This paper presents a novel delta-sigma modulator that uses a switched-capacitor (SC) integrator with the structure of a finite impulse response (FIR) filter in a loop filter configuration. The delta-sigma analog-to-digital converter (ΔΣADC) is used in various conversion systems to enable low-power, high-accuracy conversion using oversampling and noise shaping. Increasing the gain coefficient of the integrator in the loop filter configuration of the ΔΣADC suppresses the quantization noise that occurs in the signal band. However, there is a trade-off relationship between the integrator gain coefficient and system stability. The SC integrator, which contains an FIR filter, can suppress quantization noise in the signal band without requiring an additional operational amplifier. Additionally, it can realize a higher signal-to-quantization noise ratio. In addition, the poles that are added by the FIR filter structure can improve the system's stability. It is also possible to improve the flexibility of the pole placement in the system. Therefore, a noise transfer function that does not contain a large gain peak is realized. This results in a stable system operation. This paper presents the essential design aspects of a ΔΣADC with an FIR filter. Two types of simulation results are examined for the proposed first- and second-order, and these results confirm the effectiveness of the proposed architecture.
A 2nd-order ΔΣAD modulator architecture is proposed to simplify the operation phase using ring amplifier and SAR quantizer. The proposed modulator architecture can guarantee the reset time for ring amplifier and relax the speed requirement on asynchronous SAR quantizer. The SPICE simulation results demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed 2nd-order ΔΣAD modulator in 90nm CMOS technology. Simulated SNDR of 95.70dB is achieved while a sinusoid -1dBFS input is sampled at 60MS/s for the bandwidth is BW=470kHz. The power consumption of the analog part in the modulator is 1.67mW while the supply voltage is 1.2V.
Guo-Ming SUNG Leenendra Chowdary GUNNAM Wen-Sheng LIN Ying-Tzu LAI
This work develops a third-order multibit switched-current (SI) delta-sigma modulator (DSM) with a four-bit switched-capacitor (SC) flash analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and an incremental data weighted averaging circuit (IDWA), which is fabricated using 0.18µm 1P6M CMOS technology. In the proposed DSM, a 4-bit SC flash ADC is used to improve its resolution, and an IDWA is used to reduce the nonlinearity of digital-to-analog converter (DAC) by moving the quantization noise out of the signal band by first-order noise shaping. Additionally, the proposed differential sample-and-hold circuit (SH) exhibits low input impedance with feedback and width-length adjustment in the SI feedback memory cell (FMC) to increase the conversion rate. A coupled differential replicate (CDR) common-mode feedforward circuit (CMFF) is used to compensate for the mirror error that is caused by the current mirror. Measurements indicate that the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), dynamic range (DR), effective number of bits (ENOB), power consumption, and chip area are 64.1 dB, 64.4 dB, 10.36 bits, 18.82 mW, and 0.45 × 0.67 mm2 (without I/O pad), respectively, with a bandwidth of 20 kHz, an oversampling ratio (OSR) of 256, a sampling frequency of 10.24 MHz, and a supply voltage of 1.8 V.
Mixed-signal integrated circuit design and simulation highly rely on behavioral models of circuit blocks. Such models are used for the validation of design specification, optimization of system topology, and behavioral synthesis using a description language, etc. However, automatic behavioral model generation is still in its early stages; in most scenarios designers are responsible for creating behavioral models manually, which is time-consuming and error prone. In this paper an automatic behavioral model generation method for switched-capacitor (SC) integrator is proposed. This technique is based on symbolic circuit modeling with approximation, by which parametric behavioral integrator model can be generated. Such parametric models can be used in circuit design subject to severe process variational. It is demonstrated that the automatically generated integrator models can accurately capture process variation effects on arbitrarily selected circuit elements; furthermore, they can be applied to behavioral simulation of SC Sigma-Delta modulators (SDMs) with acceptable accuracy and speedup. The generated models are compared to a recently proposed manually generated behavioral integrator model in several simulation settings.
