2007 14th International Conference on Mixed Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems 2007
DOI: 10.1109/mixdes.2007.4286149
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

A Kick-Back Reduced Comparator for a 4-6-Bit 3-GS/s Flash ADC in a 90nm CMOS Process

Abstract: This paper presents a kick-back reduced comparator based on a sense-amplifier type comparator. The kickback charge and resulting voltage peak is reduced by 6x, which corresponds to a power reduction in the input driver and the resistance ladder of the same magnitude. A 4-6-bit 3-GS/s low-power flash ADC using the proposed comparator has been implemented in a 90nm CMOS process. The significantly lower requirements on input driver and resistance ladder have reduced the overall ADC power dissipation by 50%. Input… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
7
0

Year Published

2009
2009
2012
2012

Publication Types

Select...
4
3

Relationship

1
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 27 publications
(7 citation statements)
references
References 4 publications
0
7
0
Order By: Relevance
“…This causes a common-mode kickback to the input that could affect subsequent samples. By inserting the clocked transistors in between the cross-coupled inverter pair and the input transistors, the precharge of these internal nodes is prevented, and the common-mode kickback is reduced [14].…”
Section: B Comparatormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This causes a common-mode kickback to the input that could affect subsequent samples. By inserting the clocked transistors in between the cross-coupled inverter pair and the input transistors, the precharge of these internal nodes is prevented, and the common-mode kickback is reduced [14].…”
Section: B Comparatormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For a 1 GHz clock and 200 mVpp input range, this input noise results in 3.8 effective bits (ENOB) for a 4-bit ADC design, or 5.2 ENOB for a 6-bit ADC design. The performance of [2] is comparable, keeping the technology scaling in mind, however the stated power consumption does not yet include the power consumption of the reference ladder. The kickback of [3], though not mentioned, is lower than in the proposed design.…”
Section: Simulation Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is less effective in terms of kick-back noise reduction compared to [3], but the reduction is significant, and it does not increase the input noise nor the power consumption. This architecture reuses the idea of offsetting the widths of the input NMOS transistors of the comparators to induce an offset voltage and eliminate the reference ladder, and combines it with cascode transistors [2] to isolate the input differential pair from the regenerative part, and reduce the fast voltage swings across the input transistors. These cascodes separate the calibration capacitors from the drain-gate capacitors of the input differential pair, eliminating the large charge injections to the input nodes and improving the comparator sensitivity, effectively reducing the kick-back noise to clock feed through.…”
Section: Proposed Comparatormentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…With the increased number of comparators needed for redundancy this common-mode kick-back cause too large transients on the reference and input voltages. By placing the clocked transistors above the input pair, the pre-charge of these nodes is prevented and the common-mode kick-back charge is reduced by 6x, reducing the power dissipation in the reference ladder and input buffer by the same amount [14].…”
Section: Adc Architecturementioning
confidence: 99%