Title :
21.3 A 2GHz 130mW direct-digital frequency synthesizer with a nonlinear DAC in 55nm CMOS
Author :
Taegeun Yoo ; Yun-Hwan Jung ; Hong Chang Yeoh ; Yong Sin Kim ; Sung-Mo Kang ; Kwang-Hyun Baek
Author_Institution :
Chung-Ang Univ., Seoul, South Korea
Abstract :
Direct-digital frequency synthesizers (DDFSs) have been employed in many frequency-agile communication systems because of their wide bandwidth, fine frequency resolution, and fast frequency-hopping characteristics. Recent developments in DDFSs are towards enhancing performances through reduction of both complexity and power consumption [1-3]. The segmented nonlinear DAC (NLDAC) structures in [1,2] require additional coarse phase information for fine amplitude decoding with a complex decoder. Moreover, the quarter-sine-wave technique incorporated into the segmented NLDACs in [1,2] degrades spectral purity due to the need of the MSB shift DAC that introduces additional offset. Another scheme in [3] reduces complexity and power consumption by replacing the digital-based phase-to-amplitude converter with an analog-based converter, resulting in limited spectral purity. Unlike previous schemes, this work presents comprehensive enhancements in all key areas of a DDFS, the pipelined phase accumulator (PACC), digital decoder, and NLDAC as shown in Fig. 21.3.1. First, the low-power PACC with multi-level momentarily activated bias (M2AB) is presented to reduce power dissipation. Second, the coarse phase-based consecutive fine-amplitude grouping (C2FAG) scheme reduces the hardware complexity and the power consumption in digital decoder circuits. Third, the mixed-wave conversion topology (MCT) in the NLDAC improves the output spectral purity.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; digital-analogue conversion; direct digital synthesis; C2FAG scheme; CMOS; DDFS; NLDAC structure; analog-based converter; coarse phase information; coarse phase-based consecutive fine-amplitude grouping scheme; complex decoder; digital decoder circuit; direct-digital frequency synthesizer; fast frequency-hopping characteristic; fine amplitude decoding; fine frequency resolution; frequency 25 GHz; frequency-agile communication system; hardware complexity; limited spectral purity; mixed-wave conversion topology; multilevel momentarily activated bias; nonlinear DAC structure; phase-to-amplitude converter; pipelined phase accumulator; power 130 mW; power consumption; power dissipation; quarter-sine-wave technique; size 55 nm; CMOS integrated circuits; Complexity theory; Decoding; Frequency synthesizers; Power demand; Solid state circuits; Turning;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Circuits Conference Digest of Technical Papers (ISSCC), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0918-6
DOI :
10.1109/ISSCC.2014.6757471