1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to analog to digital conversion.
2. Description of Related Art
In order to test semiconductor (IC) devices of the type used in DVD, set-top boxes and game controllers, HDTV, xDSL and cellular baseband applications, high-performance digital and analog capabilities are required.
In particular, these applications require analog to digital (A/D) converters with a very high sample rate, on the order of 80 Msps(mega samples per second), high resolution such as 14–16 digital output bits and high input bandwidth, above 100 MHz.
In these applications, some popular techniques such as successive approximation analog to digital converters, sigma-delta and flash converters are no longer appropriate.
Sigma-delta technique is used for very high resolution A/D converters such as 20–24 bits, but with very low sampling rate in the order of few ksps. This technique is based on the concept of oversampling with a high factor rate and then decimating to obtain extremely low noise and thus a high number of bits. However, this technique cannot be used in applications requiring sampling rates on the order of several tens of Msps.
Successive approximation A/D converters require a relatively long time for the conversation. Flash A/D converters are relatively fast, but generally low resolution (no more than 10 bits). Therefore both of these techniques are not well suited for the above mentioned applications.
Pipeline converters are better for the aforementioned applications. Today's state-of-the-art pipeline converter technology can provide spurious free dynamic range (SFDR) on the order of 100 dB, very high input bandwidth on the order of a few hundreds of MHz and a sampling frequency of up to 100 Msps.
A problem of pipeline converters, though, is their minimum sampling frequency requirement. A general rule of thumb for these converters is that the minimum sampling frequency is on the order of about one tenth of their maximum sampling frequency. Therefore, for high speed pipeline converters in the range of 80 Msps, a minimum sampling frequency requirement between 1 and 10 Msps should be expected. This may not be a problem in applications where the sampling frequency is not required to vary beyond a relatively limited range, but is a limitation in many automated test equipment (ATE) applications.
Thus, a need has developed for a high speed, high resolution analog to digital conversion system that allows for low speed sampling of data as well.
In order to increase the cost benefit of the investment made in this technology, test engineers want use these pipeline analog to digital converters to test a wider range of semiconductor (IC) devices and in several kinds of applications, such as either linearity testing of D/A converters or testing with an undersampling technique. This latter technique requires analog to digital converters with high bandwidth and high performance, but with relatively low sampling frequency. Linearity testing of D/A converters instead may imply that the A/D converter would receive trains of pulses separated by no operation intervals; overall, the A/D converter would receive a non periodic pattern of samples.
Therefore, for certain applications where a pipeline A/D converter is used in ATE, a system that allows the A/D converter to function when the samples are at a rate below its nominal minimum sampling frequency is needed.
The present invention method and apparatus add fill-in clock pulses to the analog to digital converter's input clock signal between requests for analog data acquisition. The request for analog data acquisition may come as an input clock signal. The circuit that generates these fill-in clock pulses is designed to be able to detect a request for an analog data acquisition, synchronously stop adding the fill-in clock pulses, and track the request for data acquisition.
As already mentioned, the pipeline technique in analog to digital converters allows for high speed and high performance. It is a practical solution that is used in state-of-the-art high speed A/D converters.
A conventional 10 bit A/D converter 100 is shown
In the example of
Referring now to
As soon as there is a positive edge from the input clock signal, the pulse detector circuit detects it and inhibits the 80 MHz signal from the oscillator 202. This operation is synchronized with the input clock signal and, depending upon where the input clock pulse's positive edge on line 220 occurs within the 80 MHz clock's period, this inhibition may take up to two periods of the 80 MHz oscillator (25 ns). See
If no positive edge from the input clock is detected for more than time Tr ns (see Tr in
As shown timing diagram
The fill-in clock pulse on line 408 is generated by the divider implemented by the fourth stage flip-flops 416, 417 of stage 404 whose output terminals are connected. Every time that a positive “edge” of the input clock pulse occurs, the signal Q_COM on line 420 becomes high and stays in this state until the next negative front comes (see
When either the input clock signal is no longer active (and stays in the quiet low state) or it is below 15 Msps, the 40 Msps clock signal that is coupled to the A/D converter is restored after time Tr. As shown in timing diagram
Depending upon the requirements of a particular A/D converter, a maximum wait time exists representing the amount of time that can pass between input clock signal pulses to the A/D converter. The maximum wait time represents the largest acceptable time Tr for the A/D converter.
