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Wide-Bandwidth High-Dynamic Range D/A Converters [electronic resource] / by Konstantinos Doris, Arthu van Roermund, Domine Leenaerts.

By: Contributor(s): Series: The International Series in Engineering and Computer Science ; 871Publisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2006Description: XVIII, 202 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780387304168
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 621.381 23
LOC classification:
  • TK7800-8360
  • TK7874-7874.9
Online resources:
Contents:
Digital to Analog conversion concepts -- Framework for Analysis and Synthesis of DACs -- Current Steering DACs -- Dynamic limitations of Current Steering DACs -- Current Steering DAC circuit error analysis -- High-level modeling of Current Steering DACs -- Functional modeling of timing errors -- Functional analysis of local timing errors -- Circuit analysis of local timing errors -- Synthesis concepts for CS DACs -- Design of a 12 bit 500 Msample/s DAC.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: IGH-SPEED Digital to Analog (D/A) converters are essential components in digi- Htal communication systems providing the necessary conversion of signals encoding information in bits to signals encoding information in their amplitude vs. time domain characteristics. In general, they are parts of a larger system, the interface, which c- sists of several signal conditioning circuits. Dependent on where the converter is located within the chain of circuits in the interface, signal processing operations are partitioned in those realized with digital techniques, and those with analog. The rapid evolution of CMOS technology has established implicit and explicite trends related to the interface, and in particular to the D/A converter. The implicit relationship comes via the growth of digital systems. First, it is a global trend with respect to all interface circuits that increasing operating frequencies of digital systems place a similar demand for the interface circuits. The second trend takes place locally within the int- face. Initially, the D/A converter was placed at the beginning of the interface chain, and all signal conditioning was implemented in the analog domain after the D/A conversion. The increasing ?exibility and robustness of digital signal processing shifted the D/A converter closer to the end point of the chain where the demands for high quality high frequency operation are very high.
Item type: eBooks
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Digital to Analog conversion concepts -- Framework for Analysis and Synthesis of DACs -- Current Steering DACs -- Dynamic limitations of Current Steering DACs -- Current Steering DAC circuit error analysis -- High-level modeling of Current Steering DACs -- Functional modeling of timing errors -- Functional analysis of local timing errors -- Circuit analysis of local timing errors -- Synthesis concepts for CS DACs -- Design of a 12 bit 500 Msample/s DAC.

IGH-SPEED Digital to Analog (D/A) converters are essential components in digi- Htal communication systems providing the necessary conversion of signals encoding information in bits to signals encoding information in their amplitude vs. time domain characteristics. In general, they are parts of a larger system, the interface, which c- sists of several signal conditioning circuits. Dependent on where the converter is located within the chain of circuits in the interface, signal processing operations are partitioned in those realized with digital techniques, and those with analog. The rapid evolution of CMOS technology has established implicit and explicite trends related to the interface, and in particular to the D/A converter. The implicit relationship comes via the growth of digital systems. First, it is a global trend with respect to all interface circuits that increasing operating frequencies of digital systems place a similar demand for the interface circuits. The second trend takes place locally within the int- face. Initially, the D/A converter was placed at the beginning of the interface chain, and all signal conditioning was implemented in the analog domain after the D/A conversion. The increasing ?exibility and robustness of digital signal processing shifted the D/A converter closer to the end point of the chain where the demands for high quality high frequency operation are very high.

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