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A 107 dB DR, 106dB SNDR Sigma-Delta ADC Using a Charge-Pump Integrator for Audio Application The final year project presentation The graduation thesis plea of XXX University Student No.: Sam, (DB028791); Hubert, (DB029125) Supervisor:Prof. Sin-Weng Sai Co-Supervisor:Prof. U Seng Pan 1/47 1. Introduction 2. Basic theory of Sigma-Delta ADC CON TENTS 3. Target specification 4. Architecture Chosen 5. Charge Pump Integrator 6. Behavioral Model 7. Circuit Partial Design 8. Conclusion 2/47 01 Introduction 3/47 Introduction 1Audio in life 2A/D converter 3 Audio standard 4/47 Introduction 1Audio in life 2A/D converter 3 Audio standard ADC Analog Digital Signal: Continuous signal which represents physical measurements. Discrete time signals generated by digital modulation. Example: Human voice in air, analog electronic devices. Computers, CDs, DVDs, and other digital electronic devices. 5/47 Introduction 1Audio in life 2A/D converter 3 Audio standard ADC Increase the quality, reduce the noise and Cumulative distortion. Save energy, use converter instead of the amplifier in transmission. Information safety, Given the timing information, the transmitted waveform can be reconstructed 6/47 Introduction 1Audio in life 2A/D converter 3 Audio standard People’s hearing range Frequency range: 20~20k Hz Sound Pressure Level(SPL) =𝐿𝑃 = 20 log 𝑃𝑟𝑚𝑠 𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑓 𝑑𝐵; 𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑓 = 2𝑢𝑝𝑎 human ear's audible sounds is from 0 dB SPL (hearing threshold) to 140 dB SPL (pain threshold) 7/47 Introduction 1Audio in life 2A/D converter 3 Audio standard Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA or CD-DA) is the standard format for audio Compact Discs. The standard is defined in the Red Book 44.1 KHz 16bit about 96dB dynamic range Library 30 dB SPL symphony orchestra 110dB SPL 110 dB - 30 dB = only 80 dB real dynamic range if you brought the orchestra into your home Good enough for listeners ! 8/47 Introduction 1Audio in life 2A/D converter 3 Audio standard 16 bit enough? An professional requires more during mixing and mastering. Multiplying that noise by a few thousand times eventually becomes noticeable. Keep the accumulated noise at a very low level ! 9/47 02 Basic theory of Sigma-Delta ADC 10/47 Conversion Resolution Basic theory 1Different ADC 2Key features Sigma Delta SAR High resolution Subranging/Pipelined Low bandwidth Flash Signal Bandwidth 11/47 2Key features 1Different ADC Basic theory Signal to noise ratio for Nyquist ADC 𝑆𝑁𝑅| 𝑑𝐵 𝑃𝑠𝑖𝑔𝑛 = 10𝑙𝑜𝑔 𝑃𝑛𝑜𝑖𝑠𝑒 where Psign and Pnoise are the power of the signal and the power of the noise in the band of interest. Sine wave as example: 𝑃𝑠𝑖𝑛𝑒 1 = 𝑇 𝑇 0 2 𝑋𝐹𝑆 1 2 𝑠𝑖𝑛 2𝜋𝑓𝑡 