1 / 23

FE8113 ”High Speed Data Converters”

FE8113 ”High Speed Data Converters”. Course outline. Focus on ADCs. Three main topics: 1: Architectures ” CMOS Integrated Analog-to-Digital and Digital-to-Analog Converters ,” 2nd ed., Rudy van de Plassche, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Ch. 1-3 2: Digital background calibration

verne
Télécharger la présentation

FE8113 ”High Speed Data Converters”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FE8113 ”High Speed Data Converters”

  2. Course outline • Focus on ADCs. Three main topics: • 1: Architectures • ”CMOS Integrated Analog-to-Digital and Digital-to-Analog Converters,” 2nd ed., Rudy van de Plassche, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Ch. 1-3 • 2: Digital background calibration • Selected papers • 3: State-of-the-art converters • Selected papers

  3. Part 1: Architectures • First three chapters of van de Plassche’s textbook • Ch.1: The Converter as a black box • Ch.2: Specifications of converters • Ch.3: High-Speed A/D Converters

  4. Chapter 2Specifications of converters

  5. Digital data coding TTL, CMOS, ECL Serial to parallel conversion - Data latched out by latch clock - Directly drives switches in DA-converters - Output glitches - Deglitching - Switch optimization - Accurate board layout for matched delays

  6. Digital coding schemes • Offset binary code • Major carry transition for signal around zero • Glitch sensitive • Sign-magnitude code • Signal inversion around zero • Low-level linearity issues • Twos complement • Used for computational operations

  7. DC specifications • Absolute accuracy • Full-scale input or output compared to the absolute standard of the National Bureau of Standards • Mostly related to the reference source • Relative accuracy • Deviation of the output signal or code from a straight line • Also called integral non-linearity (INL) • No missing codes (monotonicity): INL<±1/2LSB

  8. Nonlinearity calculation • Binary w. output bit: • Full-scale value B: • Ideal step-size: • Linearity error of kth bit: • INL:

  9. Nonlinearity calculation II • Monotonicity: • D/A: No increase in analog output value when input increases by a value of one LSB: • To guarantee monotonicity the sum of errors for all bits must never exceed ½ LSB level

  10. Other static specifications • DNL • Quote from book: ”The difference between two adjacent analog signal values compared to the step-size (LSB-weight) of a converter generated by transitions between adjacent pairs of digital code numbers over the full range of the converter” (...) • Offset: • Non-zero output when zero input. • Temperature dependence: • For thermal mismatch below ¼ LSB: • Supply voltage variations: • Typically specified, e.g. ±5%

  11. Dynamic specification • SNR • Signal power divided by integrated noise power. • Harmonics not included • If harmonics included: • SNDR: Signal to noise and distortion ratio • 6.02n+1.76 dB • SFDR • Ratio between full-scale fundamental and largest harmonic distortion component • ENOB • (SNDR-1.76)/6.02

  12. Element matching vs. INL • Requirements: INL≤ ½ LSB • See book for details. • Based on measurement of many samples. • σ=mismatch standard variation.

  13. ENOB and SDNR vs. INL model • Transfer-function with INL: • INL-model (differential): • Out vs. in with three coefficients in INL-model: • Gives odd harmonics: • Only one coefficient: • Resulting ENOB:

  14. SFDR and IMD vs. INL model • Distortion: • Quantization component: • SFDR: • Intermodulation:

  15. Glitches • Important for performance of DAC • Major carry-code transition • Modelled with square glitch with area/energy (for MSB glitch): • Compare to LSB-energy:

  16. Noise • Thermal noise • No correlation with q-noise: • In a 16b DAC with 98.1dB quantization-SNR, the thermal noise must be less than -108dB for 0.5dB loss in total SNR.

  17. Noise • ADC: Noise dithers the comparator in an ADC • Estimating comparator output-noise by using probability of wrong desicion: • Noise: σ = ½ LSB: • Bias quantizer ½ LSB over quantization-level:

  18. Other error sources • Minimum reference step-size: • The possibility noise amplitude is bigger than kσ • Min. Reference step size should be 6-7 times greater than comparator RMS-noise • Bit-error rate • Number of desicion errors • For ADC typically 10-15 to 10-10 • Max sampling-rate • Rate where DR is decreased 3dB • Digital signal feed-through • Couple HF signals to the output

  19. Other error sources • Distortion • Signal band also present at multiples of fs. • Inter-modulation products may occur when applied to analog amplifier. • Mixing fs-fin with fs+fin • Product at 2fs • Harmonic • Mixing 2(fs-fin) with fs+fin • Product at fs-3fin • Non-harmonic • Only harmonics in baseband if fs>4fin. • PSRR • Immunity no power-supply noise • Settling-time • Very important in any successive approximation ADC (internal DAC) • Aquisition-time • Track-command to response delay • Limits max fs

  20. Other error sources • Aperture-time • Time-difference between hold-command and the time the sample is taken • Can give input-dependent error in sample-and-hold amplifier • Sample-and-hold step • Charge-feedthrough can give step in transition from sample-to-hold phase • Droop-rate • Discharge of hold-capacitor in hold-phase • Signal feed-through • To capacitor in hold mode • Must be attenuated 70-80dB in 8-10bit ADC • Noise in S/H-amplifier • Input-noise will be tracked • Peak-noise must be below LSB-level

  21. Other error sources • Overview of S/H-specifications • Settling-time • Aquisition-time • Aperture time / jitter • S/H step • Droop rate • Hold-mode feedthrough • S/H amplifier noise

  22. Other error sources • Analog system bandwidth • In an ideal converter system the maximum analog bandwidth is equal to fs/2. • ERB • Effective resolution bandwidth • Bandwidth where resolution is within -3dB of nominal. • Figure of merit: • Standard for comparison • FOM expected to drop factor 10 every 10th year

  23. Discussion...

More Related