This application is based on and claims the benefit of priority from prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-119071, filed on May 27, 2011, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Embodiments described herein relate generally to an arithmetic circuit and an A/D converter using the same.
An arithmetic circuit configured to amplify an analog signal by a desired amplification factor to output an amplified signal is used in an electronic circuit such as a pipelined A/D converter, etc. for amplifying a residual signal, etc. It is expected of such an arithmetic circuit to secure a necessary bandwidth and achieve a desired gain at the same time.
An arithmetic circuit according to the embodiments explained below includes: an input terminal configured to receive an input signal; a plurality of capacitors; and an amplifier circuit including an amplifying input terminal and an output terminal and configured to amplify a signal input from the amplifying input terminal and output it as an output signal from the output terminal. A first switch circuit becomes conductive based on a first control signal and thereby connects the plurality of capacitors in parallel between the input terminal and a first voltage terminal for supplying a first voltage. A second switch circuit becomes conductive based on a second control signal and thereby connects a first capacitor of the plurality of capacitors between the amplifying input terminal and a second voltage terminal for supplying a second voltage so as to form a first current path, and connects a second capacitor of the plurality of capacitors between the amplifying input terminal and the output terminal so as to form a second current path.
The embodiments of the present invention will now be explained with reference to the drawings.
Each of the capacitor circuits 11(1) to 11(N) includes a parallel connection switch 21, a cascade connection switch 22, and a capacitor 23 (capacitance Ci (i=1 to N)).
The parallel connection switch 21 is connected between the input terminal T1 and a lower electrode (bottom plate) of the capacitor 23.
The parallel connection switch 21 is configured to be capable of being switched between a conductive state and a nonconductive state in accordance with a control signal Φ1 (here, the explanation will be given on the assumption that Φ1=“1” causes switching to a conductive state and Φ1=“0” causes switching to a nonconductive state).
The cascade connection switch 22 is connected between the lower electrode of the capacitor 23 in the capacitor circuit 11(i) and an upper electrode (top plate) of the capacitor 23 in the adjoining capacitor circuit 11(i+1). However, the cascade connection switch 22 in the N-th capacitor circuit 11(N) is connected between the lower electrode in the capacitor circuit 11(N) and the output terminal T2 of the amplifier 14. The two electrodes of the capacitor 23 are referred to as “upper electrode” and “lower electrode” respectively, but these address terms are for the convenience of explanation only, and not meant to limit the directions of the capacitor 23. The present embodiment can also be applied to a circuit in which one electrode and the other electrode are arranged side by side horizontally, or to a circuit in which the electrodes are interchanged vertically.
One end of the cascade connection switch 22 of the N/2-th capacitor circuit 11(N/2) is connected to a grounding terminal, and not to the adjoining capacitor circuit 11(N/2+1). Thereby, the cascade connection switch 22 is switched between a conductive state and a nonconductive state in accordance with a control signal Φ2 (here, Φ2=“1” causes switching to a conductive state, and Φ2=“0” causes switching to a nonconductive state). The grounding terminal may be replaced by a certain voltage terminal supplying a certain voltage. The same holds true in the following descriptions.
The switches 12 described above are connected between the upper electrodes of the capacitors 23 and a grounding terminal (fixed voltage terminal). The switches 12 are switched between a conductive state and a nonconductive state in accordance with the control signal Φ1. The switches 12 and the parallel connection switches 21 are both switched to a conductive state in accordance with the control signal Φ1, and function as a first switch circuit configured to connect the N number of capacitors 23 in parallel between the input terminal T1 and the grounding terminal GND. Modification for connecting the capacitors 23 to a voltage terminal supplied with any voltage instead of the grounding terminal GND may also be possible.
The upper electrodes of the capacitors 23 of the capacitor circuits 11(1) and 11(N/2+1) are connected to an input terminal (amplifying input terminal) of the amplifier 14 through the switches 13 which are switched to a conductive state in accordance with the control signal Φ2. As the case may be, the switches 13 may be omitted, and the capacitors 23 (C1, CN/2+1) and the input terminal of the amplifier 14 may be short-circuited. The switches 13 and the cascade connection switches 22 both become a conductive state in accordance with the control signal Φ2. The switches 13 and the cascade connection switches 22 function as a second switch circuit configured to connect some of the N number of capacitors 23, e.g., N/2 number of capacitors 23 in series between the input terminal of the amplifier 14 and the grounding terminal GND, and connect some of the N number of capacitors 23, e.g., the remaining N/2 number of capacitors 23 in series between the input terminal and output terminal T2 of the amplifier 14.
