Title :
A 100-Mb/s 2.8-V CMOS current-mode analog Viterbi decoder
Author :
Demosthenous, Andreas ; Taylor, John
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Univ. Coll. London, UK
fDate :
7/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper describes a 4-state rate-1/2 analog convolutional decoder fabricated in 0.8-μm CMOS technology. Although analog implementations have been described in the literature, this decoder is the first to be reported realizing the add-compare-select section entirely with current-mode analog circuits. It operates at data rates up to 115 Mb/s (channel rate 230 Mb/s) and consumes 39 mW at that rate from a single 2.8-V power supply. At a rate of 100 Mb/s, the power consumption per trellis state is about 1/3 that of a comparable digital system. In addition, at 50 Mb/s (the only rate at which comparative data were available), the power consumption per trellis state is similarly about 1/3 that of the best competing analog realization (i.e., excluding, for example, PR4 detectors which use a simplified form of the Viterbi algorithm). The chip contains 3.7 K transistors of which less than 1 K are used in the analog part of the decoder. The die has a core area of 1 mm2, of which about 1/3 contains the analog section. The measured performance is close to that of an ideal Viterbi decoder with infinite quantization. In addition, a technique is described which extends the application of the circuits to decoders with a larger number of states. A typical example is a 64-state decoder for use in high-speed satellite communications
Keywords :
CMOS analogue integrated circuits; Viterbi decoding; analogue processing circuits; convolutional codes; current-mode circuits; digital communication; maximum likelihood decoding; sample and hold circuits; 100 Mbit/s; 2.8 V; 39 mW; CMOS technology; add-compare-select section; analog convolutional decoder; clock generator; convolutional codes; current-mode analog Viterbi decoder; digital communications; front-end sample-hold circuit; high-speed satellite communications; maximum likelihood decoding; path metric errors; power consumption per trellis state; switched-current circuits; top-plate sampling method; Analog circuits; CMOS technology; Decoding; Detectors; Digital systems; Energy consumption; Power supplies; Quantization; Semiconductor device measurement; Viterbi algorithm;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.2002.1015689