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A 7.5‐μW 0.08‐mm 2 single‐ended SC delta‐sigma ADC for acoustic sensor applications
Author(s) -
Duan Quanzhen,
Wang Zhidong,
Roh Jeongjin
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international journal of circuit theory and applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.364
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1097-007X
pISSN - 0098-9886
DOI - 10.1002/cta.2156
Subject(s) - delta sigma modulation , cmos , capacitor , electrical engineering , figure of merit , transconductance , electronic engineering , amplifier , effective number of bits , oversampling , bandwidth (computing) , low power electronics , transistor , engineering , physics , voltage , power (physics) , power consumption , telecommunications , optoelectronics , quantum mechanics
Summary This study presents an ultra‐low‐power, small‐size, 1‐bit, single‐ended, and switched‐capacitor (SC) delta‐sigma analog‐to‐digital converter (ADC) for wireless acoustic sensor nodes. This wireless sensor node has a delta‐sigma ADC that converts the sensed signal to a digital signal for convenient data processing and emphasizes the features of small size and low‐power consumption. The chip area of the delta‐sigma ADC is dominated by the capacitor; therefore, a novel common‐mode (CM) controlling technique with only transistors is proposed. This ADC achieves an extremely small size of 0.08 mm 2 in a 130‐nm CMOS process. The conventional operational transconductance amplifiers (OTAs) are replaced by inverters in the weak inversion region to achieve high power efficiency. At 4‐MHz sampling frequency and 0.7‐V power supply voltage, the delta‐sigma ADC achieves a 55.8‐dB signal‐to‐noise‐plus‐distortion ratio (SNDR) and a 298‐fJ/step figure‐of‐merit (FOM) in a signal bandwidth of 25 kHz, while consuming only 7.5 μW of power. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.