1. Introduction
Voltage and geometry scaling in CMOS technology have a detrimental effect on analog circuits while on the other hand, they increasingly improve the performances of digital circuits. Therefore, in many applications, it is preferred to implement the entire circuit in the digital domain to increase its reliability. This new approach is illustrated, for example, in [
1,
2,
3,
4], where analog functions, such as those of operational transconductance amplifiers (OTAs) amplifying, voltage reference and data converters are obtained by means of true digital circuits. Recently, another interesting idea to build more digitally friend circuit blocks is the use of delay-based signals. This technique exploits the time difference between two signals as analog information. This interesting approach is called time-mode signal processing (TMSP), which means that the amplitude of a signal is represented by means of a time delay [
5,
6]. Several circuits can be implemented using the building blocks of the TMSP. Indeed, a set of these general components can perform the most basic mathematical operations in the time-mode. Therefore, by arranging these basic structures, a sampled-data infinite impulse response (IIR) filter can be realized. Time-mode circuits are also suitable for precise time measurements, such as in the phase detector used in digital phase locked loop (PLL) [
7] or in the circuits measuring the time of flight [
8]. In all these architectures, delay generators are the key elements in the analog-to-digital conversion. The delay line, which is the core of the delay generator, is able to retard the input signal by a predefined value, which is fixed or tunable by both an analog or a digital mechanism. The digital mechanism is used for rough tuning while the analog is used for precise delay variation. The most important characteristics of the delay lines are: the finest incremental delay step, the delay range, the linearity and the jitter. The delay can be controlled by changing the power supply voltage or by means of current-starved inverters (tuning their quiescent current). A major challenge in the design of TMSP circuits is to implement a tunable delay cell having a linear transfer characteristic. For example, both the solution based on changing the supply voltage or based on current-starved inverters, although widely used, cannot assure linearity, as shown in
Figure 1. Moreover, another drawback is the excessively large increase in delay when the supply voltage (or the gate–source voltage of the current-starved transistor) becomes excessively low. Another approach [
9] is based on the modulation of the transistor threshold voltage and hence, the delay is obtained by applying a small-signal analog input to the back-gate, but this solution also presents a nonlinear transcharacteristic because the threshold voltage varies with the input in a square-root fashion, and hence the delay is nonlinear.
Another issue in practically all electronic circuits is the susceptibility to electromagnetic interferences (EMI). EMI effects may indeed involve any electrical or electronic equipment. As an example, aircrafts are especially susceptible to radiated and conducted interferences; in automotives, engines may stall because of the interference induced by traffic lights and cellular telephone transmitters can induce disturbances in braking systems (ABS). In general, as shown in
Figure 2, electromagnetic compatibility issues can be divided into two parts: emissions and susceptibility. Both of these should be as low as possible. On the other hand, high emissions are generally caused by high frequencies and high power systems, for example, as in the case of switching converters and motors while the susceptibility is a critical issue in practically all circuits. The integrated circuit ICs can be victim of conducted interferences: indeed, considering their small sizes, ICs are typically not disturbed by radiated EMI, as their on-chip interconnections are excessively small to function as effective antennas. They are, however, subjected to conducted interference which is received by the printed circuit board (PCB) tracks to which they are connected. Conducted EMI can be injected through the I/O pins generally causing two harmful effects: nonlinear distortion and EMI-induced DC bias shift, which can eventually lead to failures [
10,
11,
12]. This is particularly critical in analog ICs but the effect of conducted EMI has also recently been investigated in digital subsystems, and especially in those emulating analog functions such as in digitally based amplifiers or in time-mode circuits. The latter can indeed be susceptible to interferences. In particular, in the voltage-controlled delay unit, the effect of interferences is a strong variation of the delay, which can be named EMI-induced jitter [
13,
14].
In this paper, a voltage-controlled delay unit is proposed, with a rail-to-rail linearity range and reduced jitter caused by the electromagnetic interferences’ EMI.
The paper is organized as follows: in
Section 2 state-of-the-art VCDUs with increased linearity are outlined; in
Section 3, the proposed VCDU with a rail-to-rail range of linearity is presented; in
Section 4, the effect of the interferences injected into the I/O pins is discussed; finally,
Section 5 concludes the paper.
2. The Voltage-Controlled Delay Units with Increased Linearity Range
The key element of the time-mode signal processing circuits is the voltage-controlled delay unit (VCDU): it is a circuit that proportionally delays an input time event (i.e., a clock edge) with respect to a control voltage
. As stated above, one of the most used schematics of VCDU is the one based on the current-starved inverter [
5] which is shown in
Figure 3. It generally operates as follows: when
is low, the capacitor is charged to the supply voltage and
is therefore forced to a low logic value. When the input signal
goes up, the capacitor starts to discharge itself at a rate which is a function of
. The second inverter operates as a comparator: when the voltage of the capacitor drops below the threshold of the inverter,
switches from a low to high value. The low-to-high transition time is adjusted by the voltage
.
