This article shows the design of a wideband 3-0 sturdy-multi-stage noise-shaping (SMASH) continuous-time (CT) incremental delta–sigma (I- $\boldsymbol {\Delta \Sigma }$ ) analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The two stages’ quantizers (QTZs)… Click to show full abstract
This article shows the design of a wideband 3-0 sturdy-multi-stage noise-shaping (SMASH) continuous-time (CT) incremental delta–sigma (I- $\boldsymbol {\Delta \Sigma }$ ) analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The two stages’ quantizers (QTZs) are implemented by a single re-configurable multibit (MB) asynchronous (A)SAR ADC. The digital-to-analog converter (DAC) nonlinearities are suppressed by reconfiguring the asynchronous successive-approximation register (ASAR) ADC from 2 to 5 b, and correspondingly, the DACs dynamically switch from 1.5- to 4-b tri-level outputs within each Nyquist conversion cycle. This results in a DAC-calibration-free MB operation. A two-tap FIR filter is implemented in the feedback DACs to reduce jitter requirements in the initial 1.5-b cycles. Through the design representation, a detailed fundamental comparison between an X-0 SMASH architecture and an X-order single-loop modulator is discussed. This discussion highlights the introduction of an efficient tri-level combination between the MSB and the LSBs of the ASAR QTZ. The resulting SMASH CT I- $\boldsymbol {\Delta \Sigma }$ modulator was fabricated in 28-nm CMOS technology with an active area of 0.125 mm2. It achieves 97-dB spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) without calibration, 89-dB dynamic range (DR), and 81.2-dB SNDR in a 1-MHz bandwidth (BW). It consumes 3.6 mW from a single 0.9-V supply. The design shows very good robustness across different tested samples, supply variations, and across temperatures from −20 °C to 80 °C.
               
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