Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
545707 Microelectronics Journal 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this work an 8-bit DAC is presented which uses a new segmented architecture, where distributed binary cells are re-used in thermometric manner to realize the MSB unit cells. The DAC has been fabricated in 0.18 μm five-metal CMOS n-well process to be embedded in multi-standard reconfigurable wireless transmitters for low-speed applications. The proposed architecture has an inherent ability to reduce midcode glitch like the unary architecture, and the simulated midcode glitch is only 0.01 pV s. Simulation results show that the proposed DAC performs with an integral nonlinearity (INL) of 0.33 LSB and a differential nonlinearity (DNL) of 0.14 LSB. The DAC can achieve a maximum measured SFDR of 65.19 dB for 97.50 kHz signal at a sampling rate of 100 MSPS, without using any calibration or dynamic element matching (DEM) technique. For 1.07 MHz signal the measured SFDR is 56.84 dB at 100 MSPS sampling rate. At 50 MSPS sampling frequency and 146 kHz signal the SFDR of the DAC is 65.90 dB. The measured SFDR at 538 kHz signal is 63.62 dB for a sampling rate of 50 MSPS. Measured third order intermodulation distortion of the DAC is 58.55 dB, for a dual tone test with 1.03 MHz and 1.51 MHz signals at 50 MSPS sampling rate. Low power is also an important aspect in portable wireless devices. For 10.06 MHz signal and 100 MSPS sampling frequency, the power dissipation of the DAC is 20.74 mW with 1.8 V supply.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Hardware and Architecture
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