The present invention relates to a digital-to-analog converter and, in particular, to a digital-to-analog converter employing dynamic element matching techniques.
High-speed high-resolution digital-to-analog converters (DACs) are increasingly used for wired and wireless communication, direct digital synthesis and video signal processing. The main requirements of the DACs for these applications are high spectral-purity and small output errors. Trimming and calibration have been used to decrease element mismatches and result in high spurious-free dynamic ranges (SFDRs) and small maximum output errors. Alternatively, dynamic element matching (DEM) has been successfully applied to reduce the correlation of DAC noise to the input signal for achieving high SFDRs. For Nyquist-rate DACs, randomization is mostly used to suppress the harmonics. However, the possible maximum output errors of randomization are still large because the elements are selected randomly. Data weighted averaging (DWA), another DEM technique, is widely used for oversampling-rate ADCs and DACs. Random multiple data weighted averaging (RMDWA), one of the DWA-like techniques, was first proposed to be applied for Nyquist-rate DAC applications. With RMDWA, which has consecutive selection and randomization properties, the Nyquist-rate current-steering DAC structure can achieve both benefits of DEM techniques and proper layout switching schemes.
However, the increased switching activity of DWA-like techniques results in more dynamic errors. In order to keep the two properties and further decrease the switching activity, the present invention is proposed. The present invention proposes a new DEM technique suitable for the applications requiring high SFDR DACs. It is shown that harmonic distortions are suppressed with less switching activity.
It is an object of this invention to provide a digital-to-analog converter and method, which can reduce the errors of the analog output and enhance the spectral purity.
The digital-to-analog converter in accordance with the invention generates an analog output signal from digital input signals by using a bank of 1-bit DAC elements. The binary digital input signals are translated to be thermometer codes for the randomization encoder. The encoder implements a randomization algorithm that barrel shifts the thermometer code to a specific starting position during each randomization period. The encoder output signals are used to drive the bank of 1-bit DAC elements. The analog outputs of the bank of 1-bit DAC elements are connected through a summing node to generate the DAC analog output signal corresponding to the original digital input signals.
An example of an M-bit DAC block diagram of the present invention is shown in
It is obvious that the thermometer code generator 103 can be removed when the input has been the N-level thermometer code {x′1[n], x′2[n], . . . , x′N[n]} 104. The encoder 105, such as a barrel shifter, barrel shifts the N-level thermometer code {x′1[n], x′2[n], . . . , x′N[n]} 104 to a specific starting position.
A random number generator 106 generates a random number and sends the random number to the encoder to decide the specific starting position.
A randomization period generator 107 produces a randomization period (RP) 108 and sends the RP 108 to the random number generator 106. The RP 108 controls the encoder shifting the N-level thermometer code {x′1[n], x′2[n], . . . , x′N[n]} 104 to the same starting position during RP 108 samples of M-bit digital input x[n] 101. The RP 108 can be 1 or a number larger than 2, and, moreover, it can be a constant or a variable. Furthermore, the element switching activity can be decreased to the minimum by properly arranging the random number and/or the RP 108 for minimum element switching noise according to this invention.
The output {x1[n], x2[n], . . . , xN[n]} 109 of the encoder 105 is fed into a plurality of DAC elements 110 to generate respective analog outputs {y1[n], y2[n], . . . , yN[n]} 111. An analog output summing node 112 receives the respective analog outputs {y1[n], y2[n], . . . , yN[n]} 111 of the plurality of the DAC elements 110 to generate the analog output signal 102 of summing the respective analog outputs {y1[n], y2[n], . . . , yN[n]} 111.
With non-zero static mismatch errors, the output of the DAC can be written as:
y[n]=αx[n]+β+e[n],
where α is a constant gain error, β is a DC offset error, and e[n] is DAC noise when the gain error and offset error are removed. The form of e[n] can be re-written as
e[n]=w[n]x[n],
where w[n] is a process with characteristic determined by the encoder which produces the input codes for the plurality of digital-to-analog converter elements. In accordance with the usual definitions, the time-average mean and autocorrelation of input sequence x[n] can be defined as
Therefore, the autocorrelation of output signal y[n] can be derived as
if e[n] is zero-mean, white random process, i.e. w[n] is a random process being zero-mean, white and uncorrelated with x[n].
Choosing M=6 and N=64 for the block diagram in
In these simulations, the static mismatch errors were generated from a profile with joint error distribution (50% linear+50% quadratic) with 3.3% standard deviation of the nominal LSB value of the DAC. Without dynamic element matching, the harmonic distortions resulted from the static mismatch errors are distributed across the spectrum in
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustrations and description. They are not intended to be exclusive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090243904 A1 | Oct 2009 | US |