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Fully-Synthesizable Current-Input ADCs for Ultra-Low Area and Minimal Design Effort | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Fully-Synthesizable Current-Input ADCs for Ultra-Low Area and Minimal Design Effort


Abstract:

A fully synthesizable ADC architecture is proposed for low-end current sensing applications. Being based on standard cells and designed with a fully-automated flow, the p...Show More

Abstract:

A fully synthesizable ADC architecture is proposed for low-end current sensing applications. Being based on standard cells and designed with a fully-automated flow, the proposed ADC allows very low area, digital-like scaling across CMOS technology generations, technology and design portability, minimal design effort, and immersed-in logic design (i.e., low integration effort), compared to traditional analog-intensive designs. In addition, it allows direct current readout without requiring a transresistance stage. Testchip measurements show a 5-nA to 1-μ A input range, 6.7-bit ENOB and 2.2-kS/s sample rate, at 940-nW power and 4,580-μ m2 area. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this testchip is the first demonstration of a fully-synthesizable input-current ADC. Along with the analysis of the specific limitations of the presented demonstration, this work aims to pave the way for a new class of current-input ADCs that can be designed and integrated with logic within hours, and occupy a silicon area in the order of 10kgates.
Date of Conference: 27-29 November 2019
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 23 January 2020
ISBN Information:
Conference Location: Genoa, Italy
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I. Introduction

Analog-digital converters (ADCs) are an essential component of Systems on Chip where sensing capabilities are required, either as part of the interface towards off-chip sensors, or to sense on-chip physical parameters. Although voltage sensing is predominant, current sensing and conversion are required for the readout of sensors with current output or high output resistance [1]. A few examples of applications requiring current sensing are electrochemical biosensors [2], temperature sensing [3] (e.g., thermistor-based), environmental monitoring [4] (e.g., gas sensing), biomedical signal acquisition [5] (e.g., potentiostat-based), light sensing [6] (e.g., photodiodes and photoconductors), imaging [7], and on-chip leakage/variation monitoring [8], which require relatively coarse conversion in the and kHz range or below.

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