Design-oriented estimation of thermal noise in switched-capacitor circuits

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Abstract

Thermal noise represents a major limitation on the performance of most electronic circuits. It is particularly important in switched circuits, such as the switched-capacitor (SC) filters widely used in mixed-mode CMOS integrated circuits. In these circuits, switching introduces a boost in the power spectral density of the thermal noise due to aliasing. Unfortunately, even though the theory of noise in SC circuits is discussed in the literature, it is very intricate. The numerical calculation of noise in switched circuits is very tedious, and requires highly sophisticated and not widely available software. The purpose of this paper is twofold. It provides a tutorial description of the physical phenomena taking place in an SC circuit while it processes noise (Sections II-III). It also proposes some specialized but highly efficient algorithms for estimating the resulting sampled noise in SC circuits, which need only simple calculations (Sections IV-VI). A practical design procedure, which follows directly from the estimate, is also described. The accuracy of the proposed estimation algorithms is verified by simulation using SpectreRF. As an example, it is applied to the estimation of the total thermal noise in a second-order low-distortion delta-sigma converter. © 2005 IEEE.

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APA

Schreier, R., Silva, J., Steensgaard, J., & Temes, G. C. (2005). Design-oriented estimation of thermal noise in switched-capacitor circuits. IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, 52(11), 2358–2368. https://doi.org/10.1109/TCSI.2005.853909

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