An Ultra-Low Power Successive-Approximation-Register Analog-to-Digital Converter with Input-Referred Amplifier-Skipping Window Technique in 55 nm Low-Leakage Process

2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 849-855
Author(s):  
Shuangyi Wu ◽  
Zhengfeng Wang ◽  
Ning Ning ◽  
Ling Du ◽  
Qi Yu
2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 451-455
Author(s):  
Yahya Mohammed Ali Al-Naamani ◽  
K. Lokesh Krishna ◽  
A. M. Guna Sekhar

In recent years and continuing, widespread research work is carried out on medical implantable devices placed inside the human body. The essential and vital electronic circuit in implantable devices is the Analog to Digital Converter (ADC). The essential requirements in these applications such as long battery life-time, low power consumption and less die area poses a stringent requirement in designing and fabricating an ultra-low power ADCs. Among the diverse converter architectures existing, Successive Approximation Register (SAR) type converter architecture has shown better capabilities in terms of ultra-low power operation, medium resolution, less form factor and less silicon area. In this described paper a novel power effective, better resolution SAR type ADC to be used for biomedical related applications. The proposed work consists of capacitive type Digital to Analog Converter (DAC) based on charge distribution, a CMOS comparator, and SAR logic implemented using D-flip-flops. The different blocks of SAR architecture are simulated using EDA tools in CMOS 180 nm N-well process operated at VDD = 1.5 V voltage (VDD). The circuit is measured under various input frequencies with a sampling speed of 50 MHz and it consumes 22.6 μW. The proposed ADC technology shows SNDR of 48.6 dB and occupies a circuit area of 0.11 mm2 and the measured INL and DNL is calculated to be fewer than 0.54 LSB and 0.45 LSB respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 3
Author(s):  
Chih-Hsuan Lin ◽  
Kuei-Ann Wen

With nine-axis sensing systems in 5G smartphones, mobile power consumption has become increasingly important, and ultra-low-power (ULP) sensor circuits can decrease power consumption to tens of microwatts. This paper presents an innovative successive approximation register analog-to-digital converter, which comprises fine (three most significant bits (MSBs) plus course conversion (11 least significant bits (LSBs)) capacitive digital-to-analog converters (CDACs), ULP, four-mode reconfigurable resolution (9, 10, 11, or 12 bits), an internally generated clock, meta-detection, the switching base midpoint voltage (Vm) (SW-B-M), bit control logic, multi-phase control logic, fine (three MSBs) plus course conversion (11 LSBs) switch control logic, phase control logic, and an input signal plus negative voltage (VI + NEG) voltage generator. Then, the mechanism of the discrete Fourier transform (DFT)-based calibration is applied. The scalable voltage technique was used, and the analog/digital voltage was Vanalog (1.5 V) and Vdigital (0.9 V) to meet the specifications of the nine-axis ULP sensing system. The CDACs can reconfigure four-mode resolutions, 9–12 bits, for use in nine-axis sensor applications. The corresponding dynamic signal-to-noise and distortion ratio performance was 50.78, 58.53, 62.42, and 66.51 dB. In the 12-bit mode, the power consumption of the ADC was approximately 2.7 μW, and the corresponding figure of merit (FoM) was approximately 30.5 fJ for each conversion step.


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