Retdian NICODIMUS Takeshi SHIMA
Noise and area consumption has been a trade-off in circuit design. Especially for switched-capacitor filters (SCF), kT/C noise gives a limitation to the minimum value of unit capacitance. In case of SCFs with a large capacitance spread, this limitation will result in a large area consumption due to large capacitors. This paper introduces a technique to reduce capacitance spread using charge scaling. It will be shown that this technique can reduce total capacitance of SCFs without deteriorating their noise performances. A design method to reduce the output noise of SC low-pass filters (LPF) based on the combination of cut-set scaling, charge scaling and adaptive configuration is proposed. The proposed technique can reduce the output noise voltage by 30% for small input signals.
Norihiro KAMAE Akira TSUCHIYA Hidetoshi ONODERA
A forward/reverse body bias generator (BBG) which operates under wide supply-range is proposed. Fine-grained body biasing (FGBB) is effective to reduce variability and increase energy efficiency on digital LSIs. Since FGBB requires a number of BBGs to be implemented, simple design is preferred. We propose a BBG with charge pumps for reverse body bias and the BBG operates under wide supply-range from 0.5,V to 1.2,V. Layout of the BBG was designed in a cell-based flow with an AES core and fabricated in a 65~nm CMOS process. Area of the AES core is 0.22 mm$^2$ and area overhead of the BBG is 2.3%. Demonstration of the AES core shows a successful operation with the supply voltage from 0.5,V to 1.2,V which enables the reduction of power dissipation, for example, of 17% at 400,MHz operation.
Hao SAN Tomonari KATO Tsubasa MARUYAMA Kazuyuki AIHARA Masao HOTTA
This paper proposes a pipeline analog-to-digital converter (ADC) with non-binary encoding technique based on β-expansion. By using multiply-by-β switched-capacitor (SC) multiplying digital-to-analog converter (MDAC) circuit, our proposed ADC is composed by radix-β (1 < β < 2) 1 bit pipeline stages instead of using the conventional radix-2 1.5 bit/1 bit pipeline stages to realize non-binary analog-to-digital conversion. Also with proposed β-value estimation algorithm, there is not any digital calibration technique is required in proposed pipeline ADC. The redundancy of non-binary ADC tolerates not only the non-ideality of comparator, but also the mismatch of capacitances and the gain error of operational amplifier (op-amp) in MDAC. As a result, the power hungry high gain and wide bandwidth op-amps are not necessary for high resolution ADC, so that the reliability-enhanced pipeline ADC with simple amplifiers can operate faster and with lower power. We analyse the β-expansion of AD conversion and modify the β-encoding technique for pipeline ADC. In our knowledge, this is the first proposal architecture for non-binary pipeline ADC. The reliability of the proposed ADC architecture and β-encoding technique are verified by MATLAB simulations.
Retdian NICODIMUS Shigetaka TAKAGI
A design methodology for implementation of low-noise switched-capacitor low-pass filter (SC LPF) with small capacitance spread is proposed. The proposed method is focused on the reduction of operational amplifier noise transfer gain at low frequencies and the reduction of total capacitance. A new SC LPF topology is proposed in order to adapt the correlated double sampling and charge scaling technique at the same time. Design examples show that proposed filter reduces the total capacitance by 65% or more compared to the conventional one without having significant increase in noise transfer gain.
Zhenpeng BIAN Ruohe YAO Fei LUO
An on-chip soft-start circuit based on a switched-capacitor for DC-DC switching regulator is presented. A ramp-voltage, which is generated by a switched-capacitor, is used to make pulse width slowly increase from zero, in order to eliminate the inrush current and the overshoot voltage during start-up. The post simulation results show that the regulator soft starts well with the proposed soft-start circuit.
Retdian NICODIMUS Shigetaka TAKAGI
A technique to reduce noise transfer functions (NTF) of switched-capacitor (SC) integrators without changing their signal transfer functions (STF) is proposed. The proposed technique based on a simple reconnection scheme of multiple sampling capacitors. It can be implemented into any SC integrators as long as they have a transfer delay. A design strategy is also given to reduce the effect of parasitic capacitors. An SC integrator with a small total capacitance and a low noise transfer gain based on the proposed technique is also proposed. For a given design example, the total capacitance and the simulated noise transfer gain of the proposed SC integrator are 37% and 90% less than the conventional one.
