DESIGN OF HIGH-SPEED COMMUNICATION CIRCUITS
edited by Ramesh Harjani (University of Minnesota, USA)
MOS technology has rapidly become the de facto standard for mixed-signal integrated circuit design due to the high levels of integration possible as device geometries shrink to nanometer scales. The reduction in feature size means that the number of transistor and clock speeds have increased significantly. In fact, current day microprocessors contain hundreds of millions of transistors operating at multiple gigahertz. Furthermore, this reduction in feature size also has a significant impact on mixed-signal circuits. Due to the higher levels of integration, the majority of ASICs possesses some analog components. It has now become nearly mandatory to integrate both analog and digital circuits on the same substrate due to cost and power constraints. This book presents some of the newer problems and opportunities offered by the small device geometries and the high levels of integration that is now possible.
The aim of this book is to summarize some of the most critical aspects of high-speed analog/RF communications circuits. Attention is focused on the impact of scaling, substrate noise, data converters, RF and wireless communication circuits and wireline communication circuits, including high-speed I/O.
Contents:
- Achieving Analog Accuracy in Nanometer CMOS (M P Flynn et al.)
- Self-Induced Noise in Integrated Circuits (R Gharpurey & S Naraghi)
- High-Speed Oversampling Analog-to-Digital Converters (A Gharbiya et al.)
- Designing LC VCOs Using Capacitive Degeneration Techniques (B Jung & R Harjani)
- Fully Integrated Frequency Synthesizers: A Tutorial (S T Moon et al.)
- Recent Advances and Design Trends in CMOS Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits (D J Allstot et al.)
- Equalizers for High-Speed Serial Links (P K Hanumolu et al.)
- Low-Power, Parallel Interface with Continuous-Time Adaptive Passive Equalizer and Crosstalk Cancellation (C P Yue et al.)
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Readership: Technologists, scientists, and engineers in the field of high-speed communication circuits. It can also be used as a textbook for graduate and advanced undergraduate courses.