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Switched-Capacitor Circuits

Switched-Capacitor Circuits. Continuous-Time Integrator. . Goal:. Approach : emulating resistors with switched capacitors. Concept of Switched Capacitor. Non-overlapping two-phase clock. . so,. A switched capacitor is a discrete-time “resistor”

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Switched-Capacitor Circuits

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  1. Switched-Capacitor Circuits

  2. Continuous-Time Integrator  Goal: Approach: emulating resistors with switched capacitors

  3. Concept of Switched Capacitor Non-overlapping two-phase clock  so, • A switched capacitor is a discrete-time “resistor” • RC time constant set by capacitor ratio C2/C1 (match considerably better than R and C) and clock period T (flexibility)

  4. Switched Capacitors Shunt-type Series-type 2-phase clock Stray-insensitive • Shunt- and series-type SCs are simple and cheap to implement • Stray-insensitive SC requires 2 more switches, what’s the advantage besides being more flexible (i.e., w/ or w/o the T/2 delay)?

  5. Discrete-Time Integrator (DTI) Shunt-type Series-type 2-phase clock What are the VTFs (z-domain) of these DTIs, assuming no parasitic capacitance is present?

  6. Shunt-Type DTI Ф1 (sample)  Ф2 (update) Charge conservation law (ideal): Total charge on C1 and C2 during Ф1→ Ф2 transition must remain unchanged!

  7. Shunt-Type DTI Ф1 (sample) Ф2 (update) 

  8. Series-Type DTI Ф1 (sample/update) Ф2 (reset C1)  VTF:

  9. Stray Capacitance Shunt-type Series-type • Strays derive from D/S diodes and wiring capacitance • VTF is modified due to strays • Strays at the summing node is of no significance (virtual ground)

  10. Stray-Insensitive SC Integrator “Inverting” “Non-inverting” VTF: VTF: • Capacitors can be significantly sized down to save power/area • Sizes are eventually limited by kT/C noise, mismatch, etc.

  11. SC Amplifier VTF: • Non-integrating, memoryless (less the delay) • Used in many applications of parametric amplification

  12. SC Applications

  13. CT Filter RLC prototype  Active-RC Tow-Thomas CT biquad

  14. SC DT Filter Active-RC Tow-Thomas CT biquad  SC DT biquad

  15. Sigma-Delta (ΣΔ) Modulator DTI + 1-bit comparator + 1-bit DAC = first-order ΣΔ ADC

  16. Pipelined ADC SC amplifier + 2 comparators + 3-level DAC = 1.5-bit pipelined ADC

  17. SC Common-Mode Feedback  CM sense amp can be replaced by a floating voltage source since the gain through the main op-amp is high enough.

  18. SC Common-Mode Feedback

  19. Noise in SC Circuits

  20. Noise of CT Integrator Noise in CT circuits can be simulated with SPICE (.noise)

  21. Noise of SC Integrator SC circuits are NOT noise-free! Switches and op-amps introduce noise.

  22. Sampling (Ф1) Ideal Voltage Source • Noise is indistinguishable from signal after sampling • The noise acquired by C1 will be amplified in Ф2 just like signal

  23. Integration (Ф2) No simulator can directly simulate the aggregated output noise!

  24. Sampling (Ф1) Noise – Cascaded Stages  • Finite op-amp BW limits the noise bandwidth, resulting in less overall kT/C noise (noise filtering). • But parasitic loop delay may introduce peaking in freq. response, resulting in more integrated noise (noise peaking).

  25. Sampled Noise Spectrum CT DT • Total integrated noise power remains constant • SNR remains constant

  26. Nonideal Effects inSC Circuits

  27. Nonideal Effects in SC Circuits • Capacitors (poly-poly, metal-metal, MIM, MOM, sandwich, gate cap, accumulation-mode gate cap, etc.) • PP, MIM, and MOM are linear up to 14-16 bits (nonlinear voltage coefficients negligible for most applications) • Gate caps are typically good for up to 8-10 bits • Switches (MOS transistors) • Nonzero on-resistance (voltage dependent) • (Nonlinear) stray capacitance added (Cgs, Cgd, Cgb, Cdb, Csb) • Switch-induced sampling errors (charge injection, clock feedthrough, junction leakage, drain-source leakage, and gate leakage) • Operational amplifiers • Offset • Finite-gain effects (voltage dependent) • Finite bandwidth and slew rate (measured by settling speed)

