US20020171576A1 - Digital to analog converter - Google Patents
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- US20020171576A1 US20020171576A1 US09/829,554 US82955401A US2002171576A1 US 20020171576 A1 US20020171576 A1 US 20020171576A1 US 82955401 A US82955401 A US 82955401A US 2002171576 A1 US2002171576 A1 US 2002171576A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03M—CODING; DECODING; CODE CONVERSION IN GENERAL
- H03M1/00—Analogue/digital conversion; Digital/analogue conversion
- H03M1/66—Digital/analogue converters
- H03M1/82—Digital/analogue converters with intermediate conversion to time interval
- H03M1/822—Digital/analogue converters with intermediate conversion to time interval using pulse width modulation
- H03M1/827—Digital/analogue converters with intermediate conversion to time interval using pulse width modulation in which the total pulse width is distributed over multiple shorter pulse widths
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- DACs Digital to analog converters
- DACs Digital to analog converters
- Traditionally when converting bits of a word to an analog signal at least one resistor is needed for conversion of each bit of the word.
- conventional current summing digital to analog converters become more and more difficult to manufacture using chip technology as the number of bits per word increases.
- a digital to analog converter includes a multi-bit counter and a first and a second plurality of logic gates coupled to the multi-bit counter.
- the converter further includes a digital input selectively coupled to the first and second plurality of logic gates a first AND gate coupled to an output of the first plurality of logic gates and a second AND gate coupled to an output of the second plurality of logic gates.
- the converter includes a clock coupled to an input of the first and second AND gates and a filter coupled to an output of the first and second AND gates.
- the filter includes an output for an analog signal based on the digital input.
- a method of converting a multi-bit digital input signal to an analog signal includes receiving a digital number and converting the digital number to a series of pulses. The method further includes summing the series of pulses. The pulses in a predetermined period represent the received digital number. In addition, the method includes applying a clock signal to the sum of the series of pulses to obtain an analog signal that represents the digital number.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of an embodiment of a digital to analog converter according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIGS. 2 a - f are graphs that illustrate an example of the resulting signal of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 2 h is a graph that illustrates and example of a clock signal.
- FIG. 3 is a graph that illustrates an example of an analog output signal of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 4 is a graph that illustrates an example of a filtered analog output signal of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram of another embodiment of a digital to analog converter according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 6 is a schematic of one embodiment of a test board having a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 1 is an illustration of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter (DAC) indicated generally at 100 and constructed according to the teachings of the present invention.
- DAC 100 generates a train of pulses that are substantially spread over a time interval with the number of pulses based on the digital input number that is being converted to an analog representation. The time interval is affected by a clock input that aids in converting low frequency harmonics to high frequency. The high frequency harmonics are then easily filtered out using a simple low pass filter.
- Converter 100 includes a counter 106 that is coupled to a first and a second plurality of logic gates 102 and 104 , respectively.
- counter 106 is a 4-bit counter.
- counter 106 includes clock input 190 (CLK).
- counter 106 includes seven separate outputs Q 0 to Q 3 and NQ 0 to NQ 2 wherein the NQ outputs are the inverse of the corresponding Q output. For example when Q 0 is 1 then NQ 0 is 0 and vice versa.
- counter 106 is a 4-bit counter representing Q 0 to Q 3 and includes three inverters to convert Q 0 to Q 2 to NQ 0 to Q 2 .
- the first plurality of logic gates 104 includes four AND gates 111 , 113 , 115 and 117 and one OR gate 119 .
- OR gate 119 is coupled to the output of AND gates 111 , 113 , 115 and 117 .
- the second plurality of logic gates 102 includes four AND gates 101 , 103 , 105 and 107 and one OR gate 109 .
- OR gate 109 is coupled to the output of AND gates 101 , 103 , 105 and 107 .
- Each AND gate 111 , 113 , 115 and 117 of the first plurality of logic gates 104 and 101 , 103 , 105 and 107 of the second plurality of logic gates 102 produces pulses at a different frequency. Further, no pulses of the first plurality of logic gates 104 overlap in time and no pulses of the second plurality of logic gates 102 overlap in time. In one embodiment, each AND gate of the first or second plurality of logic gates 104 or 102 produces pulses with frequencies that are multiples of 2 of the other frequencies, e.g. the frequency of the output of AND gate 117 is twice the frequency of the output of AND gate 115 which is twice the frequency of AND gate 113 which is twice the frequency of AND gate 111 .
- no pulses overlap in time due to the selection of inputs provided by counter 106 . Since the pulses do not overlap in time the outputs of the AND gates, e.g., 111 , 113 , 115 and 117 can be summed with and OR logic gate such as 119 .
- the output of the first plurality of logic gates 104 is coupled to an input of AND gate 110 .
- the output of the second plurality of logic gates 102 is coupled to an input of AND gate 112 .
- a second input of AND gate 110 is coupled to a clock 108 .
- a second input of AND gate 112 is also coupled to clock 108 .
- the CLK input 190 of counter 106 is coupled to clock 108 .
