In this paper, we propose a discrete-time IIR low-pass filter that achieves a high-order of filtering through a charge-sharing rotation. Its sampling rate is then multiplied through pipelining. The first stage of the filter can operate in either a voltage-sampling or charge-sampling mode. It uses switches, capacitors and a simple gm-cell, rather than opamps, thus being compatible with digital nanoscale technology. In the voltage-sampling mode, the gm-cell is bypassed so the filter is fully passive. A 7th-order filter prototype operating at 800 MS/s sampling rate is implemented in TSMC 65 nm CMOS. Bandwidth of this filter is programmable between 400 kHz to 30 MHz with 100 dB maximum stop-band rejection. Its IIP3 is +21 dBm and the averaged spot noise is 4.57 nV/\surd Hz. It consumes 2 mW at 1.2 V and occupies 0.42 mm 2.
CITATION STYLE
Tohidian, M., Madadi, I., & Staszewski, R. B. (2014). Analysis and design of a high-order discrete-time passive IIR low-pass filter. IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 49(11), 2575–2587. https://doi.org/10.1109/JSSC.2014.2359656
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.