2. Cyclic ADC with CLS Gain-error Calibration in the First Stage
The cyclic ADC used in the first stage is based on a 2.5-bit MDAC structure. Fig. 3 shows an ideal transfer curve for the 2.5-bit MDAC circuit. The sub-ADC used in the
MDAC is a flash type, which includes six comparators and generates a digital output
of seven levels. An ideal closed loop gain for the 2.5-bit MDAC is four, and is realized
with a ratio of capacitors. However, in an actual implementation, the closed loop
gain cannot be exactly 4 because the DC gain of the op-amp is finite. In general,
op-amps are designed to achieve a large DC gain (more than 70 dB) to guarantee the
SNR performance of ADCs.
Fig. 3. Ideal transfer curve for a 2.5-bit MDAC circuit.
Fig. 4. Operation of the first cyclic ADC with gain error correction (a) Sampling,
(b) 1st estimation, (c) 1st level shift, (d) 2nd estimation, (e) 2nd level shift.
However, it is difficult to achieve this large DC gain in op-amps, because the supply
voltage of modern CMOS technology has decreased to approximately 1 V for analog circuit
designs. If a large DC gain is required and/or a complicated circuit design is involved,
the output swing is limited, and power consumption is increased.
In this paper, we adopted a CLS technique, which is a gain error calibration, to the
op-amp of the MDAC to reduce the required DC gain and power consumption.
Fig. 4 explains operation of the 2.5-bit MDAC step by step. For simplicity, only a single-ended
version is represented, although the implementation is fully differential. In Fig. 4(a), the input signal is directed to sampling capacitors, which are divided into four
units. When the sampling is done, a sub-ADC converts the input into a 2.5-bit digital
code, which is applied to the sub-DAC, and the op-amp and CLS capacitor ($C_{CLS}$)
are reset. The total sampled charge is given by:
where $C_S$ is sampling capacitor, $C_F$ is feedback capacitor, VIN is input voltage,
and QS is sampled charge.
In Fig. 4(b), three reference voltages ($V_{REFP}$, VCM, $V_{REFN}$) are connected to the bottom
plates of the sampling capacitors depending on the output result of the sub-ADC, $D_{1}$,
and the MDAC output is sampled to the $C_{CLS}$, including the gain error of the op-amp.
Estimation voltage, VEST, is written as
where $C_P$ is the parasitic capacitance connected to the op-amp input node, $V_{REF}$
is reference voltage which is equal to $V_{REFP}$ minus $V_{REFN}$ and $D_{1}$ is
a decimal value of the first sub-ADC output.
In Fig. 4(c), the $C_{CLS}$ is connected between the op-amp output and the feedback capacitor
in series to compensate for the gain error caused by the finite DC gain of the op-amp.
The first residue voltage, $V_{OUT1}$, which is the calibrated MDAC output, is fed
into the sub-ADC, and the second digital output, $D_{2}$, is generated. $V_{OUT1}$
is
As shown in Eq. (3), the effective loop gain becomes the square of the original loop gain ($T_{1}$).
This means that the CLS technique can alleviate the large DC gain requirement of the
op-amp, and also reduce power consumption.
In Fig. 4(d), the feedback capacitor, $C_F$, which is holding the first residue voltage, $V_{OUT1}$,
is divided by four. Three of them are used as sampling capacitors, while the fourth
one remains a feedback capacitor. This is called the capacitor sharing technique and
allows extra sampling capacitors for the second MDAC conversion to be eliminated.
The second estimation voltage, VEST2, is sampled to the $C_{CLS}$ and written as
where $Q_{RES1}$ is the first residue charge, $V_{X1}$ is an op-amp input node voltage,
both $C_S$’ and $C_F$’ are $C_F$/4 and $D_{2}$ is a decimal value of the second sub-ADC
output.
In Fig. 4(e), the $C_{CLS}$ is connected between the op-amp output and a top plate of the CSAR
in series for gain error calibration and second stage input sampling. The second residue
voltage, $V_{OUT2}$, is