This book shows that digitally assisted analog to digital converters are
not the only way to cope with poor analog performance caused by
technology scaling. It describes various analog design techniques that
enhance the area and power efficiency without employing any type of
digital calibration circuitry. These techniques consist of self-biasing
for PVT enhancement, inverter-based design for improved speed/power
ratio, gain-of-two obtained by voltage sum instead of charge
redistribution, and current-mode reference shifting instead of voltage
reference shifting. Together, these techniques allow enhancing the area
and power efficiency of the main building blocks of a multiplying
digital-to-analog converter (MDAC) based stage, namely, the flash
quantizer, the amplifier, and the switched capacitor network of the
MDAC. Complementing the theoretical analyses of the various techniques,
a power efficient operational transconductance amplifier is implemented
and experimentally characterized. Furthermore, a medium-low resolution
reference-free high-speed time-interleaved pipeline ADC employing all
mentioned design techniques and circuits is presented, implemented and
experimentally characterized. This ADC is said to be reference-free
because it precludes any reference voltage, therefore saving power and
area, as reference circuits are not necessary. Experimental results
demonstrate the potential of the techniques which enabled the
implementation of area and power efficient circuits.