HIGH LINEARITY RESISTIVE DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG CONVERTERS WITH DYNAMIC CONTROL FOR TEMPERATURE AND VOLTAGE INVARIANT ON-RESISTANCE OF SWITCHES
20220416805 · 2022-12-29
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
Circuitry is disclosed herein that dynamically (temperature-invariant and voltage-invariant) adjusts the Ron of switches in a resistive Nyquist-rate digital to analog converter (DAC) to thereby reduce DAC nonlinearity errors and improve INL results of greater than 16b. Consistent with the present disclosure, the DAC includes an R-2R ladder in which each bit corresponds to a switch. A control circuit is provided for generating signals applied to the gate of the switch to cause the on-resistances of the switch to be a particular value, such that the on-resistance of the switch plus the sum of two resistors, one having the resistance R, and the other having a resistance R′ is equivalent to the resistance of the 2R-size resistors or twice the resistance of the R-sized resistors in the ladder.
Claims
1. A digital-to-analog converter (DAC) circuit, comprising: a resistor ladder including a plurality of stages, one of the stages including a first resistor and a second resistor; a switch including a transistor coupled to one of the first and second resistors; and a control circuit operable to adjust an on-resistance of the transistor, such that a sum of the resistances of the first and second resistors and the on resistance is equal to a predetermined amount.
2. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, wherein the switch is a first switch, the DAC further including a second switch, the first switch including an n channel metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) transistor and the second switch including a p channel MOS transistor.
3. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, wherein the switch includes a first transistor, the control circuit including: a third resistor having a resistance corresponding to a resistance of the first resistor; and a second transistor connected in series with the third resistor.
4. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 3, further including a control loop that applies a voltage to a gate of the second transistor and supplies the voltage to a gate of the first transistor.
5. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, wherein the control circuit has an output, the DAC circuit further including a capacitor connected to an output of the control circuit.
6. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, further including a current source provided in the control circuit, the current source being operable to adjust an output of the control circuit based on an output of the DAC circuit.
7. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, wherein one of the plurality of stages is a unary stage.
8. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, wherein one of the plurality of stages is a binary stage.
9. A DAC circuit in accordance with claim 1, wherein a first one of the plurality of stages is a unary stage and a second one of the plurality of stages is a binary stage.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015]
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[0022]
DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0023] Circuitry is disclosed herein that dynamically (temperature-invariant and voltage-invariant) adjusts the Ron of switches in a resistive Nyquist-rate digital to analog converter (DAC) to thereby reduce DAC nonlinearity errors and improve INL results of greater than 16b. Consistent with the present disclosure, the DAC includes an R-2R ladder in which each bit corresponds to a switch. If the input bit is 1, a p-channel MOS switch transistor connects the corresponding 2R resistor to a supply voltage Vref+, and, if the input bit is 0, a n-channel MOS transistor switch connects the corresponding 2R resistor to Vref− (e.g., ground). In such a ladder, the resistor of size or value 2R can be made of two resistors of size or value R, in series, to achieve the required matching of 2R-sized resistors to that of R-sized resistors. However, because 2R-sized resistors are in series with p-channel or n-channel switches, the on-resistance of switches contribute to the mismatch between 2R-sized and R-sized resistors, which degrades the linearity of the DAC and adversely impacts INL.
[0024] Consistent with an aspect of the present disclosure, a control circuit for generating signals applied to the gate of both p-channel and n-channel switches to cause their on-resistances to be a particular value, such that the on-resistance of the switch plus the sum of two resistors, one having the resistance R, and the other having a resistance R′ is equivalent to the resistance of the 2R-size resistors or twice the resistance of the R-sized resistors in the ladder.
[0025] The control circuit or loop includes a replica of a branch of the R−(R+R′) ladder with the same resistor and switch sizes, one with the n-channel switch and one with the p-channel switch. A low-offset and low-noise operational amplifier (op-amp) adjusts the gate voltage of the switch transistor to a condition wherein a sum of the switch on-resistance plus the R′-sized resistor and the R-sized resistor is equal to the value or resistance of a 2R-sized resistor.
[0026] As the control loop constantly runs in the background, the gate voltages are regulated to compensate for or offset any changes in temperature or voltage. These voltages power the drivers for the n-channel and p-channel switches connected to the R-2R ladder.
[0027] Consistent with the present disclosure, a high-resolution DAC (>16b) with improved linearity (INL) can be realized in a small integrated circuit area.
