首页 | 官方网站   微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
A quadrature fourth-order, continuous-time, /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator with 1.5-b quantizer and feedback digital-to-analog converter (DAC) for a universal mobile telecommunication system (UMTS) receiver chain is presented. It achieves a dynamic range of 70 dB in a 2-MHz bandwidth and the total harmonic distortion is -74 dB at full-scale input. When used in an integrated receiver for UMTS, the dynamic range of the modulator substantially reduces the need for analog automatic gain control and its tolerance of large out-of-band interference also permits the use of only first-order prefiltering. An IC including an I and Q /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator, phase-locked loop, oscillator, and bandgap dissipates 11.5 mW at 1.8 V. The active area is 0.41 mm/sup 2/ in a 0.18-/spl mu/m 1-poly 5-metal CMOS technology.  相似文献   

2.
Direct digital synthesis of signals in the hundreds of megahertz can lead to simpler, smaller transceivers, free of images and LO feedthrough that plague systems requiring analog upconversion. We present a 3-bit, 2 GS/s, /spl Delta//spl Sigma/-modulated DAC in InP HBT technology. The DAC is linearized using bandpass mismatch shaping. The mismatch shaper uses seven tunable 1.5-bit discrete-time bandpass /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulators to dynamically route the digital signals to the DACs. These /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulators operate in the analog domain to decrease system complexity and power consumption. The mismatch-shaped DAC can generate narrowband signals between 250-750 MHz with >68 dB SNR in a 1-MHz bw, >74-dB SFDR, and <-80-dBc intermodulation distortion with an 8.1-W power consumption.  相似文献   

3.
Time jitter in continuous-time /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators is a known limitation on the maximum achievable signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR). Analysis of time jitter in this type of converter shows that a switched-capacitor (SC) feedback digital-to-analog converter (DAC) reduces the sensitivity to time jitter significantly. In this paper, an I and Q continuous-time fifth-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator with 1-bit quantizer and SC feedback DAC is presented, which demonstrates the improvement in maximum achievable SNR when using an SC instead of a switched-current (SI) feedback circuit. The modulator is designed for a GSM/CDMA2000/UMTS receiver and achieves a dynamic range of 92/83/72 dB in 200/1228/3840 kHz, respectively. The intermodulation distance IM2, 3 is better than 87 dB in all modes. Both the I and Q modulator consumes a power of 3.8/4.1/4.5 mW at 1.8 V. Processed in 0.18-/spl mu/m CMOS, the 0.55-mm/sup 2/ integrated circuit includes a phase-locked loop, two oscillators, and a bandgap.  相似文献   

4.
Quadrature sampling of intermediate frequency (IF) signals is subject to the well-known problem of gain and phase mismatches between the in-phase (I) and quadrature (Q) channels. This paper presents an IF-input quadrature-sampling switched-capacitor (SC) /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator that circumvents the I/Q mismatch problem by time-sharing between the I and Q channels the critical circuit components, namely, the sampling capacitor and the capacitor of the first-stage feedback digital-to-analog converter (DAC). In addition, a clocking scheme that is insensitive to I/Q phase imbalance is used. A third-order single-loop 1-bit low-pass modulator has been designed and fabricated in a 0.35-/spl mu/m CMOS process with an active area of 0.57mm/sup 2/. The experimental results show that the modulator achieves an image-rejection ratio (IRR) of greater than 75dB throughout a 200-kHz signal bandwidth.  相似文献   

5.
This paper presents the design and experimental results of a continuous-time /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator for ADSL applications. Multibit nonreturn-to-zero (NRZ) DAC pulse shaping is used to reduce clock jitter sensitivity. The nonzero excess loop delay problem in conventional continuous-time /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators is solved by our proposed architecture. A prototype third-order continuous-time /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator with 5-bit internal quantization was realized in a 0.5-/spl mu/m double-poly triple-metal CMOS technology, with a chip area of 2.4 /spl times/ 2.4 mm/sup 2/. Experimental results show that the modulator achieves 88-dB dynamic range, 84-dB SNR, and 83-dB SNDR over a 1.1-MHz signal bandwidth with an oversampling ratio of 16, while dissipating 62 mW from a 3.3-V supply.  相似文献   

6.
A delta-sigma (/spl Delta//spl Sigma/) analog-to-digital converter featuring 68-dB dynamic range and 64-dB signal-to-noise ratio in a 1-MHz bandwidth centered at an intermediate frequency of 2 MHz with a 48-MHz sample rate is reported. A second-order continuous-time modulator employing 4-bit quantization is used to achieve this performance with 2.2 mW of power consumption from a 1.8-V supply. The modulator including references occupies 0.36 mm/sup 2/ of die area and is implemented in a 0.18-/spl mu/m five-metal single-poly digital CMOS process.  相似文献   