𝑑𝑡 ≈ 4 𝑇 𝑇 0 2 𝑋𝐹𝑆 (∆ ∙ 2𝑛 )2 2 2𝜋𝑓𝑡 𝑑𝑡 = 4 8 ∆2 𝑃𝑄 = 12 ∴ 𝑆𝑁𝑅𝑠𝑖𝑛𝑒 | 𝑑𝐵 = 6.02 ∙ 𝑛 + 1.78 𝑑𝐵 Every bit of quantizer improves the SNR by 6.02 dB!!! 12/47 1Different ADC Basic theory 2Key features fs Nyquist Operation A ADC fs/2 kfs B Oversampling (OSR) Noise shaping (Order) C fs Oversampling + Digital filter ADC Digital filter kfs Oversampling + Digital filter + Noise shaping ƩΔ MOD Digital filter fs/2 kfs/2 kfs fs/2 kfs/2 kfs 13/47 03 Target specification 14/47 Target specification 1Products’ use 2Our target 15/47 Target specification 1Products’ use 2Our target Audio Sigma-Delta ADC From TI Company Normal products NAME pcm1870 SNR 90dB pcm1808 99dB pcm1851a 101dB pcm1803a 103dB From the table, listing some the audio ADCs use in car audio system. The SNR performance is 99dB. Thus We set our target as 105dB SNR, After setting the target, the structure of the ƩΔ ADC will be chosen to build the system. 16/47 04 Architecture Chosen 17/47 Architecture Chosen 1Architecture 2Quantizer and OSR Single Loop Architecture CIFB – Cascade Integrators with Distributed Feedback CIFF – Cascade Integrators with Distributed Feed-forward CRFB – Cascade Resonator with Distributed Feedback CRFF – Cascade Resonator with Distributed Feed-forward 18/47 Architecture Chosen CIFB 2Quantizer and OSR 1Architecture u(n) -ai = bi for i ≤ 3 -b4 = 1 b3 b2 b1 c1 -a1 b4 c2 -a2 y(n) c3 v(n) -a3 NTF DAC CIFF u(n) b4 b1 c2 - b1 = b4 = 1 -c1 c3 y(n) a3 v(n) a2 a3 DAC 19/47 1Architecture Architecture Chosen CRFB 2Quantizer and OSR u(n) b3 b2 b1 b4 -g1 -ai = bi for i ≤ 3 -b4 = 1 c1 -a1 c2 y(n) c3 v(n) 20-a3 -a2 0 CRFF -20 u(n) b1 -40 DAC NTF -60 b4 -80 -g1 -100 - b1 = b4 = 1 c2 c3 -120 y(n) a3 -140 -3 10 -c1 10 -2 v(n) 10 -1 a2 a3 Further increase SNR by optimizing NTF zero DAC 20/47 Architecture Chosen 1Architecture 2Quantizer and OSR Feedforward Feedback Only one DAC required Requires many feedback DACs Needs an extra adder No extra adder First integrator is fastest Last integrator is fastest First opamp is power hungry First opamp is power hungry With Resonator Without Resonator Advantage Higher SNDR Simpler Structure Disadvantage More Complex Structure (Resonator) Lower SNDR 21/47 Architecture Chosen 01 1Architecture 1.5 Bit Quantizer 2Quantizer and OSR OSR=256 Higher SNR Ensure linearity Higher SNR Decrease the Thermal Noise 02 05 3rd order architecture 03 Higher SNR A single loop 3rd order CRFB Σ-Δ ADC with 1.5 bit quantizer and 256 OSR are designed. 