Untertitel:
with Case Studies
Verlag:
SPRINGER
Erschienen:
17.01.2006
Seitenanzahl:
257
ISBN:
1402042531
EAN:
9781402042539
Sprache:
Englisch
Format:
PDF
Schutz:
Dig. Wass.
Downloadzeit:
Maximaler Downloadzeitraum: 24 Monate

Methodology for the Digital Calibration of Analog Circuits and Systems

Marc Pastre / Maher Kayal


149,79 €
inkl. 7% MwSt.
PDF mit Dig. Wass.


<P><STRONG>Methodology for the Digital Calibration of Analog Circuits and Systems&nbsp;</STRONG>shows how to relax the extreme design constraints in analog circuits, allowing the realization of high-precision systems even with low-performance components.&nbsp;A complete methodology is proposed, and&nbsp;three applications are detailed.</P><P>To start with, an in-depth analysis of existing compensation techniques for analog circuit imperfections is carried out. The M/2<SUP>+</SUP>M sub-binary digital-to-analog converter is thoroughly studied, and the use of this very low-area circuit in conjunction with a successive approximations algorithm for digital compensation is described. A complete methodology based on this compensation circuit and algorithm is then proposed. The detection and correction of analog circuit imperfections is studied, and a simulation tool allowing the transparent simulation of analog circuits with automatic compensation blocks is introduced. </P><P>The first application shows how the sub-binary M/2<SUP>+</SUP>M structure can be employed as a conventional digital-to-analog converter if two calibration and radix conversion algorithms are implemented.</P><P>The second application, a SOI 1T DRAM, is then presented. A digital algorithm chooses a suitable reference value that compensates several circuit imperfections together, from the sense amplifier offset to the dispersion of the memory read currents.</P><P>The third application is the calibration of the sensitivity of a current measurement microsystem based on a Hall magnetic field sensor. Using a variant of the chopper modulation, the spinning current technique, combined with a second modulation of a reference signal, the sensitivity of the complete system is continuously measured without interrupting normal operation. A thermal drift lower than 50 ppm/°C is achieved, which is 6 to 10 times less than in state-of-the-art implementations. Furthermore, the calibration technique also compensates drifts due to mechanical stresses and ageing. </P>

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