Xin ZHANG Yu PU Koichi ISHIDA Yoshikatsu RYU Yasuyuki OKUMA Po-Hung CHEN Takayasu SAKURAI Makoto TAKAMIYA
In this paper, a novel switched-capacitor DC-DC converter with pulse density and width modulation (PDWM) is proposed with reduced output ripple at variable output voltages. While performing pulse density modulation (PDM), the proposed PDWM modulates the pulse width at the same time to reduce the output ripple with high power efficiency. The prototype chip was implemented using 65 nm CMOS process. The switched-capacitor DC-DC converter has 0.2-V to 0.47-V output voltage and delivers 0.25-mA to 10-mA output current from a 1-V input supply with a peak efficiency of 87%. Compared with the conventional PDM scheme, the proposed switched-capacitor DC-DC converter with PDWM reduces the output ripple by 57% in the low output voltage region with the efficiency penalty of 2%.
Kenji SUZUKI Mamoru UGAJIN Mitsuru HARADA
A fifth-order switched-capacitor (SC) complex filter was implemented in 0.2-µm CMOS technology. A novel SC integrator was developed to reduce the die size and current consumption of the filter. The filter is centered at 24.730.15 kHz (3δ) and has a bandwidth of 20.260.3 kHz (3δ). The image channel is attenuated by more than 42.6 dB. The in-band third-order harmonic input intercept point (IIP3) is 17.3 dBm, and the input referred RMS noise is 34.3 µVrms. The complex filter consumes 350 µA with a 2.0-V power supply. The die size is 0.578 mm2. Owing to the new SC integrator, the filter achieves a 27% reduction in die size without any degradation in its characteristics, including its noise performance, compared with the conventional equivalent.
Ryoto YAGUCHI Fumiyuki ADACHI Takao WAHO
A switched-capacitor integrator based on dynamic source follower amplifiers has been proposed. Integrator operation has been confirmed and analyzed by assuming 0.18-µm CMOS technology. The integrator can reduce the number of elements considerably compared with conventional ones using operational amplifiers. As a result, the power dissipation of proposed integrator can be reduced to approximately one-eighth that of conventional integrators. The integrator is applied to a second-order ΔΣ modulator, and its successful operation has been confirmed by transistor-level circuit simulation.
This paper presents a novel time-domain design procedure for fast-settling three-stage nested-Miller compensated (NMC) amplifiers. In the proposed design methodology, the amplifier is designed to settle within a definite time period with a given settling accuracy by optimizing both the power consumption and silicon die area. Detailed design equations are presented and the circuit level simulation results are provided to verify the usefulness of the proposed design procedure with respect to the previously reported design schemes.
Yoshio NISHIDA Koichi HAMASHITA Gabor C. TEMES
This paper presents an enhanced dual-path delta-sigma analog-to-digital converter. Compared with other architectures, the enhanced architecture increases the noise shaping order without any instability problems and displays analog complexity equivalent to the multi-stage noise shaping architecture. Our delta-sigma converter is based on this new architecture. It employs not only doubly-differential structure to reduce common-mode errors in the system-level but also delayed-feed-in structure to mitigate the timing constraint of the feedback signal. Regarding the circuit implementation, the first-order enhancement of the quantization noise shaping is achieved via the use of a switched capacitor circuit technique. The circuit is incorporated into the active adder in a low-distortion structure. The supporting clock generation circuit that provides additional phases of clocks with the enhancement block is also implemented in the CMOS logic gates. A digital dynamic element matching circuit (i.e., segmented data-weighted-average circuit) is designed to reduce mismatch errors caused by the feedback DAC of modulator. A test chip, fabricated in a 0.18-µm CMOS process, provides a signal-to-noise+distortion ratio (SNDR) of 75-dB for a 1.0-MHz signal bandwidth clocked at 40-MHz. The 2nd harmonic is -101 dB and the 3rd harmonic is -94 dB when a -4.5-dB 100-kHz input signal is applied.