22/47 05 Charge Pump Integrator 23/47 1Introduction Charge Pump Integrator Second Integrator First Integrator VREFP VREFP Φ1a Φ1a Φ2a Φ2 Φ1a Φ2a VIP VFBN Φ1 Φ1a Φ1a VIP Φ2a Φ2a VIP CRFB architecture using Adder conventional SC integrator Third Integrator VREFP VIP 2Conclusion Φ2 Φ1a Φ2 Φ1a Φ2 Φ2 Φ1 Φ1a Φ2 Φ1 Φ2 Φ1a Φ2 Φ2 Φ2 FEEDBACK Φ1 VIP Φ1a Φ1 Φ2 Φ2 Φ2 Φ1a Φ1 Φ1 Φ2 Φ1a Φ1 Φ2 Φ2 VFBP Φ2a VREFN VIP VIP Φ2a Φ1a VIP Φ2a Φ1a Φ1a Φ2a Second Integrator First Integrator(CP) VREFP Φ1a Φ1a Φ2a VIP Φ2 CRFB architecture using CP SCAdder integrator Third Integrator VREFP Φ1 Φ1a VREFN VREFN VIP Φ2 Φ1a VIP Φ2a Φ1a Φ2a Φ2 VIP Φ1a VFBN 2VREFP Φ1a Φ2a Φ2 Φ1a Φ2 Φ1a Φ2 Φ2 Φ1 2VREFN Φ1 Φ1a VIN Φ2a Φ1a Φ2 Φ1 Φ1 Φ2 Φ2 Φ2 Φ2 Φ1a Φ1 Φ1a Φ2 Φ1 Φ2 Φ2 Φ1a Φ2 Φ2 FEEDBACK Φ1 Φ1 Φ2 Φ2 VFBP Φ1a Φ1 VIP VIP Φ2a Φ1a Φ1a VREFN Φ2a VIP Φ1a Φ2a Φ1a Φ2 VREFN 24/47 1Introduction Charge Pump Integrator 2Conclusion Conventional 𝐶𝑠/𝑘 Ci Cs Φ1 VIN Φ2 Φ2 VOUT Φ2 Cs Vref VOUT Φ1 Cl VREF Charge-pump Cs1=Cs/2 Φ2 VIN Φ2 Φ1 Φ2 Φ2 Φ1 Cs2=Cs/2 Cs/2k Ci2 VOUT Cs/4 2Vref VOUT Cl 25/47 1Introduction Charge Pump Integrator 2Conclusion Conventional Charge-pump 𝐶𝑠/𝑘 Cs/2k Cs Cs/4 Vref 2Vref VOUT VOUT Cl 𝐶𝑠 𝐶𝐿 = + 𝐶𝑙 𝑘+1 1 𝛽= 𝑘+1 𝐶𝐿 = 𝐶𝑠 + 𝐶𝑙 (𝑘 + 1) 𝛽 Cl 𝑃𝑂𝑊𝑂𝑃 ∝ 𝑔𝑚 𝑔𝑚 = 𝐶𝐿 𝛽 𝜔−3𝑑𝐵 𝐶𝐿 𝛽 𝐶𝐿 ′ = 𝐶𝑠 2 + 𝐶𝑙 𝑘+2 2 𝑘+2 𝐶𝐿 𝐶𝑠 𝑘 ( )′ = + 𝐶𝑙 ( + 1) 𝛽 4 2 𝛽′ = ′ ≈ 𝐶𝐿 4𝛽 𝑔𝑚 4 ′ = 𝑃𝑂𝑊𝑂𝑃 𝑃𝑂𝑊𝑜𝑝 4 ′ = 𝑔𝑚 26/47 Charge Pump Integrator 1Introduction STRENGTH WEAKNESS Reduce the power consumption of the amplifier S W OPPORTUNITY Easier to implement by adding capacitor 2Conclusion O T Need double supply voltage (two 0.25um transistor) THREATS May cause unmatched problem and high requirements to other parts 27/47 06 Behavioral Model 28/47 1Ideal Model 2Model with Non-idealities Behavioral Model The 3rd order CRFB with noise block in Matlab PSD of a 3rd-Order Sigma-Delta Modulator 0 -20 SNR = 134.8dB @ OSR=256 -40 ENOB = 22.10 bits @ OSR=256 -60 PSD [dB] -80 -100 -120 -140 -160 -180 -200 4 10 5 10 Frequency [Hz] 6 10 29/47 Behavioral Model 1Ideal Model 2 Model with Non-idealities The main non-idealities Operational amplifier non-idealities: 5% 20% 1. Bandwidth of Op-amp; 2. Slew rate of Op-amp; 3. Operational amplifier saturation voltages. 75% Thermal noise of Switch Capacitor structure. noise of op-amp. clock jitter at the input sampler. kT/C plus Op-amp thermal noise Other noise Quantization noise 30/47 Behavioral Model 1Ideal Model 2 Model with Non-idealities DC gain requirement of first op-amp Finite DC gain SNR 80dB 134.8dB 60dB 134.8dB -60 58dB 132.3dB -80 54dB 128.1dB -100 50dB 120.4dB PSD of a 3rd-Order Sigma-Delta Modulator 0 -20 PSD [dB] -40 -120 First Integrator Output Second Integrator Output Third Integrator Output 250 250 250 200 200 200 150 150 150 -140 -200 4 10 5 10 Frequency [Hz] Occurrences -180 Occurrences Occurrences -160 100 100 100 50 50 50 6 10 0 -0.05 0 Voltage [V] 0.05 0 -0.4 -0.2 0 Voltage [V] 0.2 0.4 0 -1 -0.5 0 Voltage [V] 0.5 1 Repeat the operation to obtain behavioral model of the system 31/47 Behavioral Model 1Ideal Model 2 Model with Non-idealities Behavioral Model of The Project Sigma-delta Parameter