In the example of
The switch 12 configured to be switched between a conductive state and a nonconductive state in accordance with the control signal Φ1 is connected between the upper electrode of the capacitor 23 and the grounding terminal GND (fixed voltage terminal).
Next, an operation of the arithmetic circuit according to the present embodiment will be explained. Here, explanation will be given for the case of N=4 (
After this, after the control signal Φ1 returns to “0” again, the control signal Φ2 changes from “0” to “1”. In response, the capacitors C1 to C2 become connected in series between the grounding terminal and the amplifier 14 such that their lower electrodes are on the side of the grounding terminal as shown in
On the other hand, the capacitors C3 to C4 become connected in series between the input terminal and output terminal of the amplifier 14 such that their lower electrodes are on the side of the output terminal of the amplifier 14, as shown in
The output signal (Vout) of the amplifier 14 at the moment is expressed by the following equation, provided that C1=C2=C3=C4.
When the amplification factor Av of the amplifier 14 is by far larger than 1 (Av>>1), the result becomes Vout≈4Vin, which means that the arithmetic circuit of
When C1=C2=C3=C4=C, the ratio between a feedback capacitance Cf (═C3·C4/(C3+C4)) and an input capacitance Ci (=C1·C2/(C1+C2)) becomes 1. A conventional switched-capacitor negative-feedback amplifier circuit can increase the amplification factor of the arithmetic circuit by increasing the ratio between the feedback capacitance Cf and the input capacitance Ci, but has a problem that it cannot increase the amplification factor without reducing the bandwidth instead.
However, according to the present embodiment, it is possible to prescribe the amplification factor by the number N of the capacitors 23, while it is also possible to keep the bandwidth constant unless the ratio between the feedback capacitance Cf and the input capacitance Ci is changed. Therefore, it is possible to secure a desired bandwidth and achieve a desired amplification factor at the same time.
The arithmetic circuit of
The pipelined A/D converter includes a plurality of stages 100 connected in cascade, and a digital arithmetic unit 200. Each stage 100 converts an analog input signal Vin input from outside or an analog input signal Vouti−1 (i=1 to 3) output by the preceding stage 100 to a digital signal Douti and outputs it to the digital arithmetic unit 200. Each stage 100 also reconverts the digital signal Douti to an analog signal, subtracts this analog signal from the input analog signal Vin or Vouti−1, amplifies an analog signal resulting from the subtraction by a certain amplification factor, and supplies it to the succeeding stage 100. Hence, the input signal Vin is converted to a digital signal of a few bits based on the plurality of digital signals Dout1 to Dout4 obtained in this way.
Here, the reference voltage Vref is a voltage used by the A/D converter circuit 101 when the arithmetic circuit of
The digital value D varies according to a digital signal of how many bits is to be generated by the A/D converter circuit 101 of each stage 100.
The output signal Vout of the arithmetic circuit of
When the amplification factor Av is a value that is by far larger than 1, the output voltage can be expressed as Vout≈4Vin−D·Vref, and hence it is possible to achieve any amplification factor in accordance with the number N of capacitors 23, regardless of any fluctuation in the amplification factor of the amplifier 14. Moreover, it is possible to keep the bandwidth constant unless the ratio between the feedback capacitance Cf and the input capacitance Ci is changed. That is, it is possible to set any amplification factor in accordance with the number N of capacitors 23 while keeping the bandwidth constant.
As shown in
The capacitor 31 is a variable capacitor of which capacitance is variable. The upper electrode of the capacitor 31 is configured to be connectable to the input terminal of the amplifier 14 through the switch 13. The lower electrode of the capacitor 31 is configured to be connectable to a grounding terminal through the switch 12′ controlled by the control signal Φ1, and connectable to a terminal for supplying a reference voltage Vref through the switch 13′ controlled by the control signal Φ2.
It is also possible to achieve a variable capacitance by, instead of using the variable capacitor 31, providing a plurality of, e.g., two capacitors 31A (capacitance CA) and 31B (capacitance CB) having different capacitances, and making switches 12A′, 12B′, 13A′, and 13B′ conductive selectively, as shown in
The variables Di1 and Di2 are determined by the value of an output signal D (
An operation of the arithmetic circuit of
After this, when the control signal Φ2 becomes “1”, the four capacitors 23 (C1 to C4) become connected in the same way as in the first embodiment (
When the capacitances C1, C2, C3, C4, and C5 of the five capacitors 23 and 31 are all C (C1=C2=C3=C4=C5=C), the output voltage (Vout) is expressed as follows, provided that the amplification factor of the amplifier is Av.
