KimKi-Hyun1
BaekJi-Hyun1
KimJong-Hyun1
ChaeHyung-Il1
-
(Department of Electrical Engineering, Konkuk University, Seoul 05029, Korea)
Copyright © The Institute of Electronics and Information Engineers(IEIE)
Index Terms
Analog-to-digital converter (ADC), hybrid ADC, noise-shaping (NS), oversampling, successive approximation register (SAR), time-interleaving
I. INTRODUCTION
In recent wireless communication systems, high-order modulation and a wide channel
bandwidth are used to rapidly transmit a large amount of data. Therefore, the need
for incorporating an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) which is compact, energy efficient,
and prompt and exhibits a high resolution in wireless receivers is increasing. Successive
approximation register (SAR) ADCs have been commonly used in receivers due to their
easy scaling for technology, small area, and high energy efficiency.
However, at high resolutions, the energy efficiency of SAR ADCs significantly reduces
due to the exponentially increased comparator power and size of the capacitive digital-to-analog
converter (CDAC). Moreover, it is also difficult to achieve a high speed because at
least N comparisons must be performed to obtain N-bit results. Because of these limitations,
conventional SAR ADCs are not suitable for applications that require a high resolution
and speed. Recently, hybrid ADCs that combine the advantages of SAR ADCs and other
ADCs have been developed to overcome the disadvantages of SAR ADCs while maintaining
a high energy efficiency.
A noise-shaping SAR (NS-SAR) ADC, a type of hybrid ADCs, can achieve a high resolution
with high energy efficiency by applying oversampling and NS of ΔΣ ADC to SAR operation
(1-4). However, the bandwidth of a NS-SAR ADC is limited due to oversampling and filter
latency. A time-interleaved NS-SAR (TINS-SAR) ADC represent another type of hybrid
ADCs that interleave NS-SAR ADCs. A TINS-SAR ADC can significantly increase the overall
conversion speed because two or more NS-SAR ADCs perform the conversion in parallel,
while maintaining a high resolution and energy efficiency. Notably, when the oversampling
ratio (OSR) is larger than the number of channels, the interleaving spurs caused by
inter-channel mismatches are located out-of-band. These spurs do not affect the overall
resolution, and thus, additional calibration is not required. In the prior (5), a TINS-SAR ADC is implemented based on the error-feedback (EF) architecture with
a static summation pre-amplifier. However, the use of the summation pre-amplifier,
which consumes static power, not only reduces the energy efficiency and speed, but
also induces additional noise.
Considering these aspects, we propose a TINS-SAR ADC based on the cascade of integrator
with feedforward (CIFF) architecture. The proposed ADC uses the midway feedback technique
(5), but it replaces the summation pre-amplifier with a dynamic multi-input comparator
to sum the feedback final residue and CDAC voltage. Because the summation pre-amplifier
is not used, the TINS-SAR ADC can be implemented without a loss in the speed and energy
efficiency or increase in the circuit complexity. A 10-bit ADC with the proposed architecture
is implemented and post-layout simulated in a 65-nm CMOS process with a supply voltage
of 1.2 V. The post-layout simulation results indicate that a signal-to-noise distortion
ratio (SNDR) of 69.2 dB can be obtained at a bandwidth of 100 MHz at 800 MS/s with
an OSR of 4.
The remaining paper is organized as follows. Section II describes the proposed ADC
architecture. The circuit implementation is presented in Section III, and the post-layout
simulation results are discussed in Section IV. The concluding remarks are presented
in Section V.
II. ARCHITECTURE
1. Midway Feedback
The final residue feedback for NS in TINS-SAR ADC can be done in two ways: direct-interleaving
or inter-channel feedback. Fig. 1(a) illustrates the direct-interleaving approach, which manages the final residue feedback
in the same channel as the conventional NS-SAR ADC. In this case, the feedback delay
becomes N, which is the number of channels, and the overall noise transfer function
(NTF) is (1-z$^{\mathrm{-N}}$). This approach reduces the NS effect in-band because
it has several notches that are spread out-of-band unnecessarily.
Fig. 1. TINS-SAR ADC using (a) direct-interleaving, (b) inter-channel feedback.
Fig. 2. Midway feedback for TINS-SAR ADC using inter-channel feedback.
The alternative final residue feedback method, inter-channel feedback, involves feeding
the final residue generated by current channel to the next channel. This approach
has only one-sample feedback delay (z$^{-1}$), as shown in Fig. 1(b), and thus, an NTF of (1-z$^{-1}$) can be implemented with a single in-band notch.
However, a timing problem occurs, as the final residues are not generated by the current
channel before the conversion of the next channel is initiated. The addition of an
artificial delay to solve the timing problem is not desirable because the overall
conversion speed is significantly reduced.
In the prior work (5), the timing problem is solved using midway feedback, by passing the final residue
generated by the current channel to the next channel in the middle of the conversion
of the next channel, as shown in Fig. 2. Because the SAR conversion process consists of several repetitions of comparison
cycles, it is easy to feedback the final residue before a certain comparison cycle.
