Data Conversion Designs for Scaled CMOS...

39
Data Conversion Designs for Scaled CMOS Technology Benjamin Froemming Stanford University

Transcript of Data Conversion Designs for Scaled CMOS...

Data Conversion Designs forScaled CMOS Technology

Benjamin FroemmingStanford University

6/12/2001EE487 2

Outline

n Quick Data Conversion Tutorialn CMOS Design Challengesn Previous Low-Voltage Techniquesn Possible Low-Voltage Solutionsn Conclusion

6/12/2001EE487 3

Why Data Conversion?

n We live in an Analog world!n BUT, digital processing gives us greater freedom

and performancen Must move between Analog & Digital domains

Analog Domain

Digital Domain

DSP

..01001101..A/D D/A

6/12/2001EE487 4

Applications

n Consumer Electronicsn Video/Audion Control (Appliances, Automotive)

n Communicationsn Wireless transceiversn Modems

n Instrumentationn Industrial & Scientific Test Equipment

6/12/2001EE487 5

A/D Conversion

DigitalFilter

Anti-aliasFiltering

Sampling Quantization DigitalCoding

AnalogIn

DigitalOut

DigitalFilter

D àà A

DigitalDecoding

DAC AnalogHold

ReconstructionFiltering

DigitalIn

AnalogOut

D/A Conversion

6/12/2001EE487 6

ADC Architectures - Nyquist Rate

n Seriesn Integratingn Successive Approximationn Cyclic (Algorithmic)

n Series-Paralleln Pipelinedn Subranging

n Paralleln Flash

6/12/2001EE487 7

Example: Pipelined ADC

n Trades speed for latencyn Interstage Sample-and-Hold Amplifiersn Size increases linearly with resolution

S/H 2n

A/D D/A

n bits

OutInPipeline Stage

6/12/2001EE487 8

ADC Architectures - Oversampling

n Predictiven Delta Modulationn DPCM

n Noise Shapingn Sigma-Delta Modulation (Σ∆)n Cascaded Σ∆n Multi-level Σ∆n Interpolating

6/12/2001EE487 9

Example: Σ∆Σ∆ Modulation

n Trades time resolution for amplitude resolutionn Integrator accumulates difference between

input and quantization signaln Requires digital filtering of results

D/A

OutIn1st Order Modulator

6/12/2001EE487 10

DAC Architectures

n Resistor-Stringn Current-Switched & Voltage-Switched

n Segmentedn Non-segmented

n Charge Redistributionn Segmentedn Non-Segmented

n Interpolating

6/12/2001EE487 11

Example: Segmented Current-Switch

n Uses equal unitcurrents for MSBs andbinary-weightedcurrents for LSBs.

n Provides monotonicitywith lower area

n Requires asegmented decoder

I/2 I/4 I/8 I/16

I I I I

LSB

MSB

Iout

6/12/2001EE487 12

Data Conversion Circuit Blocks

n Operational Amplifiersn Sample & Hold Circuitsn Comparatorsn Switched-Capacitor Amplifiers, Integrators, &

Filtersn Current Sourcesn Voltage-Switched & Current-Switched DACsn Reference Circuits

6/12/2001EE487 13

Switched-Capacitor (SC) Circuits

n Basic building block formany architectures likePipelined & Σ∆

n Clocked CMOS passgates charge/ dis-charge capacitors

n Uses “floating” switches

Simple Integrator

6/12/2001EE487 14

Why Use Standard CMOS?

n Lower cost & higher reliability of a high-volume process

n Lower power consumption due to scalingsupply voltages

n Integration with high-performance digitalcircuitry

6/12/2001EE487 15

Continued Scaling of CMOS

n Technology Roadmap for Semiconductorspredicts CMOS will continue to scale pastthe 0.1 micron level.

n Supply voltages also continue todecreasen Great for low power digital designsn Creates challenges for analog design

6/12/2001EE487 16

CMOS Design Challenges

n Continued technology scaling poses low voltageproblems for analog designsn Thinner gate oxides lower maximum voltage

constraintsn Smaller signal swings result in lower signal-to-noise

ratiosn Transistor thresholds have not scaled with supply

voltages

n Must match analog speed to digital performance

6/12/2001EE487 17

CMOS Design Challenges 2

Low Headroomn Reduced gate overdrive

results in poor linearity

No Headroomn Floating switches no longer

operaten Switches connected to a

virtual GND are fine

VDD

GND

VTP

VTN

VDD

GND

VTP

VTN

6/12/2001EE487 18

Previous Low-Voltage Techniques

n Low Threshold Transistorsn Internal Voltage Boostingn Bootstrapped Clocks

6/12/2001EE487 19

Low Threshold Technologies

n Increases headroom by lowering Vtn Advantagen Allows standard SC circuits to work at lower

voltages

n Disadvantagesn Requires a special processn May cause leakage problems

6/12/2001EE487 20

Internal Voltage Boosting

n Internal clock signals are typicallyboosted to ~2Vdd to up gate overdrive

n Advantagen Widely used for medium-voltage SC designs

n Disadvantagen Will not work for sub-micron technologies

with tighter voltage constraints

6/12/2001EE487 21

Bootstrapped Clocks

n Switches are bootstrapped to see a fixedoverdrive

n Advantagen Allows lower voltages on other components

n Disadvantagen Glitches >Vdd may occurn Added Complexity

6/12/2001EE487 22

Previous Techniques: Conclusion

n Not “true” low-power solutionsn Low-threshold technology not practicaln Boosting/Bootstrappingn Work well for older technologies run at less

than maximum voltagesn Will exceed maximum voltages for sub-

micron processes

6/12/2001EE487 23

Possible Low-Voltage Solutions

n Switched Op-Ampn Modified Switched-Capacitorn Biased Op-Ampn Multi-Input Floating Gate MOSFETs

6/12/2001EE487 24

Switched Op-Amp (SO)

n Problem: In regular SC circuits, floatingswitches at input fail under low voltages

n Solution: Replace floating switches withan op-amp that is switched on/offinstead.

n Added op-amp will function where theswitch would not.