SNR (dB) Ideal modulation 134.8 Finite DC gain (A=58dB, 58dB, 50dB) 130.6 Finite bandwidth(GBW=100MHz) 134.8 Finite Slew-rate (SR=60V/us) 134.8 Saturation voltages (|Vmax|=1V) 134.8 Sampling Jitter (Δ𝜏 = 17𝑝𝑠) 130.7 Switch (kT/C) noise (Cs=10pF) 110.4 Input-referred operational amplifier noise (Vn=1.5uV) Including all of the non-idealities 108 107-107.5 32/47 Behavioral Model 1Ideal Model 2 Model with Non-idealities In cadence simulation, the first Op-amp gain requirement is 58 dB for 133dB SNR, now change the architecture: The gain of first Opamp(dB) simulation result of Cadence(dB) 54 133 50 133 48 133 46 132 42 130 It is clearly found that the requirement of first Op-amp is reduced 33/47 07 Circuit Partial Design 34/47 1Op-amp 2Optimization3Quantizer 4Switch Circuit Partial Design Op-amp DesignV DD vOP1 R1 C1 vON1 VDD vON vOP VCMFB M10 M11 VCMFB1 1st VB3 M8 M3 vOP IREF 2 M13 vON1 M12 VB2 M6 M2 M15 vON M9 vOP1 VIN M14 VREFP VREFP VREFP VB0 5 3 4 VB1 VB2 6 VB3 M7 VIP VB2 7 VREF VB1 M4 VB4 1 M5 M1 GND GND VOP VCM Φ1 Φ2 C1 Φ1 VON Φ2 C2 C3 Φ2 Φ2 VBIAS VCMFB Φ1 VCM C4 Φ1 VBIAS CMFB Op-Amp: Main structure Bias Circuit Switched-capacitor CMFB 35/47 1Op-amp 2Optimization3Quantizer 4Switch Circuit Partial Design Op-amp Design VDD VDD VB1 M18 VCMFB M19 M1 M10 M16 M1 M12 M11 M17 M14 VCMFB VB4 VB2 VIN M15 vON VCMFB1 VB2 vOP M2 M3 VB3 M8 M9 M13 VIN M2 M3 VIP M8 M11 VB3 VB3 M6 VB4 M9 M6 M7 M4 M4 vOP vON M13 vON1 vOP1 M10 M15 M14 VIP M12 VB2 M7 VB1 M5 M5 GND 2nd GND 3rd 36/47 Circuit Partial Design 1Op-amp 2Optimization3Quantizer 4Switch Zero Optimization For the CRFB structure, it needs a local feedback from third integrator output to second integrator input to make up a resonator which effects the zero. Vi2 Φ2 Φ1 C2 C1 Φ1a C3 Φ2a Φ2 𝐶1 ||(𝐶2 + 𝐶3 ) 𝐶2 Q 2 = V𝑜3 ∙ 2 𝐶3 + 𝐶2 Vo3 Vi2 Cb Vo3 Extremely small Q = g ∙ V𝑜3 37/47 1Op-amp 2Optimization3Quantizer 4Switch Circuit Partial Design 1.5 Bit Quantizer VREFP VCM Φ2 Φ2 VDD C1 Φ1 VIP D0 VIN CLK Φ1 C2 Φ2 M10 M8 M7 M9 Φ2 VREFN VCM VREFN VCM Φ2 M11 CLK vON vOP CLK M4 M5 Φ2 C1 Φ1 M6 vIN VIP M2 M3 vIP D1 VIN Φ1 CLK C2 Φ2 VREFP M1 VSS Φ2 VCM 38/47 Circuit Partial Design 1Op-amp 2Optimization3Quantizer 4Switch CMOS switch Ron,p Ron,n CLK Vin Vout CH CLK’ Ron,eq VTHP VIN VDD-VTH It is often used very large or small voltage input, under such situation, the transmission resistor will change critically 39/47 1Op-amp 2Optimization3Quantizer 4Switch Circuit Partial Design Bootstrapped Switch Vdd Vdd sw4 Φ1 Vout Φ2 M1 Vin Output sw2 Φ2 sw3 Φ1 sw1 M5 M1 Φ2 sw5 Vss C0 M8 C2 C1 Input M2 Vss M7 M6 M3 M4 Vss To obtain constant conductance, the bootstrap technique can be used to keep the gate-source voltage at a certain value. 