Title :
A PWM signal processing core circuit based on a switched current integration technique
Author :
Nagata, Makoto ; Funakoshi, Jun ; Iwata, Atsushi
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Eng., Hiroshima Univ., Japan
fDate :
1/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A highly functional circuit for pulse width modulation (PWM) signal processing is proposed as a core of the A-D merged circuit architecture for time-domain information processing. The core circuit employs a switched-current integration technique as its computing architecture and functions as a linear arithmetic operator, a memory, and also a delaying device of PWM signals. A 0.8-μm CMOS test chip includes 110 transistors plus two capacitors and performs parallel additions and multiplications at the accuracy of 1.2 ns. A cumulative property of the technique allows the circuit to serve as a low-power accumulator that consumes 23% of the energy of the full digital 7-b accumulator. A PWM multiply-accumulate unit and a nonlinear operation unit are also proposed to extend functionality of the circuit. Since the PWM signal carries multibit data in a binary amplitude pulse, these circuits can be favorably applicable to low-voltage and low-power designs in the deep submicrometer era
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; VLSI; analogue processing circuits; mixed analogue-digital integrated circuits; pulse width modulation; signal processing; switched current circuits; 0.8 micron; CMOS test chip; PWM multiply-accumulate unit; PWM signal processing core circuit; SI computing architecture; analog-digital merged circuit architecture; deep submicron designs; delaying device; linear arithmetic operator; low-power accumulator; low-power designs; low-voltage designs; memory; nonlinear operation unit; parallel additions; parallel multiplications; pulse width modulation; switched current integration technique; time-domain information processing; Arithmetic; Computer architecture; Delay; Information processing; Pulse circuits; Pulse width modulation; Signal processing; Space vector pulse width modulation; Switching circuits; Time domain analysis;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of