An approach to tackle quantization noise folding in double-sampling 61 modulation A/D converters (2003)
| Venue: | IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. II |
| Citations: | 5 - 4 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Rombouts03anapproach,
author = {Pieter Rombouts and Johan Raman and Ludo Weyten},
title = {An approach to tackle quantization noise folding in double-sampling 61 modulation A/D converters},
journal = {IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. II},
year = {2003},
volume = {50},
pages = {157--163}
}
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Abstract
Abstract—61-modulation is a proven method to realize high- and very high-resolution analog-to-digital converters. A particularly efficient way to implement such a modulator uses double-sampling where the circuit operates during both clock phases of the master-clock. Hence, the sampling frequency is twice the master-clock frequency. Unfortunately, path mismatch between both sampling branches causes a part of the quantization noise to fold from the Nyquist frequency back in the signal band. Therefore, the performance is severely degraded. In this paper, we show that the problem is reduced but not eliminated by employing multibit quantization. Next, we present an indepth solution for the problem. The approach consists of modifying the quantization noise transfer function of the overall modulator to have one or several zeros at the Nyquist frequency. This way the effect of noise folding can nearly be eliminated. It is shown that this can be implemented by a simple modification of one of the integrators of the overall modulator circuit. Finally, several design examples of single-bit and multibit modulators are discussed. Index Terms—Analog-to-digital conversion, double-sampling, spectral shaping.