In addition, because the quantization noise of all conversion cycles except the last
conversion is cancelled, the TINS-SAR ADC with midway feedback can obtain the same
NS effect as that of the conventional NS-SAR ADC, thereby avoiding any overhead of
resolution and speed.
Fig. 3. NS-SAR ADC architecture based on (a) EF, (b) CIFF.
2. TINS-SAR ADC based on CIFF Architecture
The two main architectures used to implement a NS-SAR ADC are the EF and CIFF architectures
(6). Fig. 3(a) shows the NS-SAR ADC based on the EF architecture. This system feeds the final residue
back to the CDAC and performs the summation of the CDAC voltage and final residue
through charge sharing process. In this case, when the aforementioned midway feedback
is used, the signal sampled to the CDAC is attenuated by charge sharing, owing to
which, the quantization error is not cancelled in the next conversion. In the prior
work (5), the CDAC voltage and final residue is summed using the summation pre-amplifier to
solve this problem. However, this pre-amplifier consumes static power, reduces the
overall speed, and increases the overall circuit complexity because it is necessary
for all channels.
To overcome the limitations of using the summation pre-amplifier, the proposed ADC
uses the CIFF architecture shown in Fig. 3(b). Unlike the EF architecture, the CIFF architecture uses a dynamic multi-input comparator
to sum the CDAC voltage and final residue. Therefore, this architecture does not require
a summation pre-amplifier because the CDAC voltage remains the same regardless of
the midway feedback.
Fig. 4. (a) Signal flow, (b) block diagram of the proposed ADC.
Fig. 4(a) shows the signal flow of the proposed four-channel 10-bit TINS-SAR ADC based on the
CIFF architecture. Each channel performs 8-bit most significant bit (MSB) conversions
followed by the least significant bit (LSB) conversions including the final residue
generated and passed from the previous channel. The proposed ADC, as shown in Fig. 4(b), uses a two-input comparator to sum the CDAC voltage and final residue of the previous
channel, thereby attaining a 2${\times}$ gain by adjusting the device size ratio.
Therefore, the first-order NTF of (1-0.5z$^{-1}$)/(1+0.5z$^{-1}$) can be implemented
without an amplifier by using a passive integrator based on a switched capacitor (SC)
(7). When the LSB conversion is initiated, one redundant bit (1-bit) is added, which
prevents the overflow caused by adding a final residue in the middle of the conversion.
The redundancy provides an additional LSB conversion range to solve the problem of
exceeding the maximum LSB conversion range (V$_{\mathrm{LSB, IN MAX}}$) (8). After the redundant bit, 2-bit LSB conversions are performed to complete the analog-to-digital
conversion.
III. CIRCUIT IMPLEMENTATION
Fig. 5 shows the top-level circuit implementation of the proposed ADC. The proposed ADC
consists of four channels, and the final output can be obtained by combining the results
of each channel through a multiplexer (MUX). In the prior work (5), a summation pre-amplifier and final residue sampling capacitor (C$_{\mathrm{RES}}$)
is used for every channel. Since each channel also adds a switch for sampling residues
of other channels and logic to control it, this increases the complexity of the circuit.
In contrast, in the proposed ADC, all the channels share only one C$_{\mathrm{RES}}$
to sample the final residue. The power consumption and circuit complexity are further
reduced because pre-amplifiers and additional logic are not required, as well as simplifying
metal routing between channels. At this time, the size of C$_{\mathrm{RES }}$is 514C
(C = 2 fF), same to that of the CDAC.
Fig. 5. Top-level implementation of the proposed ADC.
The 10-bit CDAC uses the merged capacitor switching (MCS) scheme (9). Notably, the MCS can maintain a common-mode voltage with a high switching efficiency,
and it can implement the same operation in half the size compared to conventional
switching. In addition, the CDAC includes a 4-LSB magnitude redundancy (2C) to provide
the aforementioned additional LSB conversion range.
The comparator used in the proposed ADC uses a double-tail dynamic comparator to reduce
the kickback noise (10). In the proposed ADC, a multi-input comparator is used to serve two functions: summation
and amplification. Additional input pairs are used to sum the CDAC voltage and final
residue. In this case, as shown in Fig. 5, the devices connected to the RES node and INT node are set as 1:2 to obtain a 2${\times}$
gain, which eliminates the need for an additional amplifier.
The proposed ADC uses asynchronous logic to ensure a high conversion speed (11,12). Fig. 6 shows the operation of each channel. First, input signal sampling is performed through
a bootstrapped switch (13), and then 8-bit MSB conversions are performed. At this time, the INT node is reset
to V$_{\mathrm{CM}}$. After the MSB conversions, C$_{\mathrm{RES}}$, which contains
the final residue generated in the previous channel, is connected to the RES node
as $\overline{\Phi }$ goes low and $\Phi$ goes high (the two clocks are non-overlapped),
and LSB conversions are performed.
