AU2002308116A1 - Analogue to digital converter - Google Patents

Analogue to digital converter

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Publication number
AU2002308116A1
AU2002308116A1 AU2002308116A AU2002308116A AU2002308116A1 AU 2002308116 A1 AU2002308116 A1 AU 2002308116A1 AU 2002308116 A AU2002308116 A AU 2002308116A AU 2002308116 A AU2002308116 A AU 2002308116A AU 2002308116 A1 AU2002308116 A1 AU 2002308116A1
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AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
waveform
adc
clock
input signal
analogue
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
AU2002308116A
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AU2002308116B2 (en
Inventor
Robin Granger
Roderick Leonard Wallace Stevens
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Roke Manor Research Ltd
Original Assignee
Roke Manor Research Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GBGB0108829.3A external-priority patent/GB0108829D0/en
Application filed by Roke Manor Research Ltd filed Critical Roke Manor Research Ltd
Publication of AU2002308116A1 publication Critical patent/AU2002308116A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU2002308116B2 publication Critical patent/AU2002308116B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Description

ANALOGUE TO DIGITAL CONVERTER
This invention relates to an analogue to digital converter and a system for controlling the envelope of a periodic waveform using such a converter. Conventional commercially available integrated circuit analogue to digital converters are only able to digitise signals up to approximately 1 GHz bandwidth. However, there is a requirement for digitising wide bandwidth periodic analogue electrical signals in a system that corrects ripple on the input signal. Such signals typically have a 5GHz bandwidth or greater, which existing systems cannot deal with. In specialist test equipment, wide bandwidth signals up to 50GHz have been digitised, but the equipment is bulky, costly and has a high power requirement. These drawbacks make this type of equipment unsuitable for use in tightly integrated, low-power systems. Such prior art ADCs operate by sampling the input signal over a very short time window, and digitising the sample with a high resolution ADC that does not have the required input bandwidth. Εquivalent-time sampling' is a technique that can then be used to measure the complete waveform.
There are existing A/D converters which operate by splitting an input signal into multiple signals and sampling these in parallel. This creates multiple high fidelity copies of the input signal. However, this method cannot be used at microwave frequencies because of difficulties in sampling all the channels together.
In accordance with a first aspect of the present invention, an analogue to digital converter (ADC) comprises a comparator; an N x 1-bit clocked shift register; and a clock, wherein the clock is phase-locked to the input signal.
The present invention is able to take fast samples of the input signal, convert them to digital signals and subsequently store them in the shift register. The stored digital patterns may then be transmitted in parallel format at a significantly lower rate. The sampled signals can then be combined to build up a complete waveform. The benefits of having the clock phase-locked to the input waveform are that the representation of the input waveform can be built up over many repetitions of it, relaxing the requirements of the individual components comprising the ADC implementation.
Preferably, the clock is a fixed frequency clock and the clock frequency is in the range of lGHz to 50GHz. Using a fixed frequency clock gives better jitter performance, since the sample interval is determined by the fixed frequency clock, rather than an incremental delay as used in conventional ADC. The clock frequency can certainly be lower than 10GHz (e.g. 1GHz) without losing one of the essential features of the invention - that it can be realised using readily available low-cost commercially available components. However at lower clock frequencies e.g. 10kHz; alternative solutions are readily available because the problems of microwave operation do not apply.
Preferably, a threshold voltage applied to the comparator is varied in order to characterise an envelope of an input signal. Alternatively, a threshold voltage applied to the comparator is alternated between two nominated voltages, such that an envelope of an input signal is characterised more efficiently. Where the threshold voltage is fixed, a variable bias voltage may be applied to the input signal.
The ADC has a 1 bit resolution, but by varying the threshold level, it is possible to build up a more accurate representation of the signal. This is quite different from the mode of operation of prior art ADC's in the frequency range of interest.
Typically, the threshold voltage is generated by a processor controlled digital to analogue converter (DAC) circuit.
The input signal may have a bandwidth from d.c. up to 50GHz, and even higher frequencies may be possible, but preferably, the input signal has a bandwidth in the range 1 GHz to 50 GHz.
Operating at microwave frequencies requires accurate matching of all components in the system because the clock can be delayed by as much as the signal length. This problem does not occur at lower frequencies. One of the "hidden features" of prior-art "low-frequency" ADC architectures is that the propagation delay between the various discrete components is insignificant to overall operation. This is a key limitation when attempting to extend these techniques into the microwave domain, where the propagation delay between components can often exceed whole cycles of the ADC clock. Implementing an ADC at these microwave frequencies using existing prior- art ADC architectures with low-cost commercially available components is therefore impractical. This limitation is overcome in the system proposed in the present invention.
In accordance with a second aspect of the present invention, a system for controlling the envelope of a periodic waveform comprises an ADC according to the first aspect and processing means, whereby the ADC samples an input waveform and the processing means determines a correction waveform, converts the correction waveform to an analogue signal, combines the correction waveform with the input waveform to control its envelope and outputs a combined waveform, wherein the combined waveform is substantially flat.
Alternatively, the combined waveform is substantially flat for a predetermined portion of the input waveform.
In this context, flat is defined as being constrained between two threshold voltages which are applied to the comparator alternately. By setting two threshold levels, it is possible to detect excursions of the output signal from 'flat', and hence modify the correction waveform to compensate.