  28. Nonideal Effects ofSwitches

  29. Nonzero On-Resistance • FET channel resistance (thus tracking bandwidth) depends on signal level • Usually (RonCS)-1≥ (3-5)·ω-3dB of closed-loop op-amp for settling purpose

  30. Clock Bootstrapping CMOS Bootstrapped NMOS • Small on-resistance leads to large switches → large parasitic caps and large clock buffers • Clock bootstrapping keeps VGS of the switch constant → constant on-resistance (body effect?) and less parasitics w/o the PMOS

  31. Simplified Clock Bootstrapper Pros • Linearity • Bandwidth Cons • Device reliability • Complexity

  32. Switch-Induced Errors • Clock feedthrough • Charge injection Channel charge injection and clock feedthrough (on drain side) result in charge trapped on CS after switch is turned off.

  33. Clock Feedthrough and Charge Injection • Both phenomena sensitive to Zi, CS, and clock rise/fall time • Offset, gain error, and nonlinearity introduced to the sampling • Clock feedthrough can be simulated by SPICE, but charge injection cannot be simulated with lumped transistor models

  34. Clock Rise/Fall-Time Dependence

  35. Dummy Switch • Difficult to achieve precise cancellation due to the nonlinear dependence of ΔV on Zi, CS, and clock rise/fall time • Sensitive to the phase alignment between Ф and Ф_

  36. CMOS Switch Same size for P and N FETs • Very sensitive to phase alignment between Ф and Ф_ • Subject to threshold mismatch between PMOS and NMOS • Exact cancellation occurs only for one specific Vin (which one?)

  37. Differential Signaling Balanced diff. input • Signal-independent errors (offset) and even-order distortions cancelled • Gain error and odd-order nonlinearities remain

  38. Switch Performance On-resistance: Bandwidth: Charge injection: Performance FoM: Technology scaling improves switch performance!

  39. Leakage in SC Circuits Φ1 = “high”, Φ2 = “low” • I1 – diode leakage (existing in the old days too) • I2 – sub-threshold drain-source leakage of summing-node switch • I3 – gate leakage (FN tunneling) of amplifier input transistors • Leakage currents are highly temperature- and process-dependent; the lower limit of clock frequency is often determined by leakage

  40. DS Leakage • 0.13-μm CMOS • A0 = Gm·Ro = 90dB • Ro ≈ 2MΩ • Rleak ≈ 0.6V/3μA • ≈ 0.2MΩ • A0 = Gm·(Rleak//Ro) • ≈ 70dB

  41. Gate Leakage • Direct tunneling through the thin gate oxide • Short-channel MOSFET behaves increasingly like BJT’s • Violates the high-impedance assumption of the summing node

  42. Switch Size Optimization • To minimize switch-induced error voltages, small transistor size, slow turn-off, low source impedance should be used. • For fast settling (high-speed design), large W/L should be used, and errors will be inevitably large as well. Guidelines • Always use minimum channel length for switches as long as leakage allows. • For a given speed, switch sizes can be optimized w/ simulation. • Be aware of the limitations of simulators (SPICE etc.) using lumped device models.

  43. Nonideal Effects ofOp-Amps

  44. Nonideal Effects of Op-Amps • Offset • Finite-gain effects (voltage dependent) • Finite bandwidth and slew rate (measured by settling speed)

  45. Offset Voltage Vi = 0

  46. Autozeroing • Also eliminates low-frequency noise, e.g., 1/f noise • A.k.a. correlated double sampling (CDS)

  47. Chopper Stabilization Ref: K. C. Hsieh, P. R. Gray, D. Senderowicz, and D. G. Messerschmitt, “A low-noise chopper-stabilized differential switched-capacitor filtering technique,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 16, issue 6, pp. 708-715, 1981.

  48. Chopper Stabilization Also eliminates DC offset voltage of A1

  49. Chopper-Stabilized Differential Op-Amp • Integrators/amplifiers can be built using these op-amps • Some oversampling is useful to facilitate the implementation

  50. Ideal SC Amplifier • Closed-loop gain is determined by the capacitor ratio by design • But this is assuming X is an ideal summing node (the op-amp is ideal)

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