Every input clock pulse's positive edge, which represents a request for analog data acquisition, is followed by a positive edge of the 40 Msps clock signal without a fixed time relationship. In other words, when the input clock signal is sampling below 10 Msps, the A/D converter 219 is sampled by two consecutive positive pulse edges (the edge of the input clock signal followed by the edge of the 40 Msps clock signal) that have a random relationship and are completely asynchronous. The data sampled by the positive edge of the input clock signal is therefore affected by distortion. This is due to the difference in droop of the first stage of the A/D converter 219, which is different for two consecutive sampling pulses if their time relationships are not constant. The droop of the signal is based upon time constants within the A/D converter. A/D converters capable of data sampling at very high frequencies are vulnerable to this distortion.
In order to overcome this problem and retain high performance even when sampling below 15 Msps, the double pulse circuit 600 of
Theoretically, since the A/D converter 219 of the embodiment described above has 4 pipe stages, the input clock pulse should be followed by three equally time spaced pulses. However, experiments have shown that two pulses are enough in some applications to enhance the performance and that four pulses would provide any substantial improvement. More pulses may be used, however, in some applications.
The double pulse circuit 600 of
This pulse detect signal is used by the FPGA to 221 track the input clock pulse and enable the output data. When a fill-in clock pulse occurs, pulse detect will not be in the high state and therefore the output data will not be issued from FPGA 221. The FPGA 221 may also perform also other tasks such as digital compensation of the analog gain and digital filtering.
Dynamic performance system 200 is also affected by the 80 MHz oscillator 202 and specifically by the presence of undesired intermodulation products generated by the sampling frequency and the oscillator 202. When the A/D converter 219 is being sampled above its minimum sampling frequency of 15 Msps, the fill-in clock circuit and the 80 MHz oscillator 202 are no longer required. Therefore, in this situation, the oscillator 202 can be shutdown. A simple frequency detector circuit processes the input clock and inhibits the oscillator 202 when this condition is detected.
Five different cases of analog input frequency are shown in Table 1. For each input frequency, data are shown for sampling either below or above 15 Msps, which in this case is the exemplary minimum sampling frequency of the A/D converter 219.
When sampling below 15 Msps, the fill-in clock circuit 201 is active and provides fill-in clock pulses between two input clock pulses. When sampling above 15 Msps, the fill-in clock circuit 201 is inhibited and the 80 MHz oscillator 202 is shut down. The harmonics introduced by the A/D converter 219 and its noise floor do not seem to change significantly when sampling below or above 15 Msps. The SFDR, though, is affected. The SFDR is the ratio of the rms signal amplitude to the rms value of the peak spurious spectral component. The peak spurious component may or may not be a harmonic. More spurs are introduced when the fill-in clock circuit 201 is active. The deterioration of the SFDR is between 2 and 4 dB between the two cases.
Most of the spurs are generated by intermodulation products between the sampling frequency and the 80 MHz oscillator. This is why when sampling above 15 Msps the 80 MHz oscillator, which is not required anymore, is shut down. Some spurs could have been generated by the A/D converter itself if the double pulse circuit 600 had not been applied. This would have been due to the fact that the restore time Tr of the fill-in clock signal would not be predictable. The double pulse circuit 600 duplicates the sample of the input clock signal and allows the two input stages of the A/D converter 219 to see a non jittering sampling clock signal. In this case, the restore time only affects the last two stages of the A/D converter 219 that are not the ones that involve the most significant bits.
Table 2 shows detail for the first case of Table 1 (analog input frequency of 1.022 MHz). The SFDR that would be obtained if the double pulse circuit 600 were not active is also shown. This latter case is essentially theoretical.
Step 820 involves detecting an input clock pulse. The input clock pulse may be sent to a fill-in clock circuit (e.g., 201 of
As shown in
Step 840 involves measuring a wait time until the next input clock pulse is detected. Thereafter, one or more fill-in clock pulses may be generated in step 850 if the measured wait time exceeds the determined wait time. The generation of fill-in clock pulses may signal the end of a period of time (e.g., Tr as shown in
This disclosure is illustrative and not limiting; further modifications will be apparent of this disclosure and are intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims.
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