Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
547809 Microelectronics Journal 2009 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

A systematic design approach for low-power 10-bit, 100 MS/s pipelined analog-to-digital converter (ADC) is presented. At architectural level various per-stage-resolution are analyzed and most suitable architecture is selected for designing 10-bit, 100 MS/s pipeline ADC. At Circuit level a modified wide-bandwidth and high-gain two-stage operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) proposed in this work is used in track-and-hold amplifier (THA) and multiplying digital-to-analog converter (MDAC) sections, to reduce power consumption and thermal noise contribution by the ADC. The signal swing of the analog functional blocks (THA and MDAC sections) is allowed to exceed the supply voltage (1.8 V), which further increases the dynamic range of the circuit. Charge-sharing comparator is proposed in this work, which reduces the dynamic power dissipation and kickback noise of the comparator circuit. The bootstrap technique and bottom plate sampling technique is employed in THA and MDAC sections to reduce the nonlinearity error associated with the input signal resulting in a signal-to-noise-distortion ratio of 58.72/57.57 dB at 2 MHz/Nyquist frequency, respectively. The maximum differential nonlinearity (DNL) is +0.6167/−0.3151 LSB and the maximum integral nonlinearity (INL) is +0.4271/−0.4712 LSB. The dynamic range of the ADC is 58.72 dB for full-scale input signal at 2 MHz input frequency. The ADC consumes 52.6 mW at 100 MS/s sampling rate. The circuit is implemented using UMC-180 nm digital CMOS technology.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Hardware and Architecture
Authors
, , , , ,