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Jun FURUTA Shotaro SUGITANI Ryuichi NAKAJIMA Takafumi ITO Kazutoshi KOBAYASHI
Radiation-induced temporal errors become a significant issue for circuit reliability. We measured the pulse widths of radiation-induced single event transients (SETs) from pMOSFETs and nMOSFETs separately. Test results show that heavy-ion induced SET rates of nMOSFETs were twice as high as those of pMOSFETs and that neutron-induced SETs occurred only in nMOSFETs. It was confirmed that the SET distribution from inverter chains can be estimated using the SET distribution from pMOSFETs and nMOSFETs by considering the difference in load capacitance of the measurement circuits.
Applications of continuous-time (CT) comparator include relaxation oscillators, pulse width modulators, and so on. CT comparator receives a differential input and outputs a strobe ideally when the differential input crosses zero. Unlike the DT comparators with positive feedback circuit, amplifiers consuming static power must be employed in CT comparators to amplify the input signal. Therefore, minimization of comparator delay under the constraint of power consumption often becomes an issue. This paper analyzes transient behavior of a CT comparator. Using “constant delay approximation”, the comparator delay is derived as a function of input slew rate, number of stages of the preamplifier, and device parameters in each block. This paper also discusses optimum design of the CT comparator. The condition for minimum comparator delay is derived with keeping power consumption constant. The results include that the optimum DC gain of the preamplifier is e∼e3 per stage depending on the element which dominates load capacitance of the preamplifier.
Keonil KANG Kyung-Young JUNG Sang Won NAM
Recently, H-bridge pulse width modulation (PWM) micro-stepping motor drivers have been widely used for 3-D printers, robots, and medical instruments. Differently from a simple PWM motor driver circuit, the H-bridge PWM micro-stepping motor driver circuit can generate radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic interference (EMI) noises of up to several hundred MHz frequencies, due to digital interface circuits and a high-performance CPU. For medical instrument systems, the minimization of EMI noises can assure operating safety and greatly reduce the chance of malfunction between instruments. This work proposes a passive-filter configuration-based circuit design for reducing up-to-several-hundred-MHz EMI noises generated from the H-bridge PWM micro-stepping motor driver circuit. More specifically, the proposed RF EMI reduction approach consists of proper passive filter design, shielding in motor wires, and common ground design in the print circuit board. The proposed passive filter configuration design is validated through the overall reduction of EMI noises at RF band. Finally, the proposed EMI reduction approach is tested experientially through a prototype and about 16 dB average reduction of RF EMI noises is demonstrated.
Daying SUN Weifeng SUN Qing WANG Miao YANG Shen XU Shengli LU
A new digital controller for a single-phase boost power factor correction (PFC) converter operating at a discontinuous conduction mode (DCM), is presented to achieve high input power factor over wide input voltage and load range. A method of duty cycle modulation is proposed to reduce the line harmonic distortion and improve the power factor. The loop regulation scheme is adopted to further improve the system stability and the power factor simultaneously. Meanwhile, a novel digital pulse width modulator (DPWM) based on the delay lock loop technique, is realized to improve the regulation linearity of duty cycle and reduce the regulation deviation. The single-phase DCM boost PFC converter with the proposed digital controller based on the field programmable gate array (FPGA) has been implemented. Experimental results indicate that the proposed digital controller can achieve high power factor more than 0.99 over wide input voltage and load range, the output voltage deviation is less than 3V, and the peak conversion efficiency is 96.2% in the case of a full load.
Ji-Hoon LIM Won-Young JUNG Yong-Ju KIM Inchae SONG Jae-Kyung WEE
We suggest a novel digitally-controlled SMPS using a high-resolution DPWM generator. In the proposed circuit, the duty ratio of the DPWM is determined by the voltage slope control of an internal capacitor using a pseudo relaxation-oscillation technique. This new control method has a simpler structure, and consumes less power compared to a conventional digitally-controlled SMPS. Therefore, the proposed circuit is able to operate at a high switching frequency (1 MHz10 MHz) obtained from a relatively low internal operating frequency (10 MHz100 MHz) with a small area. The maximum current of the core circuit is 2.7 mA, and the total current of the entire circuit, including the output buffer driver, is 15 mA at 10 MHz switching frequency. The proposed circuit is designed to supply a maximum 1A with maximum DPWM duty ratio of 90%. The output voltage ripple is 7 mV at 3.3 V output voltage. To verify the operation of the proposed circuit, we performed a simulation with Dongbu Hitek BCD 0.35 µm technology.