When the amplification factor Av is a value that is by far larger than 1, the output signal Vout can be expressed as Vout≈4Vin−2Di2·Vref−Di1·Vref. It is possible to achieve any amplification factor in accordance with the number N of capacitors 23, regardless of any fluctuation in the amplification factor of the amplifier 14.
As can be understood from [Equation 3] above, by providing the capacitor 31, it becomes possible to output the output voltage Vout as a value obtained by subtracting the product of the reference voltage Vref and the variable Di2×2. That is, the capacitor 31 functions as a reference voltage subtracting circuit configured to provide a signal obtained by subtracting a product of the reference voltage Vref and a variable.
The arithmetic circuit according to the present embodiment is substantially the same as the second embodiment (
Each capacitor circuit 41(j) (j=1 to M) includes a parallel connection switch 51, a cascade connection switch 52, and a capacitor 53 (capacitance Cj′ (j=1 to M)). Each capacitor circuit 41(j) also includes a switch 12′ between itself and a grounding terminal.
The parallel connection switches 51 become conductive together with the switches 12′ when the control signal Φ1 becomes “1”, thereby connecting the plurality of capacitors 53 in parallel between the grounding terminal and the terminal for supplying the reference voltage Vref.
The cascade connection switch 52 is configured to be capable of being switched between a conductive state and a nonconductive state in accordance with a control signal Φ2 (here, the explanation will be given on the assumption that Φ2=“1” causes switching to a conductive state and Φ2=“0” causes switching to a nonconductive state). The cascade connection switch 52 is connected between the lower electrode of the capacitor 53 in the capacitor circuit 41(j) and the upper electrode (top plate) of the capacitor 53 in the adjoining capacitor circuit 41(j+1). However, the cascade connection switch 52 in the M-th capacitor circuit 41(M) is connected to a grounding terminal.
There are L number of capacitor circuit groups each constituted by such capacitor circuits 41(1) to 41(M). In the m-th capacitor circuit group (m=1 to L) among the L number of capacitor circuit groups (1) to (L), its (M−m) number of capacitor circuits 41 among its M number of capacitor circuits 41(1) to 41(M) are supplied with the reference voltage Vref at their one end, and its remaining capacitor circuits 41 are supplied with a grounding voltage at their both ends.
By selecting any capacitor circuit group from among the L number of capacitor circuit groups (1) to (L) by switches 42, it is possible to set any subtrahend to be subtracted from the output voltage Vout.
The present embodiment is substantially the same as the second embodiment (
The fourth embodiment is similar to the third embodiment in including capacitor circuits 41(1) to 41(n) functioning as a reference voltage subtracting circuit. In the present embodiment, the capacitor circuits 41(2) to 41(4) are supplied with the reference voltage Vref through the parallel connection switches 51. The capacitors 53 in the capacitor circuits 41(2) to 41(4) become connected in parallel between the terminal supplying the reference voltage Vref and a grounding terminal as shown in
On the other hand, the capacitor 53 in the capacitor circuit 41(1) becomes connected to a grounding terminal at both ends as shown in
After this, when the control signal Φ2 becomes “1”, the parallel connection switches 22 and 52 become conductive. In response, the capacitors 23 in the capacitor circuits 11(1) to 11(4) become connected in the same way as in the embodiment described above as shown in
Two capacitors 53 (C1′, C2′) in the capacitor circuits 41(1) and 41(2) become connected in series between the input terminal of the amplifier 14 and a grounding terminal through a switch 13A.
The switches 13A and 13B are configured to be switched between a conductive state and a nonconductive state in accordance with the variables Di1 and Dig described above. When the control signal Φ2 is “1” and the output signal D is 1 or 3, the variable Di1 is 1, making the switch 13A conductive. Otherwise, the variable Di1 is 0, making the switch 13A nonconductive.
When the control signal Φ2 is “1” and the output signal D is 2 or 3, the variable Di2 is 1, making the switch 13B conductive. Otherwise, the variable Di2 is 0, making the switch 13B nonconductive.
According to the present embodiment, it is only necessary to provide one reference voltage Vref, which allows for reducing the circuit area of a reference voltage generating circuit.
While certain embodiments of the inventions have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel methods and systems described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the methods and systems described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the inventions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2011-119071 | May 2011 | JP | national |