Fig. 6. Operation timing diagram of the proposed ADC.
IV. POST-LAYOUT SIMULATION RESULTS
This section discusses the post-layout simulation results of the proposed TINS-SAR
ADC based on the CIFF architecture. The circuit is implemented in a 65-nm CMOS process.
As shown in Fig. 7, the size of the ADC core is 360 ${\mathrm{\mu}}$m ${\times}$ 250 ${\mathrm{\mu}}$m,
and the single channel occupies an area of 165 ${\mathrm{\mu}}$m ${\times}$ 105 ${\mathrm{\mu}}$m.
The post-layout simulation contains transient noise up to 100 GHz. Fig. 8 shows the output spectral density of the proposed ADC at a sampling rate of 800 MHz.
The input signal has magnitude of -0.82 dBFS at 8.2 MHz. The results show that the
SNDR of 69.2 dB is obtained at a bandwidth of 100 MHz (OSR = 4).
Fig. 7. Layout of the proposed ADC core.
Fig. 8. Output power spectral density of the proposed ADC from post-layout simulation.
The total power consumption is 8.6 mW under a supply voltage of 1.2 V. The proportions
of digital, analog, and CDAC are 5 mW, 2.5 mW, and 1.1 mW, respectively. As shown
in Fig. 9, by replacing the pre-amplifier with the multi-input comparator, the proposed ADC
significantly reduces the power consumption associated by the pre-amplifier, which
is approximately 45.3% in the prior work.
Fig. 9. Pie chart of power consumption (a) prior work (based on EF), (b) proposed
ADC (based on CIFF).
Table 1. Performance and specifications of the prior works and the proposed ADC
|
[1]
|
[5]
|
This Work
|
Architecture
|
NS-SAR
|
TINS-SAR
(EF)
|
TINS-SAR
(CIFF)
|
Amplifier
|
YES
|
YES
|
NO
|
Process (nm)
|
65
|
40
|
65
|
Area (mm2)
|
0.0462
|
0.061
|
0.09
|
Supply Voltage (V)
|
1.2
|
1
|
1.2
|
Power (mW)
|
0.8
|
13
|
8.6
|
Sampling Rate (MS/s)
|
90
|
400
|
800
|
OSR
|
4
|
4
|
4
|
Bandwidth (MHz)
|
11
|
50
|
100
|
SNDR (dB)
|
62.1
|
70.4
|
69.2
|
FoMS (dB)
|
163.3
|
166.3
|
169.9
|
FoMw (fJ/conv.-step)
|
35.8
|
48.1
|
18.2
|
FoMs $=S N D R+10 \cdot \log 10($ Bandwidth/Power $)$
FoMw $=$ Power $\left / (2^{\text {ENOB }} \cdot 2\right.$ Bandwidth $)$.
*ENOB $=$ Effective number of bits.
Table 1 presents the performance values and specifications of the prior works and proposed
ADC. The TINS-SAR ADC based on the CIFF architecture achieves Schreier figure of merit
(FoM$_{\mathrm{S}}$) of 169.9 dB and Walden figure of merit (FoM$_{\mathrm{W}}$) of
18.2 fJ/conv.-step. The proposed ADC exhibits a high conversion speed with an energy
efficiency comparable to that of the conventional NS-SAR ADC. Compared with a TINS-SAR
ADC based on EF (5), its energy efficiency (FoMs) is 3.6 dB better because it does not use an amplifier.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
The proposed TINS-SAR ADC based on CIFF can obtain a high resolution with a high energy
efficiency, by exploiting the advantages of the SAR ADC and using NS and oversampling.
Moreover, the proposed ADC can expand the limited bandwidth by increasing the sampling
rate through interleaving. In contrast to the prior TINS-SAR ADC based on EF, the
power consumption is reduced as an amplifier that consumes static power is not used.
The circuit complexity is also reduced because all channels share only one residue
sampling capacitor.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Konkuk University in 2019.
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Author
Ki-Hyun Kim received the B.S. degrees in electrical engineering from Kookmin University,
Seoul, Korea, in 2020.
He is currently working toward the M.S. degree in electrical engineering at Konkuk
University.
His research interests include data converter.
Ji-Hyun Baek received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Konkuk University,
Seoul, Korea, in 2021.
She is currently working toward the M.S. degree in electrical engineering at Konkuk
University.
Her research during the M.S. course has focused on high speed ADC.
Jong-Hyun Kim is currently undergraduate student in electrical engineering from Konkuk
University, Seoul, Korea.
His research has focused on analog to digital converter and digital calibration.
Hyung-Il Chae received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Seoul National
University, Seoul, Korea, in 2004, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engi-neering
from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI in 2009 and 2013, respectively.
From 2013 to 2015, he was a senior engineer at Qualcomm Atheros, San Jose, CA.