This paper demonstrates a pulse width controlled PLL without using an LPF. A pulse width controlled oscillator accepts the PFD output where its pulse width controls the oscillation frequency. In the pulse width controlled oscillator, the input pulse width is converted into soft thermometer code through a time to soft thermometer code converter and the code controls the ring oscillator frequency. By using this scheme, our PLL realizes LPF-less as well as quantization noise free operation. The prototype chip achieves 60 µm 20 µm layout area using 65 nm CMOS technology along with 1.73 ps rms jitter while consuming 2.81 mW under a 1.2 V supply with 3.125 GHz output frequency.
Xin ZHANG Yu PU Koichi ISHIDA Yoshikatsu RYU Yasuyuki OKUMA Po-Hung CHEN Takayasu SAKURAI Makoto TAKAMIYA
In this paper, a novel switched-capacitor DC-DC converter with pulse density and width modulation (PDWM) is proposed with reduced output ripple at variable output voltages. While performing pulse density modulation (PDM), the proposed PDWM modulates the pulse width at the same time to reduce the output ripple with high power efficiency. The prototype chip was implemented using 65 nm CMOS process. The switched-capacitor DC-DC converter has 0.2-V to 0.47-V output voltage and delivers 0.25-mA to 10-mA output current from a 1-V input supply with a peak efficiency of 87%. Compared with the conventional PDM scheme, the proposed switched-capacitor DC-DC converter with PDWM reduces the output ripple by 57% in the low output voltage region with the efficiency penalty of 2%.
Ryo HARADA Yukio MITSUYAMA Masanori HASHIMOTO Takao ONOYE
This paper presents two circuits to measure pulse width distribution of single event transients (SETs). We first review requirements for SET measurement in accelerated neutron radiation test and point out problems of previous works, in terms of time resolution, time/area efficiency for obtaining large samples and certainty in absolute values of pulse width. We then devise two measurement circuits and a pulse generator circuit that satisfy all the requirements and attain sub-FO1-inverter-delay resolution, and propose a measurement procedure for assuring the absolute width values. Operation of one of the proposed circuits was confirmed by a radiation experiment of alpha particles with a fabricated test chip.
Keiichiro KAGAWA Makoto SHOUHO Kazuo HASHIGUCHI Masahiro NUNOSHITA Jun OHTA
We demonstrate low-voltage operation of a CMOS imager with an in-pixel large-gain comparator without degradation of the dynamic range by using a pulse-width-modulation scheme in pixel readout. Experimental results showed a dynamic range of 57 dB with a 1.0 V power supply voltage at the pixel array block, which demonstrates the possibility of low-voltage, single-power-supply operation of imagers fabricated with deep-submicron CMOS technologies.
Takashi MORIE Kenichi MURAKOSHI Makoto NAGATA Atsushi IWATA
This paper presents circuit techniques using pulse-width and pulse-phase modulation (PWM/PPM) approaches for VLSI implementation of nonlinear dynamical systems. The proposed circuits implement discrete-time continuous-state dynamics by means of analog processing in a time domain, and also approximately implement continuous-time dynamics. Arbitrary nonlinear transformation functions are generated by the process in which a PPM signal samples a voltage or current source whose waveform in the time domain has the same shape as the desired transformation function. Because a shared arbitrary nonlinear voltage or current waveform generator can be constructed by digital circuits and D/A converters, high flexibility and real-time controllability are achieved. By using one of these new techniques, we have designed and fabricated a CMOS chaos circuit with arbitrary 1-D maps using a 0.6 µm CMOS process, and demonstrate from the experimental results that the new chaos circuit successfully generated various chaos with 7.5-7.8 bit precision by using logistic, tent and chaotic-neuron maps.
In this paper, a novel technique using proportional current feedback is proposed to improve dynamic response of digital PWM DC-DC converters. Generally, digital controllers are implemented using microprocessors or DSPs. Additional A/D converters are required to sense feedback signals. Proposed simple structure makes it feasible to integrate both A/D converter and digital controller on a single chip. System complexity and hardware cost are therefore greatly reduced. A behavioral time domain circuit model is proposed and analyzed using MATLAB. Both simulation and experimental results showed satisfactory performance to meet power requirements of microprocessors.
