High Speed Current Steering DACs in SiGe BiCMOS Technology

Research output: Types of ThesisDoctoral thesis

Contributors

Abstract

The evolution of communication systems has been the strongest motivation of the rapid improvement of data converters in recent years. In optical communications, utilizing spectrally-efficient modulation schemes was the main key to meet the demand of higher bit rates. This, however, required digital-to-analog converters (DACs) with 5-8 bit resolution at a sampling rate of tens of Gigahertz. In the frame of this work an attempt has been made to address this challenge. After a brief overview of current-steering DAC architectures, the static and dynamic sources of error are mentioned in chapter 2. At medium resolutions, achieving the required static performance is not a critical task in recent silicon technology nodes. On the other hand, the dynamic DAC performance at very high speeds is a different story. In chapter 3, we investigate the impact of the dynamic output impedance and the time response of current switches as decisive factors in understanding DAC high-frequency behaviour. It is shown that a DAC in a bipolar technology can potentially provide two more resolution bits compared to an equivalent CMOS design. To improve the characteristics of a current switch cell as the main bottleneck in designing current-steering DACs, a modified circuit is proposed in chapter 4. Its static and dynamic characteristics are examined and compared with those of a conventional design. A design strategy for better matching of rise (fall) times of different cells is presented. The input capacitor of the presented cell can be lower than that of a cascode differential pair. At the same time, the rise (fall) time mismatch are decreased by factor of two for a targeted 6-bit DAC. Based on this current switch, the 6-bit fully binary DAC with 28 GSps in a SiGe 0.25 μm technology is demonstrated. The measurement results show suitable functionality of this component in a recent 100 Gbps optical transmitter. This design has the best figure-of-merit of binary DACs in a silicon-based technology. Chapter 5 presents a way of generating synchronous bit streams to test a DAC at its full speed. The proposed system is composed of several multiplexers with built-in memory cells. Those multiplexers have to be synchronized by a resettable and also adjustable clock signal. Using a hierarchical top-down method, all the blocks and sub-blocks of the complete system are explained. The measurements of the memory-multiplexer chip as well as clock generator chip are presented. The implemented system in a SiGe 0.25 μm technology is capable of supplying the needed bit stream at 28 GSps.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Awarding Institution
Supervisors/Advisors
  • Ellinger, Frank, Mentor
Place of PublicationDresden
Publisher
  • Vogt Verlag
Print ISBNs9783938860854
Publication statusPublished - 24 Mar 2015
No renderer: customAssociatesEventsRenderPortal,dk.atira.pure.api.shared.model.researchoutput.Thesis

Keywords

Keywords

  • DAC