Abstract

This paper presents a 12-bit successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) that uses a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) configurable window switching technique. By reusing the capacitors in the DAC, the proposed window switching scheme yields window boundaries to determine whether the input is located within the window, and thus avoid unnecessary capacitor switching. The proposed window SAR ADC improves the conversion efficiency and ADC linearity. A qualitative analysis of prior window switching schemes is presented to elaborate for various applications. A low-input capacitance of 1 pF was adopted to relax the input and reference buffers. A prototype ADC was implemented in 180-nm CMOS occupying an active area of 0.1 mm2. At 20 MS/s, it consumes a total power of 1.22 mW from a 1.5-V supply. The measured peak signal-to-noise and distortion ratio and spurious-free dynamic range were 61.7 and 79 dB, respectively. At the Nyquist rate, the measured effective number of bits (ENOB) was 9.53, equivalent to a figure-of-merit (FOM) of 83 fJ/conversion-step. In low-power mode (100 kS/s), it consumed a total power of $1.5~\mu \text{W}$ from a 0.7-V supply. At the Nyquist rate, the measured ENOB was 9.82, equivalent to a FOM of 16.6 fJ/conversion step.

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