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Analog to Digital Converters & Digital to Analog Converters (ADCs and DACs) Definitions: String of bits: b1 b2 b3 …bn MSB LSB MSB =Most significant bit LSB =Least significant bit FS =Full scale D b1 2 1 b2 2 2 b3 2 3 ... bn 2 n where bi 0 or 1 based on some " switch" position in the circuit D = Fractional Binary Value 2n equally spaced values from 0 (all 0s) to 12n (all 1s) with spacing 2n e.g. DAC: vO kVREF D1 D1 b1 b2 b3 . . . DAC bn VREF vO where k scale factor and VREF Reference voltage VFSR kVREF Full Scale Factor/Ran ge vO VFSR D1 VFSV 1 2 n VFSR vO MAX Full Scale Value/Outp ut MSB contribution to vO is VFSR/2 LSB contribution to vO is VFSR/2n n DR Dynamic Range 20 log 10 2 20n log 10 2 6n dB Example Consider n=3, VREF=1 and k=1. Vomin= 0 21 0 22 0 23 0 Vomax= 1 21 1 2 2 1 2 3 7 8 Converters:Factors to consider Speed Accuracy Resolution Noise Cost Size …… Specifications/Parameters: Absolute (and relative) accuracy Offset and gain errors (non-)Linearity Differential (non-)Linearity Monotonicity (DAC) / Missing codes (ADC) Conversion time & sampling rate (ADC) Settling time & sampling rate (DAC) Dynamic range ……… Ideal characteristics vO 0.5 VFSR 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 0 111 Ideal DAC Characteristic 111 110 101 100 011 010 001 vi 000 0.5 VFSR Ideal ADC Characteristic Absolute accuracy: refers to the inaccuracy due to all sources of error maximum deviation of actual output from ideal (design) output, consisting of, Zero (Offset) error Gain error Linearity errors Hysteresis errors ( usually small and due to comparators) Most easily expressed in fractions of 1 LSB sometimes in terms of the LSB voltage output (for DAC) or LSB voltage input (for ADC) Zero error or offset: DAC: Output voltage of DAC when there is zero code in ADC: Mean Value of ADC input voltage that is necessary to produce zero output code 100 011 010 Zero Error 001 000 000 001 010 011 100 Zero Error The Zero error is nulled by adjustment then gain error is assessed. DAC Gain error: Deviation from design output voltage for full-scale (FS) input code ADC: Gain error: Deviation from design input voltage for FS output code due to errors in reference voltage, resistors, amplifier gains etc. Gain error Gain error 111 110 101 100 011 010 001 000 000 001 010 011 100 110 101 0 111 Gain error is nulled by adjustment then: Linearity: (Actually the NON-LINEARITY is specified) Non-linearity: Deviation (usually the max dev.) of the characteristic from the ideal straight line Differential non-linearity: DAC: Difference between actual output change and ideal output voltage ( i.e. 1 LSB voltage) change for a 1 LSB input code change. Non-monotonicity occurs Vo starts to decrease rather than increase with the increasing input code transitions . ADC: Difference between actual input voltage change and ideal input voltage change ( 1LSB voltage) for a 1 LSB output code change. If greater than 1 LSB (+ or ) missing codes occur Nonmonotonic 100 011 010 001 000 000 001 010 011 100 Missing code Example: A 3-bit DAC designed for VFSR = 3.2 V is sequenced through all input codes from 000 to 111, and the actual out values are found to be as follows: Code Output, V 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 0.2 0.5 1.1 1.4 1.7 2.0 2.6 2.9 Find the offset error, the gain error, the integral nonlinearity (INL) and the differential nonlinearity, in fractions of 1 LSB Solution: Ideally: 1 LSB = VFSR 