Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. Eng., Nat. Chiao Tung Univ., Taiwan, Taiwan
Abstract :
In this paper, two new architectures for high-speed CMOS wave-pipelined current-mode A/D converters (WP-IADCs) are proposed and analyzed. In the new WP-IADC architectures, the wave-pipelined theory is applied to both pipeline structures, called full WP-IADC (FWP-IADC) and indirect transfer WP-IADC (ITWP-IADC). In the FWP-IADC, each stage uses the full current-mode wave-pipelined structure without switched-current cell circuits. In the ITWP-IADC, the switched-current cells are incorporated into the wave-pipelined stages which are divided into several sections with controlled clocks. Therefore, the proposed ITWP-IADC performs optimally in terms of speed and accuracy in the WP-IADCs. Generally, the proposed WP-IADCs have the advantages of high speed, high input frequency, high efficiency of timing usage, high clock-period flexibility in switched-current cells for precision enhancement, and reduced number of switched-current cells in the overall data path for linearity improvement. According to the theoretical analysis on the proposed WP-IADC structures, the minimum sampling clock period is proportional to the intrinsic delay of the current mirror and the increased rise/fall time in each wave-pipelined stage. The HSPICE simulation results reveal that, under Nyquist rate sampling in 8-b resolution, a sampling rate of 20 and 54 MHz can be achieved for FWP-IADC and two-section ITWP-IADC, respectively. If four wave-pipelined sections are used, the ITWP-IADC can be operated at 166 MHz at an input frequency of 8 MHz. To experimentally verify the correct function of the proposed WP-IADC structures, the proposed new architecture of the FWP-IADC is implemented by using 0.35-μm CMOS technology. The measurement results successfully demonstrate the feasibility of wave-pipelined IADC architectures in applications of high-speed ADCs.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; SPICE; analogue-digital conversion; circuit simulation; clocks; current-mode circuits; high-speed integrated circuits; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit measurement; integrated circuit modelling; pipeline processing; signal resolution; signal sampling; switched current circuits; 0.35 micron; 166 MHz; 20 MHz; 54 MHz; 8 MHz; FWP-IADC; HSPICE simulation; ITWP-IADC; Nyquist rate sampling resolution; WP-IADC architectures; clock-period flexibility; controlled clocks; current-mode wave-pipelined architectures; current-mode wave-pipelined structure; data path; full WP-IADC; high-speed CMOS wave-pipelined current-mode A/D converters; high-speed analog-to-digital converters; indirect transfer WP-IADC; input frequency; intrinsic current mirror delay; linearity improvement; pipeline structures; precision enhancement; rise/fall time; sampling clock period; sampling rate; switched-current cell circuits; timing usage efficiency; wave-pipelined theory; Analog-digital conversion; CMOS technology; Clocks; Delay effects; Frequency; Linearity; Pipelines; Sampling methods; Switching circuits; Timing;