<p><span>This book discusses new possibilities and trends in analog circuit design, including applications in communication, measurement and RF systems. The authors combine the main features for circuit design with actual circuit realizations and demonstrate several performance limitations with exam
Smart AD and DA Conversion (Analog Circuits and Signal Processing)
β Scribed by Pieter Harpe, Hans Hegt, Arthur H.M. van Roermund
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 174
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The history of the application of semiconductors for controlling currents goes back all the way to 1926, in which Julius Lilienfeld led a patent for a βMethod and apparatus for controlling electric currentsβ [1], which is considered the rst work on metal/semiconductor eld-effect transistors. More well-known is the work of William Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Brattain in the 1940s [2, 3], after which the development of semiconductor devices commenced. In 1958, independent work from Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce ledto the invention of integrated circuits. A few milestones in IC design are the rst monolithic operational ampli er in 1963 (Fairchild?A702, Bob Widlar) and the rst o- chip 4-bit microprocessor in 1971 (Intel 4004). Ever since the start of the semiconductor history, integration plays an imp- tant role: starting from single devices, ICs with basic functions were developed (e. g. opamps, logic gates), followed by ICs that integrate larger parts of a s- tem (e. g. microprocessors, radio tuners, audio ampli ers). Following this trend of system integration, this eventually leads to the integration of analog and d- ital components in one chip, resulting in mixed-signal ICs: digital components are required because signal processing is preferably done in the digital - main; analog components are required because physical signals are analog by nature. Mixed-signal ICs are already widespread in many applications (e. g. - dio, video); for the future, it is expected that this trend will continue, leading to a larger scale of integration.
β¦ Table of Contents
Smart AD and DA Conversion
Content
List of symbols and abbreviations
Chapter 1:
INTRODUCTION
Chapter 2:
AD AND DA CONVERSION
Chapter 3:
SMART CONVERSION
Chapter 4:
SMART DA CONVERSION
Chapter 5:
DESIGN OF A SUB-BINARY VARIABLE-RADIX DAC
Chapter 6:
SMART AD CONVERSION
Chapter 7:
DESIGN OF AN OPEN-LOOP T&H CIRCUIT
Chapter 8:
T&H CALIBRATION
Chapter 9:
T&H CALIBRATION FOR TIME-INTERLEAVED ADCs
Chapter 10:
CONCLUSIONS
References
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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