3.2 3 0.4 V 2n 2 Offset Error = v O (000) 0.2 V = + 1 LSB 2 Eliminate offset error by decreasing each output value by 0.2 V vO(111) = 2.9 – 0.2 = 2.7 V Ideally, V FSV v O (111) V FSR 1 2 3 3.2 1 2 3 = 2.8 V Gain Error = 0.1 V = 1 LSB 4 Eliminate gain error by using scale factor: multiply all new values of vO by 2.8/2.7 (see table below) Calculate INLk and DNLk for each value of code k Note: INLk = (Vk)actual – (Vk)ideal where (Vk)actual is the “corrected”(for zero and gain) output voltage at code k , k = 0, 1, …, 2n1 (in binary) Obviously: INL0 = INL 2n1 = 0 DNLk = INLk – INLk1 DNL0 is not defined k Obviously: DNL i i 1 Code, k Corrected Output, Vk [V] Ideal Vk [V] INLk INLk 000 0.0 001 0.31 010 0.93 011 1.24 100 1.56 101 1.87 110 2.49 111 2.8 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.09 0.8 0.13 1.2 0.04 1.6 0.04 2.0 0.13 2.4 0.09 2.8 0.0 DNLk 0.09 0.22 0.09 0.08 0.09 0.22 0.09 Look for max values: 1 INL = 0.13 V + LSB 3 1 and DNL = 0.22 V + LSB 2 Quantization: inherent in ADC and DAC Signal voltage (or current) range divided into M = 2n levels and sampled values rounded to one of these. Typically: v v FSR Q M = Quantization interval Model: Quantizer v(kT) vQ(kT) vQ Q/2 Q Q/2 v Q Quantizer characteristic Q = vQ v Q/2 Q/2 v Q Q Q/2 3Q/2 Q/2 Quantization error Can regard this error signal as superimposed noise Q Q Q 2 2 Mean 0 Q2 Variance 12 Mean squared error Mean squared noise Q RMS noise 12 Mean and RMS often expressed as %FS 2 D/A Converters DAC Summing Amp binary-weighted DAC VREF S4 S3 S2 R 0.5R 0.25R R vo 0.125R S1 S S S S 3 v o R 1 2 4 VREF where S i is up or down R R R R 4 2 8 or in general vO kV REF b1 2 1 b2 2 2 b3 2 3 b4 2 4 kV REF D where bi 0 or 1 based on " switch" position D b1 2 1 b2 2 2 b3 2 3 b4 2 4 and k 16 In the above figure: D 2 1 2 2 2 4 13 16 vO 13VREF 4 switches 16 different levels (0V to 15VREF) 8 switches 256 different levels (0V to 255VREF) A wide accurate range of resistors required R-2R ladder: 2R 2R 2R v1 R R i1 i1 VREF 2R 2R R vk v2 2R ik i2 R vk+1 vn ik in ik+1 2R 2R 2R 2R 2R RHS LHS: The equivalent resistance to the right of each labelled node equals 2R the current downward from each node = the current to the right of the same node twice that current enters node from the left currents and node voltages are binary-weighted i k 1 1 i 2 k v k 1 1 v 2 k k 1,2 ,... , n 1 Resistance spread is only 2-to-1 in 4-bit current-mode R-2R ladder DAC: operates on ladder currents R VREF R iS 2R R 2R R i2 i1 i1 2R i2 i3 2R i3 2R i4 i4 RF SW1 SW4 SW3 SW2 iO vo b1 b3 b2 b4 VREF 1 1 V V 1 V ; i1 iS REF REF 2 1 , i2 i1 REF 2 2 2R 2 2 2R 2R 2 2R Similarly iS V i3 REF 2R 3 2 , i 4 V REF 2R 4 2 all currents are directed to ground or virtual ground by the status of switches SW1 through SW4 (controlled by bits b1 through b4 respectively) Only 2 values of resistor required easily implemented in IC form v0 RF i0 4-bit voltage-mode R-2R ladder DAC: The 2R resistances are switched between VL and VH and the ladder output is v1 As the input code is sequenced from 0000 to 1111, v1 changes in steps of 2n(VH VL) from VL to VH 2n(VH VL). v1 is buffered with a scale factor K = 1 + RF/R1 to produce the output vO. I.e. R v0 1 F R1 v1 RF R1 vo v1 R 2R 2R SW1 2R R R 2R 2R SW4 SW3 SW2 VL VH b1 b2 b3 b4 R v1 R 2R 2R u1 2R 2R u2 u3 u4 R R R R v1 2R 2R u1 2R R VL Thevenin Equiv. 