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Non-uniform sampling: algorithms and architectures

Modern signal processing applications emerging in telecommunication and instrumentation industries have placed an increasing demand for ADCs with higher speed and resolution. The most fundamental challenge in such a progress lies at the heart of the classic signal processing: the Shannon-Nyquist sampling theorem which stated that when sampled uniformly, there is no way to increase the upper frequency in the signal spectrum and still unambiguously represent the signal except by raising the sampling rate. This thesis is dedicated to the exploration of the ways to break through the Shannon-Nyquist sampling rate by applying non-uniform sampling techniques.

Time interleaving is probably the most intuitive way to parallel the uniform sampling process in order to achieve a higher sampling rate. Unfortunately, the channel mismatches in the TIADC system make the system an instance of a recurrent non-uniform sampling system whose non-uniformities are detrimental to the performance of the system and need to be calibrated. Accordingly, this thesis proposed a flexible and efficient architecture to compensate for the channel mismatches in the TIADC system. As a key building block in the calibration architecture, the design of the Farrow structured adjustable fractional delay filter has been investigated in detail. A new modified Farrow structure is proposed to design the adjustable FD filters that are optimized for a given range of bandwidth and fractional delays. The application of the Farrow structure is not limited to the design of adjustable fractional delay filters. It can also be used to implement adjustable lowpass, highpass and bandpass filters as well as adjustable multirate filters. This thesis further extends the Farrow structure to the design of filters with adjustable polynomial phase responses.

Inspired by the theory of compressive sensing, another contribution of this thesis is to use randomization as a means to overcome the limit of the Nyquist rate. This thesis investigates the impact of random sampling intervals or jitters on the power spectrum of the sampled signal. It shows that the aliases of the original signal can be well shaped by choosing an appropriate probability distribution of the sampling intervals or jitters such that aliases can be viewed as a source of noise in the signal power spectrum. A new theoretical framework has been established to associate the probability mass function of the random sampling intervals or jitters with the aliasing shaping effect. Based on the theoretical framework, this thesis proposes three random sampling architectures, i.e., SAR ADC, ramp ADC and level crossing ADC, that can be easily implemented based on the corresponding standard ADC architectures. Detailed models and simulations are established to verify the effectiveness of the proposed architectures. A new reconstruction algorithm called the successive sine matching pursuit has also been proposed to recover a class of spectrally sparse signals from a sparse set of non-uniform samples onto a denser uniform time grid so that classic signal processing techniques can be applied afterwards.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/45873
Date09 November 2012
CreatorsLuo, Chenchi
PublisherGeorgia Institute of Technology
Source SetsGeorgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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