Title :
Time interleaved converter arrays
Author :
Black, William C., Jr. ; Hodges, David A.
fDate :
12/1/1980 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
High-speed monolithic converters normally use a variation of the flash technique, which 2/SUP n/ comparators in parallel to obtain a fast n-bit conversion. Although this method allows for high converter bandwidth, it is not very area efficient, and results in large die sizes for even modest resolution converters. In the technique presented here, a number of small but area efficient converters are operated in a time-interleaved fashion to achieve the bandwidth of a flash circuit, but in a substantially smaller area. This technique is analyzed with respect to noise and distortion resulting from nonideal array characteristics, and is demonstrated by way of a four-way array test-chip. This chip consists of four time-interleaved 7-bit weighted-capacitor A/D converters fabricated in a 10 μm metal-gate CMOS process. Full 7-bit linearity is maintained up to a 2.5 MHz conversion rate, with operation at reduced linearity continuing to approximately 4 MHz. The design of this chip, and anticipated characteristics if fabricated in a modern 4-5 μm process are described.
Keywords :
Analogue-digital conversion; Field effect integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; field effect integrated circuits; Analog-digital conversion; Bandwidth; CMOS process; Costs; Digital signal processors; Helium; Signal sampling; Solid state circuits; TV receivers; Testing;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSSC.1980.1051512