40/47 08 Conclusion 41/47 1System Performance 2 3Summary Comparison Conclusion 0 PdydB -20 -40 PSD(dB) -60 -80 -100 107dB Dynamic Range -120 -140 3 10 4 10 5 10 Frequency(Hz) 6 7 10 10 Output PSD for the system Measured SNDR versus input amplitude Technology Sampling Frequency Bandwidth Peak SNDR Power Consumption FOM 65nm CMOS 10.24MHz 20kHz 106dB 1.332mW 204f/conv. 42/47 Conclusion 1System Performance 2 3Summary Comparison Transistor level comparison of system using CP And Conventional 32.4% Peak SNDR Power consumption Power consumption 32.4% decrease because of first stage FOM CP Conventional 106dB 102dB 1.332mW 1.972mW 204f/conv. 479f/conv. It achieves a higher SNDR but cost less power by using CP integrator 43/47 1System Performance 2 3Summary Comparison Conclusion Comparison with Other Σ-Δ ADC This work JSSC/06 CICC/11 TCAS-1/13 JSSC/09 JSSC/08 JSSC/03 [1] [2] [5] [4] [3] [6] Tech [um] 0.065 0.065 0.065 0.13 0.18 0.13 0.35 Supply [V] 1.0 1.2 1.0 1.2 0.7 0.9 2 Input Range [Vpp-diff ] 0.9 1.0 0.9 0.4 1.0 1.1 / OSR 256 300 64 128 100 128 154 BW [kHz] 20 20 24 10 20 24 20 SNDR [dB] 106 95 95 87.8 81 89 105 Power [uW] 1332 2200 371 148 36 1500 68000 FOM [fJ/conv.] 204 11200 170 369 98 1360 11700 44/47 Conclusion 1System Performance 2 3Summary Comparison For audio application => high SNDR (target ≥105dB) Suppress the in-band noise (oversampling and noise shaping) 3rd CRFB Sigma-Delta modulator architecture using CP integrator is selected As a result, with a full-scale input of 900mVpp differential the CRFB ADC using charge-pump integrator achieves 106 dB SNDR and 107dB dynamic range in audio bandwidth (20kHz), while consuming 1.332mW power. 45/47 Reference 1. Dorrer, L., et al. "A 2.2 mW, continuous-time sigma-delta ADC for voice coding with 95dB dynamic range in a 65nm CMOS process." Solid-State Circuits Conference, 2006. ESSCIRC 2006. Proceedings of the 32nd European. IEEE, 2006. 2. Liu, L., et al. "A 95dB SNDR audio ΔΣ modulator in 65nm CMOS." Custom Integrated Circuits Conference (CICC), 2011 IEEE. IEEE, 2011. 3. M. G. Kim, G.-C. Ahn, P. Hanumolu, S.-H. Lee, S.-H. Kim, S.-B. You,J.-W. Kim, G. C. Temes, and U.-K. Moon, “A 0.9 V 92 dB double-sampled switched-RC delta-sigma audio ADC,” IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 43, no. 5, pp. 1195–1206, May 2008. 4. Y. Chae and G. Han, “Low voltage, low power, inverter-based switched-capacitor delta-sigma modulator,” IEEE J. Solid-State Circuits, vol. 44, no. 2, pp. 458–472, Feb. 2009. 5. Nilchi, Alireza, and David A. Johns. "A low-power delta-sigma modulator using a charge-pump integrator." Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on 60.5 (2013): 1310-1321. 6. Yang, YuQing, et al. "A 114-dB 68-mW chopper-stabilized stereo multibit audio ADC in 5.62 mm 2." Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of 38.12 (2003): 2061-2068. 46/47 THANK YOU ! 47/47