2R u2 1 u 4 VL 2 u3 V , when bi 0 ui L VH , when bi 1 bi VH VL VL Open - circuit vo ltage voc 1 voc voc 1 if VL were removed, and voc 1 u4 2 1 voc voc 2 if u4 were removed, and voc 2 VL 2 By Superposit ion Principle : voc voc 1 voc 2 2R u4 1 u4 VL 2 R v1 2R R 2R 2R u1 u2 VL 2R 2R 1 u4 VL 2 u3 Similarly: v1 1 1 1 1 u1 u 2 u 3 u 4 VL 2 2 2 2 u1 2 1 u 2 2 2 u 3 2 3 u 4 2 4 VL 2 4 v (0001) 2 V V v1 (0000) 2 1 2 2 2 3 2 4 2 4 VL VL 1 And so on…… 1 2 2 2 3 2 4 L H VL VL 2 4 VL VH VL 2 4 Scaled current source D/A In ICs , current sources are easier to make than resistors The emitter areas determine the current levels. Iout VCC RREF S1 IREF Q1 I1 S3 S2 Q2 I2 Q3 I3 QD VBE Area=4 Area=2 I out kI REF b1 2 1 b2 2 2 b3 2 3 For example : I out kI REF 4 0 1 16 5 kI REF 16 Area=1 Types of A/D Converter (ADC) Several types but we shall look at three DAC-Based ADC Dual slope integrating ADCs Flash converters DAC-Based ADC vi CMP vD/A Osc/ Clock Up-down Counter D/A VREF Worst-case conversion time = (V) S1 where V is the voltage increment of the D/A and S is the maximum slew rate of the input voltage Dual-slope ADC inherently slow C R OA1 S1 vi CMP OA2 v2 S2 VREF CAZ b1 b2 Counter Control Logic Clock bn START A1: A2 & RC : CMP : EOC unity gain buffer precision integrator voltage comparator AUTOZERO PHASE (before START command) S1 switched to ground & S2 closed Nonlinear FeedBack around the A2 and CMP combination voltage on autozero capacitor (CAZ) forced to voltage required to bring v2 right to CMP threshold voltage and hold it there. overall compensation for input offset voltages of all three devices vx START 2n Autozero counts N counts Autozero t vx Slope = vi /RC Slope =VREF/RC Integrate vi Integrate VREF SIGNAL INTEGRATION PHASE START command begins signal integration phase, Control Logic opens S2 connects S1 to vi (assumed >0) enables Counter (starting from zero) As integrator ramps down counter counts to overflow (2n clocks periods) vi n v2 2 TCLK RC where TCLK 1 f CLK DEINTEGRATE PHASE At overflow Counter resets automatically to zero signals Control Logic to connect S1 to VREF integrator ramps up (known as deintegrate phase) until v2 again reaches CMP threshold CMP output toggles and signals Control Logic to stop Counter issue EOC (end-of-conversion) command Accumulated count, N V v2 REF NTCLK RC Conversion 2n vi N bn ...b2 b1 VREF accuracy independent of R, C, fCLK and input offsets of three devices. As long as these parameters remain stable over the conversion period, they affect both integration phases equally. Hence, long-term drifts are automatically eliminated Good linearity and resolution possible. Virtually zero differential nonlinearity. Rejects mains noise. No sample-and hold (SHA) required as vi is simply averaged over the signal integration phase Long conversion times, e.g. for mains noise rejection might chose signal integration time equal to 20ms (period of 50Hz mains). Worst case conversion time is then 40ms so rate is 25 samples per sec Mains Noise Rejection Assume input is “corrupted” with mains noise at 50 Hz vi corrupted vi vn vi Vn cos 2ft v2 K where f = 50Hz t v 0 i corrupted dt where K is a constant During signal integration phase T1 vo (T1 ) Kvi T1 K Vn cos 2ft dt 0 Choose T1 = integral multiple of mains period (20 ms), say 40 ms or 60 ms, etc., then 2nd term = 0 mains interference rejected Parallel-comparator or Flash ADC 2-bit shown VREF 0.5R CMP1 B0 R CMP2 vi Logic Control R B1 CMP3 R CMP4 0.5R Very fast [10-20 ns] - suitable for video signals High specification comparators & resistors required N-bit requires 2N comparators ! (one for each level of quantization)