Circuits and methods for implementing a residue amplifier are provided.
Pipelined Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs) are widely used in high speed communication systems and other applications. A pipelined ADC converts an analog input signal into a digital output signal by generating bits of the digital output signal in multiple pipelined stages. Each stage in the pipelined ADC performs two functions: (1) producing digital output bits; and (2) computing and amplifying a residue signal to be passed on to the next stage.
In the case of the widely used 1.5 bit/stage pipelined ADC architecture, the computation and amplification of the residue signal, Vres[N+1], output by an Nth stage of the pipelined ADC architecture typically implements the operation described in equation (1):
where VREF is the reference voltage, and b is the sub-ADC output coded as −1,0, or 1.
Typical mechanisms for an accurate implementation of the 2× gain articulated in equation (1) have not been efficient in terms of power usage.
Accordingly, circuits and methods for implementing a residue amplifier are provided.
Circuits and methods for implementing a residue amplifier are provided. In some embodiments, circuits for implementing a residue amplifier are provided, the circuits comprising: a first capacitor configured to be charged to an input voltage level and that discharges from the input voltage level to a reference voltage level; a comparator having a first input coupled to the first capacitor, a second input coupled to a reference voltage source, and an output that indicates when the charge on the first capacitor is above the reference voltage level; and a second capacitor configured to be charged to an output voltage based on the output of the comparator.
In some embodiments, methods for implementing a residue amplifier are provided, the methods comprising: charging a first capacitor to an input voltage level and then discharging the first capacitor from the input voltage level to a reference voltage level; comparing the voltage level on the first capacitor to the voltage level from a reference voltage source, and producing an indication when the voltage level on the first capacitor is above the voltage level from the reference voltage source; and charging a second capacitor to an output voltage based on the indication.
a and 1b include a block diagram of a current charge pump (CCP) residue amplifier and graphs representing its operation in accordance with some embodiments.
a-7f are schematics showing configurations of switches of the circuit of
a and 9b are schematics showing configurations of switches of the circuit of
a-11c are schematics showing configurations of switches of the circuit of
In accordance with some embodiment, circuits and methods for implementing a residue amplifier are provided. In some embodiments, residue amplifiers as described herein can be used to perform residue signal computation and amplification. In some embodiments, residue amplifiers as described herein can be used to perform residue signal computation and amplification in one or more stages of a pipelined ADC or in any other circuit where residue signal computation is needed.
a) presents a block diagram of a current charge pump (CCP) residue amplifier circuit for residue calculation and amplification in accordance with some embodiments. As shown, the circuit includes an input portion 100 and an output portion 116. Input portion 100 includes an input capacitor CS1 104, a switch 108, a current source IN 106, and a comparator 112. Output portion 116 includes a current source 1P 118, a switch 120, and an output capacitor CS2 124.
Initially, an input voltage Vin 102 is stored on the input capacitor CS1 104. This input. voltage may have been applied to the input capacitor from any suitable source. For example, this input voltage may have been applied to the input capacitor from a voltage being measured from another current charge pump residue amplifier circuit or any other suitable source.
The charge on the input capacitor CS1 104 at the input voltage is shown in graph 126 of
In response to the charge on the input capacitor CS1 104 being higher than the reference voltage VR 110, comparator 112 outputs a HIGH level on output CK 114. This HIGH level causes switch 108 to close, resulting in the input capacitor being discharged by current source IN 106.
As illustrated in graph 126, this causes the charge on the capacitor to gradually decrease until it reaches VR. At this point, comparator 112 outputs a LOW level on output CK 114. This low level causes switch 108 to open and input capacitor 104 to stop discharging.
As illustrated in graph 128 of
During the period TON, switch 120 in output portion 116 is also closed. This causes output capacitor CS2 124 to be charged by current source IP 118.
As illustrated in graph 130 of
The period TON can be related to the input voltage Vin, the reference voltage VR, the input capacitor CS1, and current source IN 106 as shown in the following equation (2):
The output voltage Vout can be related to the input voltage Vin, the reference voltage VR, the input capacitor CS1, current source IN 106, the output capacitor CS2, the current source IP 118, and the initial voltage VS on the output capacitor as shown in the following equation (3):
The inter-stage gain can be set to 2 by choosing IP=2·IN and CS1=CS2 and by charging CS2 at twice the rate of the discharging rate of CS1. Thus, with these parameters, the output voltage Vout can be represented by the following equation (4):
Vout=2(Vin−VR)+VS (4)
Although the residue amplifier illustrated in
In accordance with some embodiments, the residue amplifier circuits described above can be implemented as part of a stage of a multi-stage pipelined analog-to-digital converter (ADC). For example, in some embodiments, the current charge pump residue amplifier circuit. of
A block diagram of such an ADC 200 in accordance with some embodiments is shown in
Each of stages 1-6 and flash ADC stage produce output bits (e.g., bits 218, 220, 222, and 224) that can be used as the output of the ADC.
