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The work presented in this book concerns power, noise and accuracy
in CMOS Analog IC Design. In the presented material it is shown
that power, noise and accuracy should be treated in an unitary way,
the three terms being well inter-related. This book is divided in a
theoretical part which covers sub-micron digital and sub-micron
analog followed by an applicative part where accuracy related power
and noise related power is encountered.
The work presented in Power Trade-offs and Low Power in Analog CMOS
ICs concerns power, noise and accuracy in CMOS Analog IC Design. In
the presented material it is shown that power, noise and accuracy
should be treated in an unitary way, the three terms being well
inter-related. The book is divided in a theoretical part which
covers sub-micron digital and sub-micron analog followed by an
applicative part where accuracy related power and noise related
power is encountered.
The main part of the book deals with analog circuits working in a
digital environment where the process has been optimized for
digital applications. The general trend, in digital, to scale down
the power supply makes the process of designing analog circuits a
difficult task since most of the solutions valid for large supply
voltages are not anymore useful due to the low voltage limitations.
At low supply voltage, the key problem of analog signal processing
functions is dynamic range reduction. In all cases this yields in
an increase of power consumption. Besides, analog designers have to
cope with second order effects generated by the incompatibility of
the process with analog performance.
To get the best performance, knowing the limits of power in analog
circuits and clearly defining the environment where analog circuits
should work is a must. Starting from fundamental/physical limits we
are discussing the practical limits of power in digital, mostly at
the architecture level and practical limits of power in analog at
circuit and architecture level. The fundamental limits are
asymptotic limits and they cannot provide realistic comparisons
between possible solutions. That is why the approach here provides
a step further into power analysis by discussing all possible
practical specs related to power at circuit and architecture level.
For analog circuits Dynamic-Range*Speed product is limited by
power, topology and supply voltage regardless of the type of
circuits: continuous time or sampled data, current-mode or voltage
mode.
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