1. Field of the Invention
The present disclosure relates generally to pipelined converter systems.
2. Description of the Related Art
Pipelined analog-to-digital signal converter systems are often used in high-speed, high-resolution conversion applications. These systems generally realize a desired number of conversion bits with a cascade (i.e., a pipeline) of lower-resolution converter stages and thus achieve high resolution at sampling speeds that are difficult to realize with other converter systems. Each stage of a pipelined system quantizes that stage's input signal to a predetermined number of digital bits and forms an analog residue signal which is presented to a succeeding stage for further signal processing.
Errors are induced into the transfer functions of the residue signals of the converter stages by various effects. When the converter stages are realized with switched capacitors and amplifiers, for example, mismatches in the capacitors and low gain in the amplifiers can both degrade the accuracy of the transfer functions. In addition, low gain in amplifiers
Although calibration methods have been proposed to reduce transfer function errors, they have generally suffered from various defects. A major one of these is the loss of dynamic range in the transfer function of the converter stage that is being calibrated.
The present disclosure is generally directed to calibration methods and structures for pipelined converter systems. The drawings and the following description provide an enabling disclosure and the appended claims particularly point out and distinctly claim disclosed subject matter and equivalents thereof.
Calibration methods and structures are addressed in
The calibration methods and structures are arranged to process samples of the digital codes with an algorithm that is preferably configured to repeatedly update an estimate of the transfer function with the difference between one of the input signals and the analog equivalent of the corresponding digital code. The calibration methods and structures are further configured to calibrate the transfer function of the converter stage wherein the samples are selected in accordance with various steps.
These steps can include the step of injecting dither signals into a flash analog-to-digital converter portion and a multiplying analog-to-digital converter (MDAC) portion of the converter stage to thereby maintain dynamic range.
They can also include the step of limiting the samples to those processed through a selected subrange of the subranges. They can further include the step of limiting the samples to those in which the absolute value of the input signals is less that 0.25 of the selected subrange and the absolute value of the dither signals is less that 0.25 of the selected subrange. If the selected subrange is not a central subrange, the steps can further include the step of shifting the samples by a distance between the selected subrange and the central subrange.
In particular, system embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to pipelined analog-to-digital converter systems such as the converter system 20 of
In response to each sample from the sampler 27, converter stage 1 generates a predetermined number of most-significant digital bits D1 and also forms a residue signal which is passed to stage 2 for further processing. The residue signal is the amplified and shifted difference between the analog sample and an analog value that is represented by the digital bits D1. Converter stage 1 is configured to shift the residue signal up or down as needed to locate it in an analog window similar to the window that included the original sample. This stage is further configured to amplify the difference that the total range of residue signals is similar to the range of input samples from the sampler 27.
In a similar manner, stage 2 processes the residue signal from stage 1 to provide the next-most-significant digital bits D2 and a residue signal that is passed to the succeeding stage for further processing. This process continues through subsequent stages (e.g., stage i and stage N of
Although the digital bits D1, D2 - - - DN are generated on successive clock signals, they all correspond to the original sample provided by the sampler 27. The converter stages 24 are generally configured to provide redundant code bits and the additional conversion information in these redundant code bits is used to correct conversion errors which may occur when the analog input signal or the residue signals are near transition points between analog regions that correspond to adjacent digital codes. This correction of conversion errors and the temporal alignment of bits is performed by an aligner/corrector 28 to thereby provide the digital code at the output port 26 that corresponds to the original analog sample from the sampler 27.
Example arrow 29 points to an exemplary embodiment 30 of the signal converters 22. In this embodiment, an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 31 converts the respective analog output signal Von of a preceding one of the converter stages (or the sampler 27) to corresponding digital bits Di. A digital-to-analog converter (DAC) 32 converts these digital bits to a corresponding analog signal which is differenced with the analog output signal Von (of a preceding stage) in a summer 33 to provide a difference signal. The difference signal is then amplified and level shifted in an amplifier 34 to provide a residue Von+1 for processing by the succeeding converter stage. As previously noted, the residue signal is presented in an analog window that substantially matches the analog window presented to the current stage.
A broken-line box 36 encloses the elements 32, 33 and 34 to indicate that they are directed to generation of the residue signal Von+1. Accordingly, this portion of the converter stage is generally referred to as a multiplying digital-to-analog converter (MDAC).
A decoder 48 is configured to receive the outputs of the comparators 41 to thereby provide the digital bits Di of this converter stage and also provide appropriate ones of multipliers Dn (that can be any one of +1, 0, and −1). It is noted that the switches 42, 43 and 44 and flash capacitor Cf are provided to each of the comparators 41, but that only one set is shown in
In the MADC portion 51 of the converter stage 40, the multipliers Dn, are received by a bank 52 of switches that close in phase φ2 of each clock cycle. Appropriate products of the multipliers Dn, and the reference voltage vr are thus available to the bank 52 of switches. Each of these switches is coupled to a circuit node between a corresponding input switch 53 and a corresponding one of input capacitors 54 that, in turn, is coupled to the negative input of a differential amplifier 55. An output capacitor 56 is coupled across this amplifier and switches 57 are coupled to the input and output of this amplifier to close in phase φ1 of each clock cycle. Input signals are received at the stage's input port 58 which is coupled to the switches 43 and 53. Output residue signals are provided at an output port 59 of the MDAC portion 51.