6/12/2001EE487 25

Switch Op-Amp - Continued

n Advantagen Similar to standard SC designsn Additional op-amp doesn’t add to power

n Disadvantagesn On/Off switching of op-amp increases delay

and may introduce transientsn Added complexity and internal loading of

additional op-amp

6/12/2001EE487 26

Example: 1-V, 9-bit SO ADC

n Architecturen 1.5-bits/stage Pipelined

n Reported Performance

50 dBSNDR:0.5 umProcess:

0.60LSBDNL:1.6 mWPower:

0.90LSBINL:5MS/sRate:

6/12/2001EE487 27

Modified Switched-Capacitor

n Grounding/Reseting switches areremoved and op-amp is connected inunity-gain feedback

Integrator Gain Stage

6/12/2001EE487 28

Modified SC - Continued

n Advantagesn Similar to standard SC designsn Switched op-amps not required

n Disadvantagen Requires added complexity to prevent

forward-biasing of junctions in switches(options are shifted-clock, master-slave, orfloating reference).

6/12/2001EE487 29

Example: 1.5-V, 10-bit SC ADC

n Architecturen 1.5-bits/stage Pipelined

n Reported Performance (Simulated)n 0.25um CMOS Processn 20 MS/sn SNDR of 65-70 dB

6/12/2001EE487 30

Biased Op-Amps

n Uses non-SC circuitsn S/H or T/H circuits

with a biased op-ampn Current-mode

switching andcomparators

Biased S/H

6/12/2001EE487 31

Biased Op-Amps - Continued

n Advantagesn No SC floating switchesn Only added complexity is bias generator

n Disadvantagen Resistor Matchingn Only useful for medium accuracy applications

6/12/2001EE487 32

Example: 1-V, 8-bit ADC & 10-bit DAC

n Architecturen (ADC) Successive Approximationn (DAC) R-2R Resistor String

n Reported Performance

3.00LSBD/A INL:1 MS/sD/A Rate:

1.70LSBD/A DNL:350 uWD/A Power:

1.2 umProcess:

0.47LSBA/D DNL:340 uWA/D Power:

1.14LSBA/D INL:50 kS/sA/D Rate:

6/12/2001EE487 33

Multi-Input Floating Gate MOSFETs

n Dual gate MOSFET with asecond floating gateperforms as both a currentsource and current switch

n Removes a level ofswitches from DACdesigns

n Minimum supply voltage isonly slightly higher than Vt

P+P+ N-Well

S D

Vb VsFloatingGate

6/12/2001EE487 34

Floating Gate MOSFETS - Continued

n Advantagesn Realizable in standard CMOS processes with

two poly layersn Can be used with DGMOS for low voltage

operation in older technologies

n Disadvantagen Useful only for DACs (or DAC portion of an

ADC)

6/12/2001EE487 35

Example: 1-V , 8-bit DAC

n Architecturen Segmented Current-Switch with 31 equal cells and 3

binary cells

n Reported Performance

0.15LSBOffset:1.2 umProcess:

0.80LSBDNL:850 uWPower:

1.09LSBINL:5MS/sRate:

6/12/2001EE487 36

Possible Solutions: Wrap-up

n The possible solutions are reported to workunder low-voltage conditions in currentprocesses

n These solutions should also scale for newertechnologies

n For DACs, the Floating Gate MOSFETs seem areasonable idea for 2-poly processes

6/12/2001EE487 37

Possible Solutions: ADCs

n Biased Op-amp technique has limited use inhigher accuracy applications because ofresistors

n Modified Switched-Capacitor designs have toomuch added complexity

n I predict that Switched Op-amps will standoutbecause of their close similarity to current SCdesigns

6/12/2001EE487 38

Conclusion

n Continued scaling of CMOS technologies hascreated design challenges for ADC and DACdesign

n Several solutions for low-voltage ADCs andDACs have been proposed

n Switched Op-amps is the method most likely tosee extensive future use

6/12/2001EE487 39

Referencesn B. Wooley, “EE315 Lecture Notes”, Spring 2001,

www.stanford.edu/class/ee315n U. Moon, et. al., “Switched-Capacitor Circuit Techniques in

Sub-micron Low-Voltage CMOS”, IEEE, 1999n M. Waltari, “1-V 9-Bit Pipelined Switched Op-amp ADC”, IEEE

JSSC, January 2001n M. Steyaert, et. al., “Custom Analog Low Power Design: The

problem of low voltage and mismatch”, IEEE CICC, 1997n S. Karthikeyan, “Low-Voltage Analog Circuit Design Based on

Biased Inverting Opamp Configuration”, IEEE TCS, 2000n S. Mortezapour, et. al. “A 1-V, 8-bit Successive Approximation

ADC in Standard CMOS Process”, IEEE JSSC, April 2000n L. S. Y. Wong, et. al., “A 1-V CMOS D/A Converter with Multi-

Input Floating-Gate MOSFET”, IEEE JSSC, October 1999