Title :
A higher order topology for interpolative modulators for oversampling A/D converters
Author :
Chao, Kirk C H ; Nadeem, Shujaat ; Lee, Wai L. ; Sodini, Charles G.
Author_Institution :
Microcryst. Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
fDate :
3/1/1990 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Oversampling interpolative coding has been demonstrated to be an effective technique for high-resolution analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion that is tolerant of process imperfections. A novel topology for constructing stable interpolative modulators of arbitrary order is described. Analysis of this topology shows that with proper design of the modulator coefficients, stability is not a limitation to higher order modulators. Furthermore, complete control over placement of the poles and zeros of the quantization noise response allows treatment of the modulation process as a high-pass filter for quantization noise. Higher order modulators are shown not only to greatly reduce oversampling requirements for high-resolution conversion applications, but also to randomize the quantization noise, avoiding the need for dithering. An experimental fourth-order modulator breadboard demonstrates stability and feasibility, achieving a 90-dB dynamic range over the 20-kHz audio bandwidth with a sampling rate of 2.1 MHz. A generalized simulation software package has been developed to mimic time-domain behavior for oversampling modulators. Circuit design specifications for integrated circuit implementation can be deduced from analysis of simulated data
Keywords :
analogue-digital conversion; circuit analysis computing; interpolation; modulators; network topology; poles and zeros; stability; time-domain analysis; 2.1 MHz; 20 kHz; ADC; delta-sigma modulators; generalized simulation software package; high-pass filter; high-resolution conversion; higher order topology; integrated circuit implementation; interpolative modulators; modulator coefficients; oversampling A/D converters; oversampling interpolative coding; poles and zeros; quantization noise response; stability; time-domain behavior; Application software; Circuit noise; Circuit simulation; Circuit stability; Filters; Noise reduction; Poles and zeros; Quantization; Stability analysis; Topology;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on