1. Field
The present disclosure relates to the field of delta-sigma modulators. In particular, it relates to a continuous time bandpass delta-sigma modulator using LC resonators.
2. Related Art
In a delta-sigma modulator, the poles of the feed-forward open loop are also the zeros of the noise transfer function NTF, i.e. the transfer function between the quantizer noise n and the output. Thus, four zeros in the noise transfer function NTF can, for example, be obtained by inserting four poles in the corresponding feed-forward loop. For example, in the diagram of
The delta-sigma modulator shown in
Passive resonators, such as LC resonators, are shown in
The arrangement of
The transfer function for this chain of resonators is found by multiplying each of the elements G0, G1, 15, and 16 in
The input 10 is usually a voltage analog input. The output of the transconductor G0 is a current signal which is input into the LC resonator 15 and output as a voltage signal 17. Also the second LC resonator 16 has a current input and a voltage output. Therefore, a further transconductor G1 is needed, which converts the voltage signal 17 to a current signal 18. The voltage output 19 of the LC resonator 16 is then input into the analog-to-digital converter or quantizer 11.
The presence of the transconductor G1 introduces noise and distortion in the feed-forward loop. In
At the resonant frequency
of the resonator 15, n(input)=0. However, away from this resonance frequency, n(input) is not zero and can affect the performance of the modulator. In particular, if resonator 15 has a resonant frequency f1 and resonator 16 has a resonant frequency
the noise at f2 is higher than the noise at f1, as shown in
In particular, for narrowband applications, n(input) is reduced by the gain of the first LC resonator 15 at the desired frequency. However, as the bandwidth increases, to achieve optimal signal-to-noise ratio SNR over a bandwidth, the resonator poles are split apart. As a consequence, the noise of the second, third, etc. resonators is no longer reduces by the same degree because the following resonator poles are located at a different location than the first resonator pole.
According to a first aspect, a bandpass continuous-time delta-sigma modulator is disclosed, comprising: a transconductor, having a voltage analog input and a current analog output; a filtering arrangement, having a current input comprising, at least in part, the current analog output of the transconductor and a voltage analog output; and a quantizer having an input formed by the voltage analog output of the filtering arrangement, wherein the filtering arrangement comprises a first second-order resonator and a second second-order resonator directly connected in series with the first second-order resonator.
According to a second aspect, a bandpass continuous-time delta-sigma modulator is disclosed, comprising: an input circuit transforming a first analog voltage signal into a first analog current signal; a filtering circuit comprising a first LC resonator and a second LC resonator directly connected with the first LC resonator; and an analog-to-digital converter connected with the filtering circuit, wherein: a second analog current signal is input into the filtering circuit, the second analog current signal being formed, at least in part, by the first analog current signal; and a second analog voltage signal is input into the analog-to-digital converter, the second analog voltage being read out from the filtering circuit.
According to a third aspect, a bandpass continuous-time delta-sigma modulator is disclosed, comprising: a filtering arrangement having a current analog input and a voltage analog output: and a quantizer having an input formed by the voltage analog output of the filtering arrangement, wherein the filtering arrangement comprises three or more second-order resonators, at least two of the three or more second-order resonators being directly connected to each other.
According to a fourth aspect, a method to convert an analog voltage signal to a digital voltage signal is disclosed, comprising: providing a first analog voltage signal; converting the first analog voltage signal to a first analog current signal; adding the first analog current signal to a second analog current signal to form a third analog current signal; providing the third analog current signal to an analog filtering circuit comprising a first LC resonator and a second LC resonator in series with the first LC resonator to generate a second analog voltage signal, wherein an output of the first LC resonator forms an input of the second LC resonator; and quantizing the second analog voltage signal to generate the digital voltage signal.
According to a fifth aspect, a lowpass continuous-time delta-sigma modulator is disclosed, comprising: a transconductor, having a voltage analog input and a current analog output; a filtering arrangement, having a current input comprising, at least in part, the current analog output of the transconductor and a voltage analog output; and a quantizer having an input formed by the voltage analog output of the filtering arrangement, wherein the filtering arrangement comprises at least one second-order resonator directly connected with at least one capacitor.
The present disclosure will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
The present disclosure improves the circuital arrangement discussed above because it provides for a fourth or higher order delta-sigma modulator by directly connecting the LC resonators in series so that the output of the first resonator is directly connected to the input of the second resonator, as shown in
The transfer function for the embodiment shown in
It should be noted that the poles in Equation (3) are the same as in Equation (1). Therefore, it is possible to design a delta-sigma modulator with the same noise transfer function in either the configuration of
With reference to
The elimination of active components such as the transconductor G1, and further transconductors in case of a sixth-order, eighth-order, etc. delta-sigma modulator, increases linearity and decreases noise, particularly in applications with lower oversampling ratios, for example applications where the oversampling ratio is less than 400.
The present disclosure shows an embodiment dealing with a fourth-order modulator. The person skilled in the art will note that also sixth-order, eighth-order, and so on delta-sigma modulators can be provided, by just adding additional LC resonators in series to the two resonators shown in
Additionally, a further embodiment for a lowpass delta-sigma modulator is possible where one or more LC resonators are directly connected in series with one or more capacitors, as shown in
It will be appreciated that the present disclosure is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described herein above. Rather the scope of the present disclosure is defined by the claims which follow.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5027120 | Thurston | Jun 1991 | A |
5392039 | Thurston | Feb 1995 | A |
5668552 | Thurston | Sep 1997 | A |
5858801 | Brizzolara | Jan 1999 | A |
6693573 | Linder | Feb 2004 | B1 |
6897796 | Dias et al. | May 2005 | B1 |