The present invention relates generally to improvements in clock generation circuitry for pipeline analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), and more specifically to improvements for reducing the amount of switching noise in delay lines of delay locked loop (DLL) circuits in such clock generation circuitry and to provide additional available tap points in the DLL circuits.
The known clocking schemes such as one shown in
A very large amount of switching noise is produced in single delay lines of conventional delay locked loop (DLL) circuits. The delay line of a DLL is simply a chain of a typically large number of delay cells that switch continuously. The continuous switching injects noise (also referred to as “substrate noise”) into the integrated circuit chip substrate. Such substrate noise may adversely affect the performance of other circuitry on the same chip.
Furthermore, some of the tap points of the single delay lines of conventional DLL circuits are connected to “watch dog circuits” which perform the functions of detecting “harmonic lock” or “stuck state” conditions in order to ensure proper working of the DLL loop circuitry. The tap points connected to the watch dog circuits are not available to be also connected to the clock generation circuitry, because in order to ensure matched delays at the output of the DLL, the loading at each output needs to matched, whereas connecting the tap points to inputs of the watch dog circuit results in introducing additional loading that prevents the needed matching. The above mentioned tapping used by watch dog circuits has required the use of cumbersome load matching circuitry to ensure the matched delays in the conventional DLL circuits.
The performance of the above described prior art integrated circuit pipeline ADCs and DLL circuitry have been subject to very large process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variations.
Thus, there is an unmet need for improved DLL circuitry for generating clock signals in a pipeline ADC so as to avoid large PVT variations of the clock signals and thereby avoid the resulting degradation in performance of the pipeline ADC.
There also is an unmet need for improved DLL clock generation circuitry that makes more delay tap points available for use in generating clock signals while nevertheless allowing watch dog circuitry to provide necessary monitoring and control of the clock generation circuitry.
It is an object of the present invention to provide improved DLL circuitry for generating timing signals so as to avoid large PVT variations of the timing signals.
It is another object of the present invention to provide improved DLL circuitry for generating clock signals in a pipeline ADC so as to avoid large PVT variations of the clock signals and the resulting reduction in performance of the pipeline ADC.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a circuit and technique for reducing the effects of noise injected into the substrate of an integrated circuit chip.
There also is an unmet need for improved DLL clock generation circuitry that makes more delay tap points available for use in generating clock signals while nevertheless allowing watch dog circuitry to provide necessary monitoring and control of the clock generation circuitry.
Briefly described, and in accordance with one embodiment, the present invention provides a delay locked loop clock generation circuit including a delay locked loop circuit (18), a dummy delay line (40), and a watch dog circuit (32). The delay locked loop circuit (18) includes a delay line (20) including a plurality of sequentially connected delay stages (21-1,2 . . . N), a first delay stage (21-1) connected to receive a first clock signal (CLK), each of the delay stages having a delay control input connected to receive a control signal (Vctrl), various tap points of the delay line (20) being coupled to inputs of a clock logic circuit (50) which decodes various tap points signals conducted by the various tap points, respectively, in order to generate a plurality of clock signals (52). The delay locked loop circuit (18) also includes a phase detector (25) having a first input connected to receive the first clock signal (CLK), a second input connected to an output (26) of a last delay stage (21-N) of the delay line (20), and an output (27) which performs the function of providing an output pulse of width equal to the phase difference between the input signals and, thus helps in determining whether the delay line has delay equal to the clock period (in which case phase difference is equal to zero). The delay locked loop circuit (18) further includes a charge pump circuit (30) having an input connected to the output (27) of the phase detector and an output (23) producing the control signal (Vctrl) to perform the function of converting the pulse widths at the output of the phase detector to a voltage (Vctrl), wherein the higher the voltage (Vctrl), the higher is the delay in the delay cells and delay stage. The dummy delay line (40) includes a delay line (20) including a plurality of sequentially connected delay stages (21-1,2 . . . N) that are precisely matched to the delay stages of the delay line (20). A first delay stage (21-1) of the dummy delay line (40) is connected to receive a second clock signal (CLKZ) which is out of phase with respect to the first clock signal (CLK), each of the delay stages of the dummy delay line having a delay control input connected to receive the control signal (Vctrl). The watchdog circuit (32) has a plurality of inputs coupled to various tap points of the dummy delay line (40) to generate a first group of control signals (34A) coupled to the phase detector (25) and a second group of control signals (34B) coupled to the charge pump circuit (30)
In one embodiment, the DLL clock generation circuitry is used to provide sample and hold clock signals which are relatively independent of the PVT variations as clock signals for a pipeline ADC.
In accordance with another embodiment, the invention provides a pipeline ADC including a sample and hold amplifier that samples an input to the pipeline ADC followed by a first pipeline stage of the pipeline ADC, wherein each of a plurality of pipeline stages samples the previous pipeline stage during a sample clock phase and produces a residue signal through a gain amplifier of the pipeline stage during a hold clock phase, and also including a delay locked loop clock generation circuit (100). The delay locked loop clock generation circuit (100) includes a delay locked loop circuit (18) including a delay line (20) having a plurality of serially connected delay stages (21-1,2 . . . N), a first delay stage (21-1) being connected to receive a first clock signal (CLK), each of the delay stages having a delay control input connected to receive a delay control signal (Vctrl), various tap points of the delay line (20) being coupled to inputs of a clock logic circuit (50) operating on various tap point signals conducted by the various tap points, respectively, to generate a plurality of clock signals (52), a phase detector (25) having a first input connected to receive the first clock signal (CLK), a second input connected to an output of a final delay stage (21-N) of the delay line (20), and an output (27), a charge pump circuit (30) having an input connected to the output (27) of the phase detector and an output (23) producing the delay control signal (Vctrl).
