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Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs) play an important role in most
modern signal processing and wireless communication systems where
extensive signal manipulation is necessary to be performed by
complicated digital signal processing (DSP) circuitry. This trend
also creates the possibility of fabricating all functional blocks
of a system in a single chip (System On Chip - SoC), with great
reductions in cost, chip area and power consumption. However, this
tendency places an increasing challenge, in terms of speed,
resolution, power consumption, and noise performance, in the design
of the front-end ADC which is usually the bottleneck of the whole
system, especially under the unavoidable low supply-voltage imposed
by technology scaling, as well as the requirement of battery
operated portable devices. Generalized Low-Voltage Circuit
Techniques for Very High-Speed Time-Interleaved Analog-to-Digital
Converters will present new techniques tailored for low-voltage and
high-speed Switched-Capacitor (SC) ADC with various design-specific
considerations.
Technology-assisted People-to-People (P2P) interactions, embedded
in a global environment, will be at the core of 21st century
communications and will command the technological development of
the forthcoming future. The intelligent interactivity of people,
process (delivering the right information to the right
person/machine at the right time), data and things, incorporates
the Internet-of-Everything (IoE) that expands itself beyond the
Internet-of-Things (IoT). In general, IoT comprises all physical or
cyber objects (things) with an address that can transmit data
(without human-to-machine interactions), while the IoE also
involves communications among the users and the whole universe of
electronic gadgets. Further, they both operate with data acquired
from analog sources, thus connecting two different realities, the
analog (physical/real) and the digital (cyber/virtual) worlds.
Since the interface between the two realms deals with analog
signals, its mandatory functions integrate several analog and
mixed-signal sub-systems that include signal sensing, transmission
and reception, frequency generation, energy harvesting, in-memory
processing, data and power conversion. This publication presents
state-of-the-art designs of the most critical building blocks of
the analog/digital interface highlighting new and innovative
circuit architectures and techniques. It addresses capacitive
sensor interfaces, ultra-low-power wireless transceivers, key
technologies for wireline transceivers, oscillators and frequency
generators, integrated energy harvesting interfaces, in-memory
processing, as well as, data and power converters, all exhibiting
high quality performance with low power consumption, high
energy-efficiency and high speed, thus enabling a reliable and
consistent development of the IoE while enlarging its frontiers. In
the coming decades, with the continuous evolution of electronics
downscaling, the challenges that the above-mentioned sub-systems
face will be tremendous in terms of the requirements for ultra-low
power and ultra-high speed, obtained with the maximum
energy-efficiency. Thus, the analog and mixed-signal very large
scale integration area of work will continue to be an attractive
field for research for design engineers both in the academia and in
the industry, as it has been always the case since the emergence of
silicon planar electronics 6 decades ago.
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