It is common feature of comparator/shift register designs to have a sample window which can be considerably shorter than the clock period. Thus, higher bandwidth signals can be sampled by varying the phase of the clock signal relative to the input signal. This technique is called 'equivalent-time sampling'.
In this specification, the term bandwidth refers to the maximum bandwidth of a signal which can be sampled and the term throughput refers to the number of samples which can be acquired per second.
An example of an analogue to digital converter and a system for controlling the envelope of a periodic waveform according to the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:-
Figure 1 illustrates a system for controlling the envelope of a periodic waveform;
Figure 2 illustrates examples of how the clock is phase locked to the input signal; and,
Figure 3 illustrates a digital to analogue converter according to the present invention for use in the system of Fig. 1.
One example of a system according to the present invention is shown in Fig. 1. The system comprises a voltage-controlled attenuator 1 which receives an input signal
2. The input signal 2 has peaks and troughs which need to be flattened out to produce a substantially constant output level. An output from the attenuator 1 is split in a splitter
3, so that one output of the splitter forms the output signal 4 and another output from the splitter is input to an analogue to digital converter (ADC) 5 in accordance with the invention. A digital signal output from the ADC 5 is processed by a processor 6, input to memory 7 and under control of a clock 8, successive values in the memory 7 are passed through a digital to analogue converter (DAC) 9, filtered by a low pass filter 10 and the filtered signal applied to the control input of the voltage controlled attenuator 1. The system operates by sampling a portion of the output from the attenuator 1 and digitising the sampled signal. The loop bandwidth is greater than any variation in input signal between successive periods. Because of this the system is able to track any variations, and thus produce a substantially flat output. Because the output is substantially flat, an ADC with only one bit resolution is required to characterise it, thus simplifying the hardware. The processor 6 calculates a correction waveform which when combined with the input waveform produces a substantially constant waveform. Data representing the correction waveform is passed to the memory 7. Successive values in memory are passed to the DAC 9 at a rate which is controlled by the clock 8 which is phase-locked to the input signal 2. The resulting analogue waveform is then low-pass filtered by filter 10 to produce waveform 12 which is used to control the attenuator 1, and thus to control the shape of the output signal 4.
In Fig. 2a, a first example of how the clock is phase-locked to the input signal is shown. In this case, it can be seen that both the input signal and the clock are similarly regular and each clock cycle coincides with a similar point on a cycle of the input signal. In Fig. 2b, the input signal is still regular, but it is spread out over a longer period of time, so that the repetition occurs after several clock cycles, rather than every one.
A particular feature of this invention is the design of the ADC 5. Conventional ADC integrated circuits are capable of digitising signals with bandwidths up to approximately 1GHz. However, there is a requirement to digitise periodic analogue electrical signals for which these conventional ADC integrated circuits are not suitable, for example, flattening the waveform produced by a pulsed chirp laser. This is particularly applicable to telecomms applications. Analogue to digital conversion systems, which are capable of sampling up to 50GHz bandwidth, have been produced but these are bulky and expensive, so are not suitable for this application. Also, because they are not available as integrated circuits due to their complexity and high performance, they cannot be incorporated easily into existing system designs. These conventional ADC's rely on equivalent-time sampling techniques to achieve the required bandwidth.
The present invention overcomes the problems of conventional systems dealing with wide bandwidth signals by using a demultiplexer circuit as a combined 1-bit ADC (or comparator) and N x 1-bit register, as shown in Fig. 3. In this particular example, the demultiplexer (DMUX) 15 is a 16: 1 DMUX (i.e. N = 16) operating at approximately 10GHz, but higher clock rates, e.g. 40GHz, and other ratios, e.g. 4: 1 or 2: 1 are also currently available. A sampled signal 13 from the splitter 3 is applied to input a of the comparator 14 in the DMUX 15. A threshold signal 16 is applied to input b of the comparator 14. The threshold signal voltage may be generated by a DAC circuit under control of the processor 6. The sampled waveform is periodic, so that it is not essential to sample every single cycle. This feature allows a low speed DAC to be used to generate the threshold signal voltage, because samples can be discarded whilst the DAC settles. The output of the comparator 14 is logical "1" if input a is greater than input b and logical "0" otherwise. The output values are stored sequentially in the 16 x 1-bit register 17 on successive rising edges of the clock 18.
In a preferred mode of operation, 1-bit digitised samples of the analogue input signal from the register 17 are sent to the processor 6, sixteen at a time corresponding to sixteen consecutive samples. The processor 6 can then determine which portions of the waveform are above or below the threshold voltage and alter the values in the memory 7 accordingly thus changing the correction waveform. By setting alternately high and low threshold voltages, the output signal can be constrained between the two threshold levels.
An alternative mode of operation requires only one threshold level 16 to be set. In this mode the processor 6 counts the number of ones and zeros corresponding to the same sample instant in the cycle. The ratio of ones to zeros is used to determine the appropriate corresponding value in the memory 7; thus changing the correction waveform to maintain the ratio at approximately 50:50.
The system of the present invention produces an output signal which is substantially flat. An alternative is to produce an output signal which is substantially flat for a particular portion of its period by modifying selected entries in the memory 7.
Amongst the advantages of the ADC of the present invention are that it uses a small, low-cost, low-power commercially available device compared to existing ADC's which operate at these bandwidths; it offers improved jitter performance since the sample interval is determined by a fixed-frequency clock, rather than the conventional method of using an incremental delay; and it offers full bandwidth performance at 1-bit resolution as compared with the significantly smaller bandwidths offered by conventional devices, albeit at higher resolution.

