Time-Domain Analog and RF Signal Processing
- Date
- Feb 1, 2013
- Time
- 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM
- Speaker
- Robert Bogdan Staszewski
- Language
- en
- Main Topic
- Elektro- u. Informationstechnik
- Other Topics
- Elektro- u. Informationstechnik, Materialien
- Host
- Sandra Bley, cfAED / HAEC
- Description
Abstract:One of the most important developments in the wireless industry within the last decade was the invention and popularization of the time-domain analog/RF microelectronics. The new paradigm revolves around a bold premise of "the superiority of a time-domain operation over the traditional voltage-domain operation" in which the time-stamps, rather than the voltage or current levels, are the information carrier. This approach works surprisingly well in nanoscale CMOS processes, being nowadays the mainstream process technology for consumer electronics, with their rising and falling transition times on the order of 10 picoseconds as well as extremely low energy consumption due to the fact that only 100 or so electrons are involved in each transition. This new paradigm has been successfully exploited by this author while at Texas Instruments in Dallas, Texas, USA, to transform the entire wireless transmitter/receiver architecture in which the analog and RF circuits operate now in the time-domain. Specifically, a time-to-digital converter (TDC) and a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO), which form an all-digital phase-locked loop (ADPLL), have been proposed to significantly improve the frequency synthesizers operating at multi-GHz frequencies. New infinite-impulse response (IIR) filters have been proposed to process weak antenna signals in the new discrete-time receiver architecture. This new approach drastically improves cost, area/volume, energy consumption and integration level of analog electronic circuits. Consequently, the majority of the 1.6 billion cell phones produced annually are now based on this approach. However, this author believes that the time-domain analog revolution has merely begun and the best is yet to come with new aspects (e.g., ultra-low power, millimeter-wave), circuits (e.g., ADC, DAC) and applications (e.g., satellite communications; non-wireless, such as 3D imagers) begging to be exploited. This talk revisits this exciting journey and offers glimpse of future developments.
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Last modified: Feb 1, 2013, 9:03:37 AM
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