Referring to
Another input of phase detector 25 is connected to CLK. Phase detector 25 also receives a control signal 34A generated by watch dog circuit 32, as subsequently explained. The output of phase detector 25 is connected by conductor 27 to an input of a charge pump circuit 30. Another input of charge pump circuit 30 is connected to receive control signal 34B generated by watchdog circuit 32. Charge pump circuit 30 generates a delay control signal Vctrl on conductor 23, which is connected to the delay control input of each of delay stages 21-1,2 . . . N. The first and second control signals 34A and 34B are a “harmonic lock detect” signal and a “stuck state detect” signal, respectively (also called “DOWN” signals and“UP” signals, respectively). A “harmonic lock state” occurs if the DLL tries to lock to a delay that is greater than the period T of CLK, for example 2T, 3T or 4T etc. This is because phase detector 25 cannot differentiate between T, 2T or 3T, which is because for phase detector 25 all such delays represent a phase difference of zero. Similarly, phase detector 25 cannot differentiate between zero and t and might try to lock a zero delay, thus causing a stuck state. If watch dog circuit 32 detects either of these conditions, it will pull Vctrl UP in case of a stuck state or DOWN in case of a harmonic lock the so that the DLL 18 comes out of the condition.
Note that delay stages 21-1,2 etc., phase detector 25, charge pump circuit 30 and watchdog circuit 32 all are conventional circuits which are commonly utilized in typical DLL circuits for generating non-overlapping clock signals.
Still referring to
Referring to
Referring to
For example, during a positive transition of CLK, transistor MP1 turns off and transistor MN1 turns on, and the coupling of parasitic drain-to-bulk capacitance Cdb1 causes flow of a noise current out of substrate 63 through transistor MN1 into the ground conductor connected to the source of transistor MN1. However, the resulting noise in substrate 63 is at least partially canceled because CLKZ essentially simultaneously turns transistor MN2 off and simultaneously turns transistor MP2 on, and the coupling of a matched parasitic drain-to-bulk capacitance Cdb2 causes flow of an opposite-polarity matched noise current from VCC through transistor M2 into substrate 63. In the prior art schemes, the edges of signals such as n1 to n5 are generated by delays, so by designing in the fastest “process corner” for non-overlap, in the slowest process corner, the non-overlap becomes 2-3 times higher for crunching the sample and hold times. (The term “process corner” means a silicon process statistical variation which can make components faster, e.g., a silicon process statistical variation which can increase the transconductance of a transistor. The term “crunching” means a reduction in an effective time for sampling data in the sample phase or settling of the amplifier in the hold phase which would potentially degrade performance.) In the present scheme, since the signals n1 to n5 of
Furthermore, use of dummy delay line 40 also keeps all delay tap points of delay line 20 free to be used by other circuits. Locating dummy delay line 40 very close to delay line 20 and feeding it the out-of-phase clock signal CLKZ causes effective switching noise cancellation. The described DLL-based clocking results in a low PVT variation of the generated clock signals 52, which in turn ensures optimum hold and sample time for switched-capacitance amplifiers and ensures constant non-overlapping times for all of the clock signals.
Thus, use of the above described dummy delay line 40 located in close proximity with (i.e., immediately adjacent to) delay line 20 and operating on the inverted clock signal CLKZ but having the same delay control voltage Vctrl to a large extent cancels the switching noise. The delay line layout is made in such a way that one delay stage constitutes two delay cells, one cell for the actual line and the other for the dummy line, positioned close to one another and therefore closely matched. These delay stages are cascaded to form the delay line. Dummy delay line 40, which has essentially the same delay as the actual delay line (except for mismatches), is tapped by watchdog circuit 32 to ensure proper working of the DLL circuit 18 without being connected to additional tap points of delay line 20. Use of successive DLL tap point signal edges for generating non-overlapping clock phase signals 52 for pipeline ADC 54 eliminates the above mentioned PVT variation in clocking signals of the prior art DLL clock generation circuits.
Thus, the invention includes (1) improving pipeline ADC clocking by using a DLL to generate the clocks. The invention also includes improving a DLL design by using a dummy line along with the actual line. The invention is particularly useful whenever the timing of the edges of clock signals is critical. It should be understood that a DLL basically takes an input clock and generates equidistant edges between two consecutive rising/falling edges of the input clock. These equidistant edges are PVT invariant because a feedback loop corrects for any PVT variation. If two consecutive edges are chosen, for example a falling edge of a signal SAMPLEP and a signal SAMPLE, the phase relationship would remain the same, whatever the process corner may be. Therefore, the closest possible edges can be chosen, thereby increasing the effective sample and hold times. In conventional schemes, since SAMPLEP and SAMPLE are generated from buffer delays, this would be PVT variant (i.e., dependent upon PVT). So to avoid overlapping of the signals SAMPLEP and SAMPLE, it is necessary to provide a margin of safety for the fastest “process corner” (where buffer delay is minimum), so that for the weakest “process corner”, corresponding edges of the signals SAMPLEP and SAMPLE would be spaced apart by an interval equal to approximately 3 times the margin of safety, thereby “crunching” sample and hold times. This is very critical in speed designs where buffer delays are a large fraction (e.g., 5 percent) of sample/hold times.
As shown in
While the invention has been described with reference to several particular embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will be able to make various modifications to the described embodiments of the invention without departing from its true spirit and scope. It is intended that all elements or steps which are insubstantially different from those recited in the claims but perform substantially the same functions, respectively, in substantially the same way to achieve the same result as what is claimed are within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of prior filed co-pending U. S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/525,282 filed Nov. 26, 2003 entitled “DUMMY DELAY LINE BASED DLL AND METHOD FOR CLOCKING IN PIPELINE ADC” by Chieh et al.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60525282 | Nov 2003 | US |