dc.description.abstract | Successive Approximation (SAR) Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs) are among the
most energy efficient ADCs and has therefore received enormous attention in medical and
wireless applications. The great energy efficiency of SAR ADCs are mainly attributed to
the downscaling of Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) circuits, since
the SAR architecture benefits greatly by going to smaller and smaller CMOS process
nodes. Due to this excellent scaling, the introduction of smaller CMOS nodes opens up
for new opportunities and challenges when designing SAR ADCs.
In this thesis, the speed limits of SAR ADCs have been pushed, while high resolution
and energy efficiency are maintained. The SAR designed in this thesis is a Nyquist ADC
intended for medical ultrasound applications and is designed in a 22 nm Fully Depleted
Silicon-On-Insulator (FDSOI) process. The designed SAR ADC is simulated post-layout
and the mean Monte Carlo results yields an Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) of 10.2 bits
at a sample rate of 100 MS/s. The power consumption is 268 μW and the resulting mean
Monte CarloWalden Figure of Merit (FoM) for the ADC is 2.29 fJ/conv.-step. This is currently
better than all state-of-the-art ADCs with similar specifications. The ADC designed
is also unique in the sense that no one else has managed similar speed and resolution with
the same simple pure SAR ADC architecture.
These results are accomplished by using a popular dynamic latch comparator with capacitive
loading, improving on already existing bootstrapped switch topology, improvement
on already existing Capacitive Digital-to-Analog Converter (CDAC) architecture to greatly
increase linearity and still achieve small unit capacitance, a custom made digital circuitry
that has very low propagation delay and clock generation based on CDAC bottom plate. | |