[0028] Reference will now be made in detail to the present exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
[0029]
[0030] As further shown in
[0031] As noted above, each input bit (S1, S2, Sn and Sn) is supplied to an inverter pair. Thus, for example, if the input bit S1 is at a relatively high voltage or a ‘1’, both inverters B1 and B5 output low voltages. When applied to the gate of transistor Q1, the transistor is cutoff. However, such low voltage, when applied to the gate of transistor Q5, turns transistor Q5 on to thereby connect resistor R′ of stage 104-1 to output portion 103 of ladder 102 and supply a high voltage vrefP to output portion 103. If input bit S1 is a low voltage or ground corresponding to a ‘0’ bit, the output of inverters B1 and B5 are at a relatively high voltage such that transistor Q1 turns on and transistor Q5 is shut off. As a result, transistor Q1 connects, via resistor R′ of stage 104-1, a low voltage, vrefN, or ground, to output portion 103. Other inverters and transistor switches shown in
[0032] It is noted that in a parallel-resistor-divider DAC, the INL contribution from an error in switch or transistor on-resistance depends on that error compared to the total series resistance of a resistor stage 104 of ladder 102:
[0033] Where 2Runit is, in the above example, R+R′, and Rsw is the on-resistance of the transistor switch. ΔRsw is an error of the switch resistance.
[0034] The on-resistance of each transistor switch, however, can change based on the applied gate voltage. Accordingly, by applying an appropriate gate voltage to the switch the on-resistance can be set so that a sum of the on-resistance, R′, and R is set to a predetermined value, such as 2R, and be equivalent to the value of a two R-sized resistors, which is twice the value of the R-sized resistors in satisfy the resistor matching criteria noted above. Namely, provided that each stage 104 has the same 2 R resistance a highly linear output of the DAC can be achieved.
[0035] Accordingly, consistent with an aspect of the present disclosure, circuit VsuppN control 105 provides a reference voltage to inverters B1, B2, Bn, and Bn+1, such that these inverters output the reference voltage VsuppN to the gate of a corresponding n channel switch when a low bit is input to the inverter. The reference voltage is adjusted so that the voltage applied to the gate of the corresponding n channel switch creates an on-resistance of the switch that, when added to resistors R′ and R of a corresponding stage 104 yields a total resistance of 2R for the corresponding stage 104.
[0036] In addition, circuit VsuppP control 107 provides a reference voltage to inverters B5, B6, Bn′, and Bn+1′, such that these inverters output the reference voltage VsuppP to the gate of a corresponding p channel switch when a high bit is input to the inverter. The reference voltage is adjusted so that the voltage applied to the gate of the corresponding p channel switch creates an on-resistance of the switch that, when added to resistors R′ and R, yields a total resistance of 2R for the corresponding stage 104.
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[0040] If due to temperature changes, the resistance of resistor R′ in branch BR1 is reduced, such resistance change will result in a voltage change at the non-inverting input of operational amplifier OA1, thereby causing OA1 to output a voltage to the gate of n channel transistor Q20 to increase the on-resistance of transistor Q20 and thereby offset the reduced resistance of resistor R′ in branch BR1. Since a similar resistance change would likely be experienced by resistor R′ in stage 104-1, the same gate voltage (VsuppN) is applied as a reference voltage to rail RL1 of inverter B1. As a result, VsuppN is output from inverter B1 to the gate of switch Q1, so that the sum of the on-resistance of switch Q1, resistor R′ in stage 104-1 and resistor R in stage 104-1 is equal to 2R, for example. As the control loop CL including OA1 and transistor Q20 constantly runs in the background, the gate voltages are regulated with any changes in temperature or voltage. These voltages power the drivers for the n-channel and p-channel switches in DAC 100 that are associated with R-2R ladder 102.
[0041] As further shown in
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[0043] As further shown in
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[0047] D/A and optics block 401 further includes modulators 410-1 to 410-4, each of which may be a Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) that modulates the phase and/or amplitude of the light output from laser 408 having a frequency f0. As further shown in
[0048] The optical outputs of MZMs 410-1 and 410-2 are combined to provide an X polarized optical signal including I and Q components and fed to a polarization beam combiner (PBC) 414 provided in block 401. In addition, the outputs of MZMs 410-3 and 410-4 are combined to provide an optical signal that is fed to a polarization rotator, further provided in block 401, that rotates the polarization of such optical signal to provide a modulated optical signal having a Y (or TM) polarization. The Y polarized modulated optical signal is also provided to PBC 414, which combines the X and Y polarized modulated optical signals to provide a polarization multiplexed (“dual-pol”) modulated optical signal onto optical fiber 416, for example. In the examples disclosed herein, MZMs 410-1 to 410-4 collectively constitute a modulator.
[0049] The polarization multiplexed optical signal output from D/A and optics block 401 includes optical subcarriers, such that each subcarrier has X and Y polarization components and I and Q components. Moreover, each subcarrier SC1 to SCn may be associated with or corresponds to a respective one of data streams SC Data 1 to SC Data n.
[0050] Other embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification. For example, stages 104-1 and 104-2 are considered to be binary stages of DAC 100, whereas stages 104-n and 104-n+1 are considered unary stages of DAC 100. It is understood that, instead of a combination of binary and unary stages, DAC 100 may include only binary stages or only unary stages. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.