About: Analogue electronics is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4094 publications have been published within this topic receiving 58305 citations. The topic is also known as: analogue electronics.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the non-ideal effects in Switched-Capacitor Circuits, as well as their application in switch-capacitor circuits.
Abstract: Transformation Methods. MOS Devices as Circuit Elements. MOS Operational Amplifiers. Switched-Capacitor Filters. Nonfiltering Applications of Switched-Capacitor Circuits. Nonideal Effects in Switched-Capacitor Circuits. Systems Considerations and Applications. Index.
TL;DR: The EKV Model of the MOS Transistor is used as a model for low-voltage circuit design and analog Circuits in Weak Inversion are studied.
Abstract: Origins of Weak Inversion (or Sub-threshold) Circuit Design.- Survey of Low-voltage Implementations.- Minimizing Energy Consumption.- EKV Model of the MOS Transistor.- Digital Logic.- Sub-threshold Memories.- Analog Circuits in Weak Inversion.- System Examples.
TL;DR: An approach to use memristors (resistors with memory) in programmable analog circuits in which low voltages are applied to memristor during their operation as analog circuit elements and high voltage are used to program the Memristor's states.
Abstract: We suggest an approach to use memristors (resistors with memory) in programmable analog circuits. Our idea consists in a circuit design in which low voltages are applied to memristors during their operation as analog circuit elements and high voltages are used to program the memristor's states. This way, as it was demonstrated in recent experiments, the state of memristors does not essentially change during analog mode operation. As an example of our approach, we have built several programmable analog circuits demonstrating memristor-based programming of threshold, gain and frequency. In these circuits the role of memristor is played by a memristor emulator developed by us.
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of switching transients in digital MOS circuits that perturb analog circuits integrated on the same die by means of coupling through the substrate were observed. But the authors did not consider the effect of the layout geometry of the substrate.
Abstract: An experimental technique is described for observing the effects of switching transients in digital MOS circuits that perturb analog circuits integrated on the same die by means of coupling through the substrate. Various approaches to reducing substrate crosstalk (the use of physical separation of analog and digital circuits, guard rings, and a low-inductance substrate bias) are evaluated experimentally for a CMOS technology with a substrate comprising an epitaxial layer grown on a heavily doped bulk wafer. Observations indicate that reducing the inductance in the substrate bias is the most effective. Device simulations are used to show how crosstalk propagates via the heavily doped bulk and to predict the nature of substrate crosstalk in CMOS technologies integrated in uniform, lightly doped bulk substrates, showing that in such cases the substrate noise is highly dependent on layout geometry. A method of including substrate effects in SPICE simulations for circuits fabricated on epitaxial, heavily doped substrates is developed. >
TL;DR: In this paper, a 10-b 20-Msample/s analog-to-digital converter fabricated in a 0.9-mu m CMOS technology is described, which uses a pipelined nine-stage architecture with fully differential analog circuits and achieves a SNDR of 60 dB with a full-scale sinusoidal input at 5 MHz.
Abstract: A 10-b 20-Msample/s analog-to-digital converter fabricated in a 0.9- mu m CMOS technology is described. The converter uses a pipelined nine-stage architecture with fully differential analog circuits and achieves a signal-to-noise-and-distortion ratio (SNDR) of 60 dB with a full-scale sinusoidal input at 5 MHz. It occupies a 8.7 mm/sup 2/ and dissipates 240 mW. >