in
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) 0.18[mu]m CMOS, 9.2
effective number of bits (ENOB) is achieved with a near Nyquist-rate full scale signal.
The ADC uses an area of 1.1mm2 and consumes 42mW in its analog core. Compared to
recent state-of-the-art implementations in the 100-200MS/s range, the presented pipeline
ADC uses the least power per conversion rated at 0.45pJ/conversion-step.
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Low-power Charge-pump Based Switched-capacitor CircuitsNilchi, Alireza 09 August 2013 (has links)
In this thesis, low-power charge-pump (CP) based switched-capacitor (SC) circuits are proposed. The approach is validated in SC integrators and gain stages, and is shown to achieve power savings compared to conventional SC circuits. For the same thermal noise and settling performance, a CP based integrator with N sampling capacitors ideally consumes N^2 times lower OTA power compared to a conventional integrator. Practical effects such as the OTA
partial slew-rate limitation and the CP parasitics reduce the power savings. In the case of a SC gain stage, reduction in power savings also occurs due to the load capacitance from the next stage. A prototype delta-sigma modulator employing a CP integrator at the front-end is
fabricated. Experimental results demonstrate that the CP based ADC achieves the same performance as a conventional ADC while consuming three times lower OTA power in the front-end integrator. The CP ADC achieves 87.8 dB SNDR 89.2 dB SNR and 90 dB DR over a 10 kHz bandwidth while consuming 148 uW from a 1.2 V power supply. The conventional ADC
has similar performance but dissipates 241 uW. The CP ADC figure-of-merit (FOM) is 0.369
pJ/conv-step, which is almost 40% lower than that of the conventional ADC.
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