The delay unit based on the current-starved inverter is attractive for its capability to give a wide range of delay. On the other hand, the delay is a nonlinear function of the control voltage . The voltage–delay characteristic of the cell can indeed be written as where is the delay, C is the load capacitance and i is the current controlled by . The current follows the MOSFET equations, and therefore, it is proportional to the square of its gate–source voltage ().
Several works can be found in the literature focused on techniques to linearize the characteristics [
15,
16,
17,
18,
19]. Indeed, the linearity of VCDUs is important because it defines the dynamic range of the TMSP circuits that follow. In [
15], a new delay element is proposed. As shown in
Figure 4, this delay element is composed of two inverters. The first inverter is a simple inverter, whereas the second one is a current-starved inverter. The two inverters are connected in parallel (see
Figure 4a): the delay of the first inverter is fixed and the delay of the second inverter is a function of the controlling voltage, which is
in this case. In this architecture, thanks to the use of the first inverter with a fixed delay, the maximum delay is limited (see
Figure 4b). As a consequence, the linearity is improved because for low
, the delay does not abruptly increase: moreover, by sizing the current starved nmos to obtain a high resistance, the linear region can be wider, but still not rail to rail, as highlighted in
Figure 4c. The circuit proposed in [
15] has a power supply of 1.8 V and its linearity ranges between 0.8 V and 1.8 V.
In [
16], a Modified Pseudo Differential Current-Starved Delay Element (MPDCSDE) is used to realize a delay cell. The proposed delay cell is shown in
Figure 5. Each branch of the delay cell is implemented as a two-stage inverter. All the bulk of the pmos transistor is biased towards Vcp, while the bulk of nmos transistors is biased towards Vcn; the gates of the pmos devices are at Vgp and the gates of the nmos devices are at Vgn, except for the transistors connected to the input or to the output. M1 is the pull-down while M2 is the pull-up transistor. The control voltages Vcn and Vcp, respectively, modulate the ON resistance of the devices M1 and M2. These variable resistances control the current available to the charge or discharge the load capacitance of the first inverter. Moreover, the body bias technique is utilized to widen the applicable range for the controlled signal and improve the linearity. This circuit is powered at 1.5 V and shows a linear behavior for control voltages ranging from 0.2 V to 1.2 V. Therefore, although the linearity range is largely increased, this topology does not show a real rail-to-rail linear characteristic.
In [
17], a VCDU with the extended linear region is also proposed. It is schematically shown in
Figure 6.
The core of the VCDU is the signal conditioning circuit based on a resistor voltage divider and a mos level shifter. These devices are added to improve the linearity of the VCDU. Without the signal conditioner, indeed, for low-input voltage, the current-starved nmos transistor enters the subthreshold region, causing strong nonlinearity. Overall, the VCDU proposed in [
17] has a voltage supply of 1.8 V and a linear range from 0 up to 1.2 V. The VCDU proposed in [
18] and shown in
Figure 7 is still based on a signal conditioning circuit, but in this case, the circuit is different both in the schematic and in working principle. The conditioning circuit is indeed based on a simple inverting common-source amplifier, with the pmos input device (controlled by Vin) and nmos active load (biased at Vdd); this stage helps in obtaining a quasi-linear monotonic relationship in the delay response of the circuit. However, transistor sizing optimization must be performed by means of a parametric sweep in order to obtain the most linear voltage–delay characteristic: the circuit is therefore simple in the schematic but sensible to process variation.
The work presented in [
19] is based on the schematic discussed in [
18] which is further modified and improved. It is based on a delay element controlled by a voltage Vin on a signal conditioning circuit similar to that depicted in [
18] and based on a simple inverting common-source amplifier, with the pmos input device (controlled by Vin) and nmos active load (biased at Vdd) on a balanced current-starved inverter and two switches at the output connected to two capacitors. The latter can provide a rough control of the delay, whereas Vin can precisely tune it. The power supply of the circuit in [
19] is 1.8 V and the linear range goes from 0.8 V up to 1.8 V; moreover, thanks to the switchable capacitors, a wider delay range can be obtained. A comparison between the main topologies implemented to increase the linearity range of the delay cell is summarized in
Table 1. The comparison is limited to the voltage supply and the linear range, but other parameters should be considered in a practical project, such, for example, the area, the power consumption or the linear distortion. These data are often not available or cannot be directly compared because the various VCDUs are fabricated in different technologies. As shown in the table, it is hard to obtain a rail-to-rail linear range. The architecture based on the conditioning amplifier is the best from this point of view; however, the results show a quasi-linear characteristic very sensible to the process variation.