Kei EGUCHI Sawai PONGSWATD Amphawan JULSEREEWONG Kitti TIRASESTH Hirofumi SASAKI Takahiro INOUE
A multiple-input switched-capacitor DC-DC converter which can realize long battery runtime is proposed in this letter. Unlike conventional converters for a back-lighting application, the proposed converter drives some LEDs by converting energy from solar cells. Furthermore, the proposed converter can charge a lithium battery when an output load is light. The validity of circuit design is confirmed by theoretical analyses, simulations, and experiments.
Eddy TAILLEFER Shoichi KITAZAWA Masazumi UEBA
We propose a proof-of-concept of a switchable multi-frequency MMIC (monolithic microwave integrated circuit) oscillator device, operating in the 60 GHz millimeter wave band, which is implemented in GaAs p-HEMT transistor technology. Oscillators that can switch between two frequencies have been designed, fabricated and evaluated. The oscillator uses a cross-coupled FET topology, combined with a bent asymmetric coplanar stripline for the resonator, and a switched-capacitor for the frequency switching components. The oscillator generates two oscillations at f/2 and f where f is the target frequency of around 60 GHz. The switchable oscillator has been demonstrated for the range of frequency from 44 GHz to 68.9 GHz. Moreover, the designed oscillator exhibits a wide-band negative resistance property that allows fabricating switchable oscillators covering the 50 to 75 GHz V-band. An evaluated switchable oscillator delivers -17.09 dBm and -13.72 dBm output power at 62.45 GHz and 64.78 GHz, for a supplied power of 40.6 mW and 39.1 mW, respectively.
Xian Ping FAN Pak Kwong CHAN Piew Yoong CHEE
A 150 MS/s 10-bit MOS-inverter-based subranging analog-to-digital converter (ADC) dedicated to a high-speed low-power application is presented in this paper. A new time constant reduction technique is proposed in the multi-stage preamplifier design which aims to further increase the speed of the coarse ADC. A synchronized switch is introduced to minimize the sample-time mismatch in the interleaved architecture of fine ADCs. An internal pipelined scheme incorporating the double sampling and interleaving techniques in fine ADCs allows the ADC sample input signal to run on a consecutive clock, thus maximizing the throughput. The prototype ADC achieves 52 dB SNDR for a 10 MHz input frequency at 150 MS/s. Without calibration, the measured differential nonlinearity (DNL) is 0.5 LSB, while the integral nonlinearity (INL) is 0.9 LSB. The CMOS ADC is fabricated in a 0.35 µm CMOS technology, with an active area of 2.7 mm2, consuming only 178 mW from a single 3 V supply. Comparing technology normalized figure-of-merits, it achieves better power-speed efficiency than other similar types of ADCs.
Huy-Binh LE Seung-Tak RYU Sang-Gug LEE
An on-chip CMOS preamplifier for direct signal readout from an electret capacitor microphone has been designed with high immunity to common-mode and supply noise. The Gm-Opamp-RC based high impedance preamplifier helps to remove all disadvantages of the conventional JFET based amplifier and can drive a following switched-capacitor sigma-delta modulator in order to realize a compact digital electret microphone. The proposed chip is designed based on 0.18 µm CMOS technology, and the simulation results show 86 dB of dynamic range with 4.5 µVrms of input-referred noise for an audio bandwidth of 20 kHz and a total harmonic distortion (THD) of 1% at 90 mVrms input. Power supply rejection ratio (PSRR) and common-mode rejection ration (CMRR) are more than 95 dB at 1 kHz. The proposed design dissipates 125 µA and can operate over a wide supply voltage range of 1.6 V to 3.3 V.
This letter proposes a mismatch insensitive switched-capacitor multiply-by-four (4X) amplifier using the voltage addition scheme. The proposed circuit provides 2-times faster speed and about half of silicon area when compared with the cascade of conventional 2X amplifiers. Monte-Carlo simulation results show about 15% gain accuracy improvement over the cascaded 2X- amplifiers.