Title: ECE496Y Design Project Course
1Improvement of Accuracy in Pipelined ADC by
methods of Calibration Techniques
- Presented by Daniel Chung
- Course ECE1352F
- Professor Khoman Phang
2Presentation Outline
- Introduction to Pipelined A/D converters
- Why is Calibration Technique of interest
- Performance Limitations
- Evolution of Digital Calibration
- Future challenges
- Conclusion
3Pipeline ADCs
- High resolution and high speed at the same time.
- Processing rate 1 sample per cycle.
- Sample-hold amplifier at the input.
- Latency N. N clock cycles to process each
input signal. - Compact area and efficient power dissipation
- Switch capacitor implementation in CMOS
technologies. Capability for high-precision
sampling and charge transfer.
4Pipeline ADCs
Figure 1 N-bit pipeline ADC with 1-bit/stage
resolution. 5
5Performance Limitations
- Resolution
- Quantization error
- ENOB Effective number of bits. Commonly used
metric for characterizing the performance of
non-ideal quantizers. - INL Integral Nonlinearity Error
- DNL Differential Nonlinearity Error.
- Monotonicity.
6Why Digital Calibration?
- Improve resolution
- Without any calibration, the pipelined ADC is
generally limited to approx. 10-12 bits of
resolution. 1-2 - With Digital Calibration, resolution higher than
14 bits can be achieved. 3-4 - Improve capacitor mismatch, comparator offset,
charge injection, finite op-amp gain, and
capacitor nonlinearity contributing to DNL
7Digital Calibration
- Missing decision levels result when the input of
any of the stages exceeds the full scale due to
mismatches. - The missing decision levels can be eliminated, by
using gain less than 2 and 2 to 3 more stages of
pipeline, which gives enough redundancy in the
analog decision levels.
8Digital Calibration
Figure 2 Digital Calibration applied to Stage
11. 4
9Digital Calibration
Figure 3 Single-ended 2x residue amplifier a)
circuit diagram b) during phase1 c) during
phase2. 5
10Digital Calibration
Figure 4 Digital Calibration. 4
11Current Techniques
- Correction algorithms taking place continuously.
Corrects time-varying inaccuracies caused by
supply and temperature variations. 7 - Measure the offset during normal converter
operations.
12Current Techniques
Figure 5 A Radix-2 1.5-bit Switch Capacitor
stage for background Calibration. 5
13PRO / CON
- PRO
- Improve accuracy and resolution compared to not
having any calibration circuits. - With calibration techniques, resolution can be
improved significantly. - CON
- Additional Area.
- Complexity of the circuit increases.
14Future Challenges
- With newer processes, better capacitor matching
is required. - Minimize the usage of additional circuitry.
Further optimization in techniques should improve
area utilization and reduce power consumption.
15Conclusion
- Digital self-calibration technique based on radix
lt 2 applied to a pipeline ADC was discussed. - This technique accounts for capacitor mismatch,
comparator offset, finite op-amp gain, and for
DNL error contributed by circuit nonlinearities.
- Original Digital Calibration techniques executed
calibration procedures at the initial turn-on
stages. However, more recent methods use
continuous calibration techniques, to compensate
for the constant variations in supply and
temperature.
16References
1 S. H. Lewis, H. S. Fetterman, G. F. Gross,
R. Ramachandran, and T. R. Viswanathan, A 10-b
20-Msample/s analog-to-digital converter, IEEE
J. Solid-State Circuits, vol.27, pp. 351-358,
Mar. 1992. 2 T. Byunghak and P. R. Gray, A
10-b 20-Msample/s 35-mW pipeline A/D converter,
IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 30, pp.
166-172, Mar. 1995. 3 M. K. Mayes and S. W.
Chin, A 200-mW 1-Msample/s 16-b, pipelined A/D
converter with on-chip 32-b microcontroller,
IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 31, pp.
1862-1872, Dec. 1996.
17References
- 4 A. N. Karanicolas, H. S. Lee and K. L.
Bacrania, A 15-b 1-Msample/s digitally
self-calibrated pipeline ADC, IEEE J.
Solid-State Circuits, vol. 28, pp. 1207-1215,
Dec. 1993. - 5 U. Moon, J. Steensgaard, and G. Temes,
Digital techniques for improving the accuracy of
data converters, IEEE Comm. Magazine, pp.
136-143, Oct. 1999. - 6 H. C. Liu, Z. M. Lee, J. T. Wu, A Digital
background calibration technique for pipelined
analog-to-digital converters, IEEE, pp. I-881 -
I-884, 2003.
18References
7 U. Moon and B. Song, Background digital
calibration techniques for pipelined ADCs, IEEE
Trans. Circuits Syst. II, pp. 102-109, Feb.
1997. 8 H. S. Lee, D. A. Hodges and P. R.
Gray, A self-calibrating 15-bit CMOS A/D
converter, IEEE J. of Solid-State Circuits, vol.
19, pp. 813-819, Dec. 1984. 9 D. A. Johns, K.
Martin, Analog Integrated Circuit Design. John
Wiley Sons, Inc. New York, 1997. 10 W. Law,
J. Guo, C. T. Peach, W. J. Helms, and D. J.
Allstot, A Monotonic Digital Calibration
Technique for Pipelined Data Converters,
ISCAS2003, Vol. 1, pp. I873-I876, 25-28 May
2003.
19Questions?