Patent classifications
H03M1/44
Voltage stabilizing techniques
Various implementations described herein are directed to device having multiple stages. The device may include a first stage that converts an analog voltage signal in a power supply domain into a digitally coded signal. The device may include a second stage that generates a derivative of the digitally coded signal, detects an event of the analog voltage signal based on the derivative of the digitally coded signal, and derives a control signal based on the event. The device may include a third stage that injects current into or sinks current from the power supply domain that is associated with the analog voltage signal based on the control signal.
Glitch free current mode analog to digital converters for artificial intelligence
Single-stage and multiple-stage current-mode Analog-to-Digital converters (iADC)s utilizing apparatuses, circuits, and methods are described in this disclosure. The disclosed iADCs can operate asynchronously and be free from the digital clock noise, which also lowers dynamic power consumption, and reduces circuitry overhead associated with free running clocks. For their pseudo-flash operations, the disclosed iADCs do not require their input current signals to be replicated which saves area, lowers power consumption, and improves accuracy. Moreover, the disclosed methods of multi-staging of iADCs increase their resolutions while keeping current consumption and die size (cost) low. The iADC's asynchronous topology facilitates decoupling analog-computations from digital-computations, which helps reduce glitch, and facilitates gradual degradation (instead of an abrupt drop) of iADC's accuracy with increased input current signal frequency. The iADCs can be arranged with minimal digital circuitry (i.e., be digital-light), thereby saving on die size and dynamic power consumption.
FRONT-END CIRCUIT PERFORMING ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION AND TOUCH PROCESSING CIRCUIT INCLUDING THE SAME
A touch processing circuit includes: a front-end circuit including an amplifier, a first capacitor, a second capacitor, a third capacitor, and a plurality of switches each having two ends that are selectively connected each other, the front-end circuit being configured to process an input signal varying according to a touch; and a controller controlling the plurality of switches so that the front-end circuit is configured as a first circuit that accumulates deviation of the input signal between a first phase and a second phase during an integration period and a second circuit that converts the accumulated deviation into a digital signal during a conversion period.
NOISE SHAPING ALGORITHMIC ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTER
Disclosed herein are some examples of algorithmic analog-to-digital converters (AADCs) that perform noise shaping. In particular, an AADC disclosed herein includes circuitry that can store residue(s) of one or more conversion cycles produced by the AADC and apply a value corresponding to the residue(s) to a subsequent conversion cycle. The AADC may perform a filtering procedure with the residue(s) to produce the value applied to the subsequent conversion. Applying the value to the subsequent conversion cycle can increase a signal-to-noise ratio of the signal that the AADC is converting in the subsequent conversion cycle.
Current mode analog to digital converter with enhanced accuracy
A family of current mode analog to digital converters, or TiADC, utilizing methods, circuits, and apparatuses, are disclosed with the following benefits: (1) There are normal and random non-systematic mismatch between devices in silicon manufacturing, that introduce non-linearity in current mode analog to digital converter's, or iADC, reference network. The iADC's linearity is improved by utilizing a thermometer current mode signal conditioning method, SCM. Successive applications of the SCM effectuates a segmented current reference network to function like a thermometer network, which operates based on the function of summation. Having a TiADC with a thermometer reference network, where current segments are summed or accumulated incrementally, would inherently reduce the impact of statistical distribution of component's random mismatch on the iADC's non-linearity. Accordingly, linearity of TiADC can be improved by the square root of the sum of the square of mismatch errors of the number of segmented current references in the thermometer network. (2) speed is improved by operating the TiADC in current mode, which is inherently faster. (3) voltage swings in current mode are small, which enables he iADC to operate at lower power supply voltages. (4) The TiADC can operate in subthreshold and at very low currents, which lower powers consumption. (5) the TiADC is asynchronous. Being clock free, TiADC has lower dynamic power consumption with reduces digital system noise. (6) the signal conditioning method or SCM utilized in TiADC provides concurrent functions of analog differencing and digital comparison. This trait enhances the dynamic response of iADC, wherein the digital output throughput accuracy degrades gradually and not abruptly as a function of increasing frequency of iADC's input signal. (7) No passive devices, such as capacitors or resistors, are required for the TiADC. (8) TiADC can be fabricated on low cost mainstream standard digital CMOS processes.
