Title :
Designing analog and RF circuits in nanoscale CMOS technologies: Scale the supply, reduce the area and use digital gates
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Columbia Univ., New York, NY, USA
Abstract :
We will present our recent research that has centered around three themes aimed at facilitating the design of analog and RF interface circuits in digital nanoscale CMOS processes. Nanometer CMOS is operating with supply voltages of about 1 V or less and for low power operation in future deeply scaled nodes supply voltages as low as 0.5 V are projected. Supply reductions are needed to maintain reliability for scaled devices, but are further strongly driven by the requirement to improve energy efficiency, so that functional density can increase without raising power density. In our research we have investigated the scaling of the supply voltage of analog and RF interfaces down to 0.5 V. Keeping these interfaces compatible with the core digital technology and supply is eventually always preferred for high volume applications and can offer advantages in low power system-on-chip applications with large digital signal processing cores. We will show that this research track offers ample opportunities for innovations in device biasing, circuit topologies, system architectures and signaling. Our ultra-low voltage prototypes include reference circuits, filters, analog-to-digital converters and fully integrated RF front-ends including baseband filtering and frequency synthesis. A second important theme is circuit design techniques to reduce area used by RF integrated circuits. Recent RFIC designs rely substantially on the use of on-chip spiral inductors, but these structures do not scale sufficiently with technology and become progressively more expensive. We will show design and layout techniques that allow to reuse the space under spiral inductors without affecting the performance of the building blocks. Examples include voltage-controlled oscillators and fully integrated phase-locked loops. Finally we will discuss the use of digital gates to improve the performance of analog and RF integrated circuits. Digital signal processing blocks are reducing much faster in area and po- wer than analog or RF circuits and whenever possible the assistance of digital computation should be exploited to reduce the need for analog/RF circuits or enhance their performance. In particular we will discuss the opportunities for using digital intelligence to improve the linearity performance of RF front-ends while making them more robust to process variations and simplifying their design. We will point out the need for a different approach for digital assistance for RF functions compared to mixed signal functions.
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; analogue integrated circuits; analogue-digital conversion; digital signal processing chips; filters; inductors; integrated circuit layout; integrated circuit reliability; network topology; phase locked loops; radiofrequency integrated circuits; system-on-chip; voltage-controlled oscillators; RF integrated circuits; RF interface circuit; RFIC designs; analog circuit; analog-to-digital converters; baseband filtering; circuit design techniques; circuit topology; core digital technology; design technique; device biasing; digital assistance; digital computation; digital gates; digital nanoscale CMOS process; digital signal processing; energy efficiency; filters; frequency synthesis; fully integrated phase-locked loops; functional density; layout technique; linearity performance; low power system-on-chip applications; mixed signal functions; on-chip spiral inductors; reference circuits; reliability; signaling; supply voltage scaling; system architectures; ultralow voltage prototypes; voltage-controlled oscillators; CMOS analog integrated circuits; CMOS digital integrated circuits; CMOS technology; Digital signal processing; Inductors; Radio frequency; Radiofrequency integrated circuits; Space technology; Spirals; Voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Microwaves, Communications, Antennas and Electronics Systems, 2009. COMCAS 2009. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Tel Aviv
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3985-0
DOI :
10.1109/COMCAS.2009.5386007