Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMilton Carter Modified over 9 years ago
1
McGill Increasing the Time Dynamic Range of Pulse Measurement Techniques in Digital CMOS Applications of Pulse Measurement: Duty-Cycle Measurement Pulsed Radar Digital Applications … Previous Techniques Limitations: Large power dissipation for small pulses Otherwise, very high resolution ADC needed Time walk correction techniques needed in the dual-slope ADC approach Always linearity, power, resolution trade-offs
2
McGill Proposed System Vin V th,n t1t1 V out1 V out2 TT T = (t 2 -t 1 ) m. T Time Amplification Edge Detection Vin t2t2 t1t1 t2t2 Low Power; dynamic current generation techniques in the front-end edge detection while relying on the charge carried by the input edges and a capacitor for a fast discharge of the output node, without the need for a constant biasing current Low-end pulse measurement possible; relies on time amplification which is used to stretch the two input edges, carrying the pulse width, into an amplified version, using simple cross-coupled differential pairs loaded properly and operating in the appropriate mode. Amplification makes the task of digitization simpler The system carries the timing information with two fast edges More noise immunity and less non-linear errors Unlike the dual-slope ADC circuit, the proposed system does not suffer from the linearity, power, resolution trade-offs (no comparator overdrive concerns here) Extra degree of freedom to the designer Low- Resolution TDC 00..11100..111 Serial Shift Out 00..111
3
McGill Summary of Results Before calibration After calibration Offset Simulated/Fitted time amplifier gain 78 156 234 312 390 468 546 Input pulse width, ps 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 TDC shift in bit location
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.