Noise shaping analog-to-digital converter
In certain aspects, an analog-to-digital converter includes a first capacitive digital-to-analog converter (DAC), a second capacitive DAC, and a comparator including a first input, a second input, and an output. The analog-to-digital converter also includes a switch circuit including a first input coupled to the first capacitive DAC, a second input coupled to the second capacitive DAC, a first output coupled to the first input of the comparator, and a second output coupled to the second input of the comparator. The analog-to-digital converter further includes a first switch coupled between the output of the comparator and the first input of the comparator, and a successive approximation register (SAR) coupled to the output of the comparator, the first capacitive DAC, and the second capacitive DAC.
Dithering and calibration technique in multi-stage ADC
A multi-stage analog-to-digital converter includes a signal input terminal, a first stage analog-to-digital converter, a digital-to-analog converter; a second stage analog-to-digital converter, and dither circuitry. The first stage analog-to-digital converter includes an input coupled to the signal input terminal. The digital-to-analog converter includes an input coupled to an output of the first stage analog-to-digital converter, and an input coupled to the signal input terminal. The second stage analog-to-digital converter includes a first input coupled to an output of the digital-to-analog converter. The dither circuitry is coupled to a second input of the second stage analog-to-digital converter, and is configured to provide a dither signal to the second stage analog-to-digital converter during selection of fewer than all bits of a digital value of a residue signal received from the digital-to-analog converter.
Dithering and calibration technique in multi-stage ADC
A multi-stage analog-to-digital converter includes a signal input terminal, a first stage analog-to-digital converter, a digital-to-analog converter; a second stage analog-to-digital converter, and dither circuitry. The first stage analog-to-digital converter includes an input coupled to the signal input terminal. The digital-to-analog converter includes an input coupled to an output of the first stage analog-to-digital converter, and an input coupled to the signal input terminal. The second stage analog-to-digital converter includes a first input coupled to an output of the digital-to-analog converter. The dither circuitry is coupled to a second input of the second stage analog-to-digital converter, and is configured to provide a dither signal to the second stage analog-to-digital converter during selection of fewer than all bits of a digital value of a residue signal received from the digital-to-analog converter.
CONVERSION AND FOLDING CIRCUIT FOR DELAY-BASED ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERTER SYSTEM
An RF receiver including: an antenna cable of receiving an RF signal; a low noise amplifier coupled to the antenna and having an output; a bandpass filter coupled to the output of the low noise amplifier and having a voltage signal output, V.sub.IN; a conversion and folding circuit; and an analog-to-digital converter for converting the earlier-arriving or later-arriving delay signals into a digital code representing the voltage signal. The conversion and folding circuit having: a voltage-to-delay converter block, including preamplifiers, for converting the voltage signal into delay signals; and a folding block, including logic gates coupled to the preamplifiers, for selecting earlier-arriving and later-arriving ones of the delay signals; and
Analog-digital converter, semiconductor device, and voltage signal generation method
The analog-to-digital converter includes a quantizer for outputting a quantized signal, a sampling circuit for sampling an analog input signal, a dithering circuit for generating an added voltage, and an integrating circuit for integrating a signal on which the added voltage is superimposed and outputting an integration result to the quantizer. The dithering circuit includes a variable capacitance circuit and a control circuit. The variable capacitance circuit includes a plurality of capacitors. The control circuit controls the capacitance of the variable capacitance circuit to a capacitance smaller than the capacitances of the capacitors, and causes the variable capacitance circuit to generate an added voltage.