The invention relates to a flash analog-to-digital converter as defined by the preamble of claim 1.
Such a converter is known from the article “A 2.5-V 12-b 54-Msample/s 0.25-μm CMOS ADC in 1-mm2 With Mixed-Signal Chopping and Calibration” by van der Ploeg et al in IEEE Journal of Solid State Circuits, Vol. 36 No. 12, December 2001, pp 1859-1867.
A flash analog-to-digital converter contains a resistive reference ladder to generate a plurality of reference voltages. A problem with a single stage flash converter is that for each value of the digital output signal a reference voltage is required, so that for a 12-bit converter a reference ladder with 212−1=1023 resistive elements would be necessary. To avoid this and other problems a multi-stage flash converter is developed. A two-stage flash converter uses a coarse and a fine quantization to achieve the required resolution. For instance the coarse quantization generates a 5-bit digital word with a reference ladder of 25−1=31 taps. Subsequently the 5-bit word is converted in a digital-to-analog converter to its analog equivalent, this analog equivalent is subtracted from the analog input signal and the difference, the residue, is applied to the second DA-stage that performs the fine quantization of the residue. This second stage may e.g. generate a 7-bit fine code. In a digital decoder the 5-bit coarse code and the 7-bit fine code are combined to obtain the 12-bit digital output signal. In practice this means that selectors with a large number of switches have to be connected to the reference ladder to perform the digital to analog conversion. This large number of switches and the correspondingly large number of wires to and from the switches makes the layout of the chip more complicated and results in a large parasitic capacitance that is undesired for high-speed conversion.
The present invention seeks to substantially reduce the number of switches in a flash analog-to-digital converter of the abovementioned kind and the analog-to-digital converter of the present invention is therefore characterized by the characterizing portion of claim 1.
In prior art flash single ended, single residue analog-to-digital converters of the abovementioned kind the number of switches connected to the reference ladder is 2n where n is the number of bits generated by the coarse quantization stage. In a dual residue version the number of switches is doubled to 2n+1 and in a differential version the number of these switches is again doubled to 2n+2. In a converter according to the invention the doubling for the differential version is avoided and in stead 4 switches per residue are required for performing the crossover function. This implies that with 3 bits coarse quantization in a dual residue differential converter the number of switches for generating the residue signals is reduced from 32 to 24. This does not seem to be a large improvement, however, if the number of bits of the coarse quantization increases to e.g. 5, the number of switches is reduced from 128 to 68 which is a substantial improvement. This means a much smaller capacitive load of the reference ladder, which can be helpful for faster generation of the residue signals and therefore in a higher speed of the analog-to-digital converter. Moreover the dissipation will be lower and the silicon area will be less. Another advantage is the reduction of the number of wires to and from the switches.
Preferably the reference ladder has a double function. First reference voltages for the course flash conversion are generated. After completion of the coarse quantization, the coarse code is stored and the plurality of selectors connected to the taps of the reference ladder and controlled by the stored coarse code generate the analog representation of the coarse code.
Preferably the analog-to-digital converter constituted by the reference ladder and the selectors generate two analog representations of the coarse code so as to allow the generation of two residue signals. Moreover, on a low voltage CMOS chip with a lot of digital processing all the signals in the analog-to-digital converter should preferably be differential signals.
The invention further relates to a digital-to-analog converter for use in a flash analog-to-digital converter as claimed in claim 4 and a method for analog-to-digital conversion as claimed in claim 6.
The invention will be described with reference to the accompanying Figures. Herein shows:
a the reference ladder and the digital-to-analog converter in the analog-to-digital converter of
b the output signals of the digital-to-analog converter of
a the reference ladder and the digital-to-analog converter in an analog-to-digital converter of the present invention and
b the output signals of the digital-to-analog converter of
The analog-to-digital converter of
The coarse quantization code C is also applied to a digital-to-analog converter unit 3. This unit receives also the reference voltages of the ladder 6 and contains a plurality of switches that are controlled by the code C. The output signal of the unit 3 is an analog version of the code C and therefore follows the input signal I with coarse quantization. The operation of this digital-to-analog converter 3 will be further explained with reference to the
The digital-to-analog converter shown in
It may be observed that in practice eight one-pole switches build each of the four selectors 7, 8, 9 and 10. Therefore this arrangement needs a total of 32 one-pole switches for making a 3-bit course quantization (2n+2=32 with n=3).
In the arrangement of
The signals Q1 and Q2 of the selectors 12 and 13 are fed to a crossover switch 17 to constitute the signals Ra+ and Ra− and the output signals Q3 and Q4 of the selectors 14 and 15 are fed to a crossover switch 18 to constitute the signals Rb+ and Rb−. The two crossover switches are switched when the input signal is halfway of its full range.
The result of this action of the crossover switches is depicted in the upper four rows of
In summary the invention relates to a flash analog-to-digital converter comprising a resistive reference ladder, a set of comparators for comparing the analog input signal with the reference voltages of the ladder to provide a digital code representing a coarse quantization of the input signal, a set of switches connected to the reference ladder and controlled by said digital code to provide an analog representation of the coarse quantization of the input signal, means to derive from said analog representation of the coarse quantization and from the input signal one or more residue signals and a fine analog-to-digital converter stage to generate a digital code representing a fine quantization of the one or more residue signals. For minimizing the number of switches required, each selector for one residue signal selects voltages of one half of the ladder at two values of the coarse quantization and the output signals of the two selectors for that residue signal are reversed by a crossover switch when the coarse quantization passes its center value.
The invention can also be used in a single residue multistage flash analog-to-digital converter. Because in that case only one pair of differential signals Ra+ and Ra− is needed the selectors 13 and 14 and the crossover switches 18 can be dispensed with.
It will be apparent that the invention can also be used in a flash analog-to-digital converter having more than two stages. In that case the digital-to-analog converter with its selectors and its crossover switches can be applied in any of the stages except, of course, the last one.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05102404 | Mar 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2006/050852 | 3/20/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/14/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/100634 | 9/28/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7417572 | Williams et al. | Aug 2008 | B1 |
7605740 | Pelgrom et al. | Oct 2009 | B2 |
20040119626 | Lien | Jun 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090201189 A1 | Aug 2009 | US |