7.
A second-order multibit bandpass /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator (BP/spl Sigma//spl Delta/M) used for the digitizing of AM/FM radio broadcasting signals at a 10.7-MHz IF is presented. The BP/spl Sigma//spl Delta/M is realized with switched-capacitor (SC) techniques and operates with a sampling frequency of 37.05 MHz. The input impulse current, required by the SC input branch, is minimized by the use of a switched buffer without deteriorating the overall system performance. The accuracy of the in-band noise shaping is ensured with two self-calibrating control systems. In a 0.18-/spl mu/m CMOS technology, the device die size is 1 mm/sup 2/ and the power consumption is 88 mW. In production, the BP/spl Sigma//spl Delta/M features at least 78-dB dynamic range and 72-dB peak SNR within a 200-kHz bandwidth (FM bandwidth). The intermodulation (IMD) is -65 dBc for two tones at -11 dBFS. The robustness of the aforementioned performance is demonstrated by the fact that it has been realized with the BP/spl Sigma//spl Delta/M embedded in the noisy on-chip environment of a complete mixed-signal FM receiver.  相似文献   

8.
This paper presents the design and implementation of a high-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ interface for micromachined inertial sensors, which employs an electronic filter in series with the mechanical sensor element to reject the excessive in-band quantization noise inherently present in state-of-the-art second-order solutions. A fourth-order prototype was fabricated in a standard 0.5-/spl mu/m CMOS process. The active circuit area measures 0.9 mm/sup 2/, and the interface consumes 13 mW from a 5-V supply and achieves resolution of 1/spl deg//s//spl radic/Hz with a gyroscope and 150/spl mu/g//spl radic/Hz with an accelerometer. Comparison between the measured and simulated behavior of the system shows that the contribution of the quantization error to the total noise is negligible.  相似文献   

9.
Bandpass modulators sampling at high IFs (/spl sim/200 MHz) allow direct sampling of an IF signal, reducing analog hardware, and make it easier to realize completely software-programmable receivers. This paper presents the circuit design of and test results from a continuous-time tunable IF-sampling fourth-order bandpass /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulator implemented in InP HBT IC technology for use in a multimode digital receiver application. The bandpass /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulator is fabricated in AlInAs-GaInAs heterojunction bipolar technology with a peak unity current gain cutoff frequency (f/sub T/) of 130 GHz and a maximum frequency of oscillation (f/sub MAX/) of 130 GHz. The fourth-order bandpass /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulator consists of two bandpass resonators that can be tuned to optimize both wide-band and narrow-band operation. The IF is tunable from 140 to 210 MHz in this /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulator for use in multiple platform applications. Operating from /spl plusmn/5-V power supplies, the fabricated fourth-order /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulator sampling at 4 GSPS demonstrates stable behavior and achieves a signal-to-(noise + distortion) ratio (SNDR) of 78 dB at 1 MHz BW and 50 dB at 60 MHz BW. The average SNDR performance measured on over 250 parts is 72.5 dB at 1 MHz BW and 47.7 dB at 60 MHz BW.  相似文献   

10.
A 14-bit 8/spl times/ oversampling delta-sigma (/spl Delta//spl Sigma/) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for wide-band communication applications has been developed. By using a novel architecture, a high maximum out-of-band quantization noise gain (Q/sub max/) is realized, which greatly improves the SNR and tonal behavior. The ADC employs a fifth-order single-stage structure with a 4-bit quantizer. It achieves 82-dB SNDR and 103-dB SFDR at 4-MHz conversion bandwidth with a single 1.8-V power supply.  相似文献   

11.
In direct digital synthesizer (DDS) applications, the drawback of the conventional delta sigma (/spl Delta//spl Sigma/) modulator structure is that its signal band is fixed. In the new architecture presented in this paper, the signal band of the /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulator is tuned according to the DDS output frequency. We use a hardware-efficient phase-to-sine amplitude converter in the DDS that approximates the first quadrant of the sine function with 16 equal-length piecewise second-degree polynomial segments. The DDS is capable of frequency, phase, and quadrature amplitude modulation. The die area of the chip is 2.02 mm/sup 2/ (0.13 /spl mu/m CMOS technology). The total power consumption is 138 mW at 1.5 V with an output frequency of 63.33 MHz at a clock frequency of 200 MHz (D/A converter full-scale output current: 11.5 mA).  相似文献   

12.
This paper describes an architecture for stable high-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulation. The architecture is based on a hybrid /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator, wherein hybrid integrators replace conventional analog integrators. The hybrid integrator, which is a combination of an analog integrator and a digital integrator, offers an increased dynamic range and helps make the resulting high-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator stable. However, the hybrid /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator relies on precise matching of analog and digital paths. In this paper, a calibration technique to alleviate possible mismatch between analog and digital paths is proposed. The calibration adaptively adjusts the digital integrators so that their transfer functions match the transfer functions of corresponding analog integrators. Through behavioral-level simulations of fourth-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators, the calibration technique is verified.  相似文献   

