The field of the invention is analog to digital signal conversion. An exemplary application of the invention is to CMOS track and hold circuits (T/H).
Sampled-data analog signal processing is widely used in analog/digital integrated systems. With an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and proper sampling, most signal processing functions can be achieved digitally with high accuracy, which can meet or even exceed analog signal processing accuracy. Example signal processing functions used in a variety of applications from communications to measurement include filtering, timing recovery, and demodulation.
During analog to digital conversion, the analog signal is sampled. This is typically achieved with sample-and-hold (S/H) or track-and-hold (T/H) circuits at the input that accepts the analog signal. S/H and T/H circuits hold a discrete value of the input taken at an instant of time to permit an analog to digital conversion circuit to see a fixed voltage that may be converted into a digital value. In CMOS technology, S/H is the more commonly used technique because most ADCs are implemented in switched-capacitor circuits.
T/H has advantages, however. For example, in generic high-speed flash-type architectures, T/H helps to shorten the data conversion time.
Due to the finite rise/fall time of the hold clock applied to the inverters I1 and I2 in
With regard to the conventional circuit of
Switch non-linearity has been addressed in S/H circuits. One technique decreases the switch on-resistance by a constant-voltage boosting of the gate over-drive voltage of the bottom-plate switch transistor. See, e.g., Cho, T. B. and Gray, P. R., “A 10-bit, 20-MS/s, 35-mW Pipeline A/D Converter,” IEEE J. of Solid-State Circuits, Vol. 30, pp. 166-172, March 1995. This technique results in a smaller voltage drop across the non-linear switch in sampling and thereby the sampling non-linearity is reduced. However, the constant-voltage boosting of the gate over-drive voltage is significantly affected by the signal-dependent switch on-resistance.
Another way is to boost the gate over-drive voltage by a constant voltage over the input signal. See, e.g., Brooks, T. L., Robertson, D. H., Kelly, D. F., Del Muro, A., and Harston, S. W., “A Cascaded Sigma-Delta Pipeline A/D Converter with 1.25 MHz Signal Bandwidth and 89 dB SNR,” IEEE J. of Solid-State Circuits, Vol. 32, pp. 1896-1906, December 1997. This second technique keeps the switch on-resistance relatively constant. However, the signal-dependent non-linear threshold voltage still modulates the switch on-resistance.
In S/H, the non-linearity in the switch on-resistance is a principal error source in sampling. In S/H, the non-linear threshold voltage variation of the sampling switch can be cancelled by boosting with a feedback amplifier. See, e.g., Pan, H., Segami, M., Choi, M., Ling Cao, and Abidi, A. A., “A 3.3-V 12-b 50-MS/s A/D Converter in 0.6-μm CMOS with Over 80-dB SFDR,” IEEE J. of Solid-State Circuits, Vol. 35, pp. 1769-1780, December 2000. However, in T/H, the signal-dependent non-linear channel charge injection also needs to be considered.
The invention provides circuits that provide a gate boost to address non-linear threshold voltage variation in a CMOS T/H circuit. In embodiments of the invention, a boost capacitor and a feedback amplifier add a signal-dependent threshold voltage to the switch gate over-drive voltage of a switch that controls track and hold circuit sampling. In a modified embodiment, capacitive boost is omitted and the feedback amplifier provides the signal-dependent threshold voltage boost. In another embodiment, a boost capacitor and a diode connected transistor provide the signal-dependent threshold voltage boost. In a modified embodiment, capacitive boost is omitted and the diode connected transistor provides the signal-dependent threshold voltage.
The sampling accuracy in CMOS T/H circuits is improved in embodiments of the invention by keeping switch on-resistance and channel charge injection constant. Embodiments of the invention provide CMOS T/H circuits that make the switch on-resistance and the channel charge injection linear and independent of the signal. Embodiments of the invention address problems with conventional circuits that have been identified by the present inventor. Unlike bottom-plate S/H circuits, conventional T/H circuits experience higher levels of error resulting from switch non-linearity, switch charge injection, and clock feed-through errors. In the differential T/H shown in
Switch-related non-linearity errors take the following three different forms, but are all attributable to non-linear signal-dependent threshold voltage:
1. Signal-dependent non-linear on-resistance;
2. Signal-dependent non-linear channel charge injection; and
3. Signal dependent non-linear clock feed-through.
The non-linear on-resistance error can be reduced using large switches for Ms1 and Ms2 or boosting the switch overdrive voltage. However, the non-linear channel charge injection and clock feed-through errors will increase as a result. Also the non-linear channel charge injection and clock feed-through errors can be reduced by using large sampling capacitors, but the settling requirement limits the size of sampling capacitors that may be used and it is preferable to set an optimum sampling capacitor size for converter performance. An optimum capacitance value is determined in view of the settling requirement when sampling switch size and sampling rate are set.
The non-linear clock feed-through error is less significant than the non-linear channel charge injection or non-linear on-resistance. This is because the overlap capacitance of each of the switches Ms1 and Ms2 is far smaller than the sampling capacitance of the C1 and C2, and the even-order components of such non-linearity error are partly cancelled in the differential sampling. Embodiments of the invention provide circuits that make the switch on-resistance and the channel charge injection linear and independent of the signal.
An embodiment of the invention reduces sampling timing errors by applying a signal tracking inverter power supply to the circuit of
For accurate T/H implementation, the linearization of the sampling switch MS1 and the fast rise/fall time of the sampling clock are important. The former depends mostly on the circuit implementation while the latter in general is limited by the speed of the technology. Embodiments of the invention provide standard techniques to reduce the switch non-linearity effect in T/H circuits. Buffer amplifiers A1 and A2 in T/H shown in
Alternate embodiment circuits are shown in
While specific embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it should be understood that other modifications, substitutions and alternatives are apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art. Such modifications, substitutions and alternatives can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which should be determined from the appended claims.
Various features of the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
This application is related to and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 from prior provisional application Ser. No. 60/608,508, filed Sep. 9, 2004.
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5084634 | Gorecki | Jan 1992 | A |
6052000 | Nagaraj | Apr 2000 | A |
6090914 | Linsley et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6310565 | Ong et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060049857 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60608508 | Sep 2004 | US |