3. The Proposed VCDU
This was designed with the objective of improving the linearity range and at the same time to increase the flexibility of the delay element. Indeed, in the novel VCDU, the rising and falling transient of the output voltage are symmetrical and the voltage-to-time gain of the cell can be easily modified by means of the components’ sizes. The proposed VCDU is based on the architecture suggested in [
18] which has been further modified and improved to achieve a very wide linearity range and a higher robustness against process variations by combining the ideas of the signal conditioning circuit proposed in [
17]. The delay of the output (Vout) with respect to the input signal (In) is controlled by a voltage obtained from a resistive voltage divider between the control voltage (Vin) and the power supply (1.8 V), as visible in
Figure 8. The voltage divider therefore acts as a level shifter. As such, the control voltage is always higher than the threshold voltage Vtn, preventing the transistor M4-M6 entering the subthreshold region. Indeed, as shown in the literature, when transistors enter the subthreshold region, they cause significant distortion and therefore linearity issues. To this aim, the value of the resistors must be chosen to obtain the proper control voltage. Then, the value of the resistors will be a compromise between power and area consumption. Nevertheless, it is worth adding that a precise value of them is not mandatory because the circuit is not affected by the mismatch of the components. The proposed VCDU was designed in a standard 1.8 V 180 nm CMOS process which is proprietary to the United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) and the circuit extracted from the layout was deeply simulated and characterized using the Cadence tool named Virtuoso, which is available from the Design Kit. The gain, meaning the delay versus the control voltage, has an absolute value of 82 ps/V. The delay unit exhibits good linearity in the maximum voltage range, which is rail to rail, from 0 to 1.8 V of the control voltage Vin, as shown in
Figure 9. This is also evident from the linear regression and from the linearity error, which is less than 10
−3 in practically all the rail-to-rail range, as can be seen in
Figure 10. The components’ mismatch, temperature variations and changes in the voltage supply Vdd affect the delay characteristic of the proposed VCDU but have a negligible effect on the linearity of the circuit. Several plots of the simulations we ran are attached to show the overall performance of the VCDU (see
Figure 11,
Figure 12 and
Figure 13).
Finally, for the sake of completeness, the overall sizing of the circuits is listed in
Table 2 and the layout is shown in
Figure 14: the area is 37 μm × 65 μm.
4. EMI
It has recently been demonstrated that the effect of the electromagnetic interferences can affect a generic VCDU as well as the voltage-to-time converter (VTC) based on VCDU [
13,
14]. The interferences can indeed reach the devices through the I/O pins and they can eventually lead to failures [
10,
11,
12] in a generic-integrated circuit; in the case of time-mode circuits, the interfering signal can cause, in particular, an EMI-induced jitter, as illustrated in
Figure 15.
The investigation of the EMI susceptibility in VCDU is therefore interesting and necessary. The first step to characterize the susceptibility of the proposed VCDU is to find the most critical paths. The VCDU, as shown in the schematic of
Figure 8, has two input pins (Vin, Vclk) and two pins for the power supply (Vdd and Gnd). Vclk is generated inside the integrated circuit but Vin is external and can pick up the interferences, leading them to the voltage-to-time converter. Moreover, the interferences reaching the
pin are critical because this signal cannot be filtered; instead, generally speaking, it is possible to filter the noise from the power supply lines.
To investigate the EMI effect in the proposed VCDU, several (time-consuming) transient simulations are performed on the circuit extracted from the layout using the Cadence tool named Virtuoso, available from the Design Kit. In particular, the control voltage Vin, which is set to 0.9 V DC, is simulated as affected by an 0DC mean value sinusoidal signal with an amplitude ranging from 200 mVp up to 600 mVp and a frequency set at 100 MHz, 500 MHz, 1 GHz and 5 GHz (because several simulations show that the worst case is right between hundreds of MHz until GHz [
10,
11]). The initial phase of the EMI is swept from 0° to 340° and the average EMI-induced jitter is calculated and plotted in
Figure 16 because it is an interesting and important way to quantify the EMI susceptibility of the circuit, as suggested in the most recent literature about this topic [
13]. Due to interferences, the delay moves only slightly away from the nominal condition (525 ps, represented by the black solid line in
Figure 16) and the proposed VCDU exhibits a small average EMI-induced jitter: this depends on both the EMI amplitude and the frequencies, but it is always limited to approximately 1% of the nominal delay.
These results confirm those observed in [
13] where the classical current-starved delay unit of
Figure 3 with a limited linearity range) is exposed to the interferences and compared to another VCDU with improved linearity. The average EMI-induced jitter of the first topology is 25% of the nominal delay for an EMI amplitude of 200 mV and it increases up to 40% for 600 mV of interference amplitude. The second topology considered in [
13] is similar to that of [
17], which exhibits a wider linear range (although still not rail to rail) and a lower susceptibility to interferences. Indeed, the average EMI-induced Jitter is approximately 10–20% of the nominal delay. A comparison between these three topologies is summarized in
Table 3.