13.
The K-level Sigma-Delta (/spl Sigma//spl Delta/) scheme with step size /spl delta/ is introduced as a technique for quantizing finite frame expansions for /spl Ropf//sup d/. Error estimates for various quantized frame expansions are derived, and, in particular, it is shown that /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ quantization of a unit-norm finite frame expansion in /spl Ropf//sup d/ achieves approximation error where N is the frame size, and the frame variation /spl sigma/(F,p) is a quantity which reflects the dependence of the /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ scheme on the frame. Here /spl par//spl middot//spl par/ is the d-dimensional Euclidean 2-norm. Lower bounds and refined upper bounds are derived for certain specific cases. As a direct consequence of these error bounds one is able to bound the mean squared error (MSE) by an order of 1/N/sup 2/. When dealing with sufficiently redundant frame expansions, this represents a significant improvement over classical pulse-code modulation (PCM) quantization, which only has MSE of order 1/N under certain nonrigorous statistical assumptions. /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ also achieves the optimal MSE order for PCM with consistent reconstruction.  相似文献   

14.
We present a tool that starting from high-level specifications of switched-capacitor (SC) /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators calculates optimum specifications for their building blocks and then optimum sizes for the block schematics. At both design levels, optimization is performed using statistical techniques to enable global design and innovative heuristics for increased computer efficiency as compared with conventional statistical optimization. The tool uses an equation-based approach at the modulator level, a simulation-based approach at the cell level, and incorporates an advanced /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ behavioral simulator for monitoring and design space exploration. We include measurements taken from two silicon prototypes: (1) a 16 b @ 16 kHz output rate second-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator; and (2) a 17 b @ 40 kHz output rate fourth-order /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator. Both use SC fully differential circuits and were designed using the proposed tool and manufactured in a 1.2 /spl mu/m CMOS double-metal double-poly technology.<>  相似文献   

15.
A scheme for achieving adaptive reduction in the order of the loop filter of usual high-order, single-stage, single-bit Delta-Sigma (/spl Delta//spl Sigma/) modulators is proposed in order to improve their performance. The resulting /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulators can recover from instability effectively, having also an extended input signal range in comparison to that of the corresponding conventional /spl Delta//spl Sigma/ modulators.  相似文献   

16.
An analytical design methodology for continuous-time (CT) bandpass (BP) /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators is presented. Second- and fourth-order tunable continuous time BP /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator design equations are presented. A novel /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ loop architecture, where the traditional CT BP loop filter function is replaced with the filter function with fractional delays, is proposed. Validity of the methodology is confirmed by mixed-signal behavioral simulations.  相似文献   

17.
An 800-MHz low-power direct digital frequency synthesizer (DDFS) with an on-chip digital-to-analog (D/A) converter is presented. The DDFS consists of a phase accumulator, two phase-to-sine converters, and a D/A converter. The high-speed operation of the DDFS is enabled by applying parallelism to the phase-to-sine converter and by including a D/A converter in a single chip. The on-chip D/A converter saves delay and power consumption due to interchip interconnections. The DDFS considerably reduces power consumption by using several low-power techniques. The pipelined parallel accumulator consumes only 22% power of a conventional pipelined accumulator with the same throughput. The quad line approximation (QLA) and the quantization and error ROM (QE-ROM) minimize the ROM to generate a sine wave. The QLA saves 4 bits of the sine amplitude by approximating the sine function with four lines. The QE-ROM quantizes the ROM data by magnitude and address and then it stores the quantized values and the quantization errors separately. The ROM size for a 9-bit sine output is only 368 bits. A DDFS chip is fabricated in a 0.35-/spl mu/m CMOS process. It consumes only 174 mW at 800 MHz with 3.3 V. The chip core area is 1.47 mm/sup 2/. The spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) is 55 dBc.  相似文献   

18.
The design of a fifth-order 4-b quantizer single-loop /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulator is presented that achieves 25-MS/s conversion rate with 84 dB of dynamic range and 82 dB of signal-to-noise ratio. Implemented in a 0.18-/spl mu/m CMOS technology, the 0.95-mm/sup 2/ chip has a power consumption of 200 mW from a 1.8-V supply.  相似文献   

19.
Chang  T.-H. Dung  L.-R. 《Electronics letters》2004,40(11):652-654
A new design methodology for wideband, multi-stage, multi-bit /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators (/spl Sigma//spl Delta/Ms) with improved dynamic range, is presented. The key to improving dynamic range is to have the first stage oscillated, then the coarse quantisation noise vanishes and hence circuit non-linearities do not cause a leakage quantisation noise problem. Based on the proposed methodology, a fourth-order four-bit /spl Sigma//spl Delta/M can achieve the dynamic range of 80 dB at the OSR of 8 without using additional calibration techniques.  相似文献   

20.
Multi-bit sigma-delta modulators are widely used in analog-to-digital conversion especially in the modern deep-submicron CMOS process. As the quantizer resolution of /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators increases, the SNR performance improves. However, the feedback DAC has to maintain high linearity. The general practice to achieve that is to use dynamic element matching (DEM). The methodology proposed in this paper will greatly reduce the complexity or even avoid usage of DEM for multi-bit /spl Sigma//spl Delta/ modulators. The proposed methodology-truncation error shaping and cancellation-reduces the feedback DAC levels for multi-bit quantizers. A prototype was designed in a standard CMOS 90-nm process to demonstrate the proposed methodologies. It achieved targeted performance without DEM at low power consumption with small silicon area.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司    京ICP备09084417号-23

京公网安备 11010802026262号