Claims (9)

1. An analogue to digital converter (ADC), the ADC comprising a comparator; an N x 1-bit clocked shift register; and a clock; wherein the clock is phase-locked to the input signal.
2. An ADC according to claim 1, wherein the clock is a fixed frequency clock.
3. An ADC according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the clock frequency is in the range of 1 GHz to 50GHz.
4. An ADC according to any preceding claim, wherein a threshold voltage applied to the comparator is varied in order to characterise an envelope of an input signal.
5. An ADC according to any of claims 1 to 3, wherein a threshold voltage applied to the comparator is alternated between two nominated voltages, such that an envelope of an input signal is characterised more efficiently.
6. An ADC according to claim 4 or claim 5, wherein the threshold voltage is generated by a processor controlled digital to analogue converter (DAC) circuit.
7. An ADC according to any preceding claim, wherein the input signal has a bandwidth between 1 GHz and 50GHz.
8. A system for controlling the envelope of a periodic waveform, the system comprising an ADC according to any preceding claim and processing means, whereby the ADC samples an input waveform and the processing means determines a correction waveform, converts the correction waveform to an analogue signal, combines the correction waveform with the input waveform to control its envelope and outputs a combined waveform, wherein the combined waveform is substantially flat.
9. A system according to claim 8, wherein the combined waveform is substantially flat for a predetermined portion of the input waveform.
AU2002308116A 2001-04-07 2002-03-28 Analogue to digital converter Ceased AU2002308116B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0108829.3 2001-04-07
GBGB0108829.3A GB0108829D0 (en) 2001-04-07 2001-04-07 Analogue to digital converter
PCT/EP2002/003596 WO2002082659A2 (en) 2001-04-07 2002-03-28 Analogue to digital converter

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU2002308116A1 true AU2002308116A1 (en) 2003-04-10
AU2002308116B2 AU2002308116B2 (en) 2006-06-08

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU2002308116A Ceased AU2002308116B2 (en) 2001-04-07 2002-03-28 Analogue to digital converter

Country Status (9)

Country Link
US (1) US6917323B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1384326B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE398359T1 (en)
AU (1) AU2002308116B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2443582C (en)
DE (1) DE60227061D1 (en)
ES (1) ES2305280T3 (en)
GB (1) GB0108829D0 (en)
WO (1) WO2002082659A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7356186B2 (en) * 2002-08-23 2008-04-08 Kulas Charles J Digital representation of audio waveforms using peak shifting to provide increased dynamic range
US8130889B2 (en) * 2005-04-04 2012-03-06 Texas Instruments Incorporated Receive timing manager
US7253600B2 (en) * 2005-07-19 2007-08-07 Cambridge Analog Technology, Llc Constant slope ramp circuits for sample-data circuits
US7468688B2 (en) * 2006-09-06 2008-12-23 Infineon Technologies Ag Converter and method for converting an analog signal and comparator for use in such conversion

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GB1207747A (en) 1967-11-13 1970-10-07 Princeton Applied Res Corp Signal correlator
US3991409A (en) * 1974-05-29 1976-11-09 Whittaker Corporation Digital storage system for high frequency signals
JPS57202128A (en) 1981-06-08 1982-12-10 Victor Co Of Japan Ltd Analog-to-digital converting circuit
US4411002A (en) * 1981-09-29 1983-10-18 Magnavox Government And Industrial Electronics Company Method and apparatus for a continuously variable slope delta range extender
US4595909A (en) 1981-11-25 1986-06-17 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy N-bit propagatary analog-to-digital converter system
GB2115998A (en) 1982-03-03 1983-09-14 Rca Corp Apparatus and method for rapid analog-to-digital conversion
GB2115247B (en) 1982-10-14 1986-01-02 Burr Brown Res Corp An improved analog to digital converter system for application to pulse code audio modulation
US4654584A (en) * 1985-12-12 1987-03-31 Analogic Corporation High-speed precision equivalent time sampling A/D converter and method
US4736387A (en) * 1986-03-28 1988-04-05 Gte Laboratories Incorporated Quantizing apparatus
US4983972A (en) * 1989-10-13 1991-01-08 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Video delta modulation encoder
US5010340A (en) 1990-03-26 1991-04-23 Rockwell International Corporation Charge domain successive approximation analog to digital converter
JPH04152717A (en) 1990-10-17 1992-05-26 Hitachi Ltd A/d converter
JP3831951B2 (en) * 1997-05-27 2006-10-11 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Image processing apparatus and integrated circuit therefor
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