Title :
A 0.4 V 63
W 76.1 dB SNDR 20 kHz Bandwidth Delta-Sigma Modulator Using a Hybrid Switching Integrator
Author :
Younghyun Yoon ; Danbi Choi ; Jeongjin Roh
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Hanyang Univ., Ansan, South Korea
Abstract :
This paper presents a delta-sigma modulator operating at a supply voltage of 0.4 V. The designed delta-sigma modulator uses a proposed hybrid switching integrator and operates at a low supply voltage without clock boosting or bootstrapped switches. The proposed integrator consists of both switched-resistor and switched-capacitor operations and significantly reduces distortion at a low supply voltage. Variation in the turn-on resistance, which is the main source of distortion, is avoided by placing the switches at the virtual ground node of the amplifier. The proposed low-voltage design scheme can replace commonly-used clock boosting techniques, which rely on internal high-voltage generation circuits. A fabricated modulator achieves a 76.1 dB signal-to-noise-plus-distortion ratio (SNDR) and an 82 dB dynamic range at a 20 kHz bandwidth. The measured total power consumption is 63 μW from a 0.4 V supply voltage. The measured results show robust SNDR performance, even at ±10% supply voltage variations. The measured results also show stable performance over a wide temperature range.
Keywords :
clocks; delta-sigma modulation; integrating circuits; bandwidth 20 kHz; bootstrapped switches; clock boosting; delta-sigma modulator; hybrid switching integrator; internal high-voltage generation circuits; low-voltage design scheme; power 63 muW; signal-to-noise-plus-distortion ratio; switched-capacitor operation; switched-resistor operation; turn-on resistance; virtual ground node; voltage 0.4 V; Boosting; Capacitors; Clocks; Modulation; Switches; Switching circuits; Threshold voltage; Hybrid switching integrator; low-power delta-sigma modulator;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2015.2468857