In accordance with some embodiments, a switched-capacitor sampling circuit can be used at the input of the first stage. Any suitable switched-capacitor sampling circuit can be used in some embodiments.
As also shown, the ADC can provide reference voltages 226 and clock signals 228 to the stages of the ADC as described further below.
Turning to
As shown, portion 300 of the pipelined ADC includes a part of a stage N−1 301, a stage N 302, and a part of a stage N+1 303. As also shown, each of these stages includes a signal path 304 and a sub-ADC path 305.
As illustrated, the part of stage N−1 301 shown in
Stage N 302 shown in
Stage N+1 303 shown in
As shown, in some embodiments, by using a second CCP in the sub-ADC path, the input voltage Vin[N] can be protected from sub-ADC kickback noise. In some embodiments, this second CCP can be scaled relative to the first CCP in the signal path in order to reduce power consumption. For example, in some embodiments, the size of input capacitor CS1b 346 can be half the size of the input capacitor CS1 326, and the size of the current source 318 feeding capacitor CS1b 346 can be half the size of the current source 310 feeding capacitor CS1 326.
In accordance with some embodiments, to accommodate overshoot due to delay of comparator 330 delay, VS can be set to 270 mV.
Any suitable voltage levels can be used for VDD, VCM, and VREF in some embodiments. For example, VDD can be 1V, VCM can be 0.55V, and VREF can be 0.2V in some embodiments.
As also illustrated, input Vin[N] and output signal Vin[N+1] of the stage lie between VCM−VREF and VCM+VREF. Upon re-writing equation (1) based on this characteristic, the operation of the stage becomes:
Equation (5) can be implemented with a CCP circuit based on equation (4) by setting VS to VCM−VREF.
As also shown in
As shown in
An example of a timing diagram 600 that shows clock signals CKRS, CKS, CKRA, and CKA that can be used to control these four phases is presented in
Also shown in timing diagram are signals CKN−1, CKN, and CKN+1 that would be generated by the comparators (e.g., comparator 330) of stages N+1 301, N 302, and N+1 303, respectively. As described in connection with
In accordance with some embodiments, the duty cycle of the reset phases can be made smaller to optimize operating speed. To generate the four clock signals, a divide-by-2 circuit can be employed in the clock generator shown in
At each of times t2, t2, t3, t4, t5, and t6 shown in
Turning to
As also illustrated, in
Next, as illustrated in
At time t3, as shown in
During a reset phase, as shown in
At time t5, as shown in
Finally, at time t6, as shown in
As can be seen in
In some embodiments, an offset cancellation technique for the first inverter 810 can be used. As shown in
Also, in some embodiments, the equivalent offset of the signal-path comparator due to its finite delay can be accommodated by towering the initial voltage VS of the succeeding stage. For example, instead of using a VS of 350 mV, a VS of 270 mV can be used.
Turning to
As shown, switches 1020 and 1024 and inverters 1018 and 1022 can be configured to forma gated latch 1038 in some embodiments.
As also shown, the bottom of switch 1004 can be fed by a voltage VRT
As shown in
a-11c show the configuration of the switches during HIGH levels of clock signals CKS, CKRA, and CKRAD, respectively.
As with comparator 800, in some embodiments, an offset cancellation technique for the first inverter 1010 can be used. As shown in
As shown in
After the latch input settles for a short time, as shown in
In accordance with some embodiments, the gain provided by the first inverter prevents the dynamic latch from being the dominant offset contributing source. Thus, by performing offset calibration for the first inverter stage, the dynamic latch can be designed much smaller in area without contributing much to the comparator input referred offset. As a result, more offset in the signal path can be tolerated.
A differential CCP residue amplifier circuit 1200 that can be used in accordance with some embodiments is illustrated in
Although the invention has been described and illustrated in the foregoing illustrative embodiments, it is understood that the present disclosure has been made only by way of example, and that numerous changes in the details of implementation of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which is only limited by the claims which follow. Features of the disclosed embodiments can be combined and rearranged in various ways.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/422,135, filed Dec. 11, 2010, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
This invention was made with government support under grant PHY 0612811 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2011/064414 | 12/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 1/29/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/079077 | 6/14/2012 | WO | A |
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7245245 | Chien | Jul 2007 | B2 |
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7479915 | Singh et al. | Jan 2009 | B1 |
8547271 | De Geronimo et al. | Oct 2013 | B2 |
20060208938 | Fiorenza et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |
20080186077 | Guyton et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
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20140132438 A1 | May 2014 | US |
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61422135 | Dec 2010 | US |