Kousuke KATAYAMA Atsushi IWATA Takashi MORIE Makoto NAGATA
A circuit that carries out an Hadamard transform of an input image using the pulse width modulation technique is proposed. The proposed circuit architecture realizes the function of an Hadamard transform with a full-size pixel image. A test chip that we designed and fabricated integrates 64 64 pixels in a 4.9 mm 4.9 mm area, with 0.35 µm CMOS technology. The functional operation and linearity of this chip are measured. An image processing application utilizing this chip is demonstrated.
The conventional average model for a pulse width modulator employed in a voltage-mode-controlled pulse width modulated converter tends to be numerically unstable when the on-time duty ratio becomes sufficiently small. This paper presents a new average model for a voltage-mode control modulator that is not susceptible to such numerical problems. The validity of the proposed model is confirmed with cycle-by-cycle simulations using an exact discrete-time model.
We describe the width conversion of an optical signal by using an erbium-doped fiber and an asymmetric optical circuit. The width of an optical signal was measured to be a respective 350 nsec and 200 nsec for a 70 m and 40 m fiber (Lf). The width of the pumping pulse was 5 nsec and the length of erbium-doped fiber was 3 m. We also extended the optical signals to a respective 300 nsec and 150 nsec wide at a pumping pulse 10 nsec by inserting a 60 m and a 30 m fiber (Lf) inside a circuit.
Linear signal analysis (LSA) is the conventional method of estimating the playback voltage and pulse width in linearly operating shielded GMR heads. To improve the accuracy of LSA, a new, highly precise LSA which includes the effect of the magnetization distribution in the medium and inhomogeneous biasing by domain control magnets, was developed. Utilizing this new LSA to calculate the playback waveforms, the calculated peak voltage and pulse width were compared with the experimental values and agreement within 10% was obtained. As the result of estimation using the new LSA, it is considered that the use of a vertical-type spin-valve head will make it possible to achieve a recording areal density of 40 Gb/in2.
Shigeo KINOSHITA Takashi MORIE Makoto NAGATA Atsushi IWATA
This paper proposes non-volatile analog memory circuits using pulse-width modulation (PWM) methods. The conventional analog memory using floating gate device has a trade-off between programming speed and precision because of the constant width of write pulses. The proposed circuits attain high programming speed with high precision by using PWM write pulses. Three circuits are proposed and their performance is evaluated using SPICE simulation. The simulation results show that fast programming time less than 20 µs, high updating resolution of 11 bits, and high precision more than 7 bits are achieved.
Takashi MORIE Jun FUNAKOSHI Makoto NAGATA Atsushi IWATA
This paper presents a neural circuit using PWM technique based on an analog-digital merged circuit architecture. Some new PWM circuit techniques are proposed. A bipolar-weighted summation circuit is described which attains 8-bit precision in SPICE simulation at 5 V supply voltage by compensating parasitic capacitance effects. A high performance differential-type latch comparator which can discriminate 1 mV difference at 100 MHz in SPICE simulation is also described. Next, we present a prototype chip fabricated using a 0.6µm CMOS process. The measurement results demonstrate that the overall precision in the weighted summation and the sigmoidal transformation is 5 bits. A neural network has been constructed using the prototype chips, and the experimental results for realizing the XOR function have successfully verified the basic neural operation.
This paper describes the new analog-digital merged circuit architecture which utilizes the pulse modulation signals. By reconsidering the information representing and processing principles, and the circuit operations governed by the physical law, the new circuit architecture is proposed to overcome the limitations of existent VLSI technologies. The proposed architecture utilizes the pulse width modulation (PWM) signal which has analog information in the time domain, and be constructed with the novel PWM circuits which carry out the multi-input arithmetic operations, the signal conversions and the data storage. It has a potential to exploit the high speed switching capability of deep sub-µm devices, and to reduce the number of devices and the power dissipation to one-tenth of those of the binary digital circuits. Therefore it will effectively implement the intelligent processing systems utilizing 0.5-0.2µm scaled CMOS devices.