The operation of the converter stage 40 can be described with reference to a selected one of the clock cycles. In the second phase φ2 of the preceding clock cycle (the cycle prior to the selected cycle), switches 44 and 45 close to store a respective one of the ladder voltages vlad into the flash capacitor Cf.
In the first phase φ1 of the selected clock cycle, switch 43 closes so that the input voltage vin from the sampler (27 in
In the first phase φ1 of the selected clock cycle, the switches 53 close so that the input voltage vin from the sampler (27 in
In the following description it is assumed the converter stage 40 of
When the input voltage vin at the input port 58 is further from the center of the input range, the decoder 48 will vary the multipliers Dn, of
The slope of the transfer function 72 is determined by the ratio of the capacitance of the output capacitor Co of
Real-life switched-capacitor converter stages are generally prone to the generation of various conversion errors. If the capacitances of the input capacitors Cn, and/or the output capacitor Co vary from their predetermined values, for example, the slopes of the transfer function in each subrange of
These conversion degradations are initially illustrated in
These conversion errors can be reduced by calibrating the stage gain through the MDAC portion of the converter stage 40 of
The system digital code at the ADC output port 26 is increased or decreased in a digital multiplier 86 which provides digital coefficients to a digital correlator 87 with an initial estimate Gn of the signal gain through the converter stage 40. Correlators are typically configured to digitally separate uncorrelated signals. In this embodiment, the correlator 87 separates the system digital code (the digitized version of the input signal Vin) from a digitized version of the input dither signal Vd. Via a DAC 88, the latter signal is then provided to the summer 85 as the analog signal GnVd. Equations 89 in
Essentially, this error signal indicates the error between the assumed gain and the actual gain of the converter stage 40. When this error signal is fed back to the digital multiplier 86, it updates the digital stage gain in accordance with the algorithm:
Gn+1=Gn−μvden (1)
in which μ is an algorithm step size selected to obtain a compromise between the speed of the convergence to a final stage gain and the accuracy of that final stage gain. The final gain value obtained by the algorithm (1) effectively calibrates the system to thereby correct processing errors in the converter stage 40. The algorithm (1) is generally referred to as a least-mean-square algorithm and is an exemplary one of various algorithms that can be used for obtaining the calibrated gain value for the selected converter stage by repeatedly updating an estimate of a transfer function value with the difference between input signals and the analog equivalent of the corresponding digital codes.
The graph 90 of
In order to provide calibration of the converter stage 40 of
For example, the algorithm may be only applied to data points of the converter system (20 in
In another important observation, it is noted that if a dither signal is injected into the MDAC 51 of the converter stage 40 of
Yet another observation recognizes that two signals are uncorrelated if changes in one of them are unrelated to changes in the other. The injected dither signal is preferably uncorrelated with the input signal that is being processed by the system 20 of
Accordingly, an exemplary algorithm of this disclosure is enabled by independently limiting the system's input signal and the injected random signal. In a system embodiment, the absolute value of the input signal is limited to occupy less than 25% of a subrange of
This concept is illustrated in the graph 100 of
Attention is now returned to the converter stage 40 of
The injection structures 60 also include a flash dither capacitor Cdf 65 that receives a flash dither signal vdf through a switched capacitor 66 wherein the path between these elements is coupled to ground via a switched capacitor 67. The output of the flash dither capacitor 65 is coupled to drive the flash capacitor Cf.
In general, the dither signal vd and the flash dither signal vdf are the same signal and the amplitude of this signal is set to observe the restraint above in which the absolute value of these signals is less than 0.25 of a subrange. In order to also insure that a calibration algorithm uses is applied only to input signals whose absolute value is also less than 0.25 of a subrange, a pair of appropriate comparators can be added to the comparators 42 in
The algorithmic processing in
Various system effects may cause the subrange shifts (e.g., K1, K2 and K3) to be poorly defined and/or variable. For example, the converter system 20 of
This may be accomplished via the use of a digital leaky trough detector which is a detector similar to a peak detector but is one that operates on minima rather than maxima. The detector is preferably slow enough to ignore instantaneous signal changes yet fast enough to track slower changes. The action of a leaky trough detector is exemplified in the graph 110 of
It is also noted that the calibration methods discussed above facilitate the use of low-level input signals that cause the converter system (20 in
The result is that the system's input signal is randomly processed down different portions of the system's transfer function. Preferably, a large number of dither levels is employed. In addition, an odd number of dither levels is preferably used because when these levels occupy less than a subrange, it has been found that the processing will also take place over randomly selected portions of the transfer function of each of the converter system's stages.
The converter system structures and processes discussed above insure that calibration of a converter stage is substantially enhanced by observing the following rules while calibrating the stage with, for example, a least-mean-squares algorithm directed to injected PN signals:
The processes above have been introduced to detect and calibrate gain errors in the MDAC sections of converter stages. By breaking the broken-line rectangles 102 of
It is noted that gain and linearity errors can also be reduced by forming the capacitors in the dither and MDAC portions of the converter stage 40 of
An enabling disclosure has been provided of signal converter system embodiments which substantially reduce symmetrical and asymmetrical INL errors. The embodiments of the disclosure described herein are exemplary and numerous modifications, variations and rearrangements can be readily envisioned to achieve substantially equivalent results, all of which are intended to be embraced within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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