- the outputs of AND gates 110 and 112 are coupled to a filter 118 .
- Filter 118 includes an output 167 for an analog signal based on a digital input signal via L 0 to L 7 . In one embodiment, filter 118 is a low pass filter.
- filter 118 comprises a first resistor 120 coupled to the output of AND gate 110 and a second resistor 122 coupled to the output of AND gate 112 .
- Resistor 120 and 122 are coupled in parallel and are coupled in series with a capacitor 124 .
- resistor 120 is sixteen times the value of resistor 122 , as further described below.
- counter 106 counts between 0 and 15 on the output of Q 0 to Q 3 , changing the state on each clock pulse coming from CLK input 190 .
- the binary outputs of counter 106 are represented in Table 1 beginning with 0 ( 0000 ) and going up to 15 ( 1111 ).
- information is input to the first and second plurality of logic gates 104 and 102 via inputs L 0 to L 7 .
- L 7 representing the most significant bit and L 0 the least significant bit in an 8-bit word that is to be converted from a digital word to an analog output.
- the voltage measured on the output of converter 100 is proportional to the value input via L 0 to L 7 .
- the first and the second plurality of logic gates 104 and 102 each perform pulse width modulation on the received input signals L 0 to L 3 and L 4 to L 7 , respectively.
- L 0 , L 1 , L 2 and L 3 are all high or 1 's
- the output of AND gates 111 , 113 , 115 , and 117 as counter 106 counts between 0 and 15 are graphically depicted in FIGS. 2 a , 2 b , 2 c , and 2 d , respectively.
- the plurality of logic gates 104 operate on 4-bits L 3 L 2 L 1 L 0 and the plurality of logic gates 102 operate on a second 4-bits L 7 L 6 L 5 L 4 .
- Digital to analog converter 106 is capable of converting up to an 8-bit word.
- the first and second plurality of logic gates 104 and 102 include the same hardware, four AND logic gates and 1 OR logic gate configured the same and receiving the corresponding inputs, Q 0 to Q 4 and NQ 0 to NQ 2 from counter 106 .
- the first and second logic gates 104 and 102 differ in that they operate on different 4-bit inputs L 0 to L 3 and L 4 to L 7 , respectively.
- the OR gates 119 and 109 of plurality of logic gates 104 and 102 respectively, each receives the outputs of their respective AND gates, adds the outputs together, and transmits the resulting sum to associated AND gates 110 and 112 respectively.
- the outputs of AND gates 110 and 112 depend on the outputs of OR gates 119 and 109 , respectively, and on the output of clock 108 .
- the clock pulses of clock 108 acting on the other inputs of AND gates 110 and 112 prevent the outputs of AND gates 110 and 112 from depending on transient events which take place in counter 106 and in sets of logic gates 102 and 104 . As a result, the low frequency noise from the transients is not allowed to reach analog output 167 .
- the outputs of AND gate 111 for the least significant bit L 0 of the 4-bit input L 3 L 2 L 1 L 0 is the same as the output of AND gate 101 for the least significant bit L 4 of the 4-bit input L 7 L 6 L 5 L 4 when L 0 and L 4 are both high or both low.
- the voltage output for the plurality of logic gates 102 has to be increased by a proportional amount or the voltage output for the plurality of logic gates 104 has to be decreased by a proportional amount.
- Each bit L 0 to L 7 represents a number twice as large as the next higher bit.
- each bit of 4-bit input L 3 L 2 L 1 L 0 can be represented with respect to each bit of the 4-bit input L 7 L 6 L 5 L 4 as follows:
- Resistors 120 and 122 are sized to compensate for this difference in value.
- the value for 122 is ⁇ fraction (1/16) ⁇ th of the value for resistor 120 .
- the same clock can be use for each of logic circuits 102 and 104 .
- an 8-bit output is produced using only a 4-bit clock counter 106 during 16 clock periods.
- AND gates 110 and 112 each receive two inputs. One input from their respective plurality of logic gates 104 and 102 and another from a common clock 108 .
- AND gate 110 takes an output such as that depicted in FIG. 2 e, and produces an output to resistor 120 based on clock 108 .
- the shape of the pulses coming out of AND gates 110 and 112 do not depend on various transients.
- output pulses of AND gates 110 and 112 are of the same shape.
- the graph marked by diamonds of FIG. 3 is a graph that illustrates the log power spectrum of the analog output 167 based on a representative digital input.
- the graph includes high frequency harmonics that are then filtered out by a low pass filter such as 118 .
- the resultant output is illustrated by the graph marked by diamonds of FIG. 4 where the high frequency signals have been filtered out leaving only the analog output signal having good spectral purity.
- FIG. 5 is an illustration of another embodiment of a digital to analog converter indicated generally at 500 and constructed according to the teachings of the present invention.
- DAC 500 includes a plurality of 4-bit logic circuits 550 - 1 to 550 -K. Each logic circuit 550 - 1 to 550 -K includes a plurality of logic gates such as 104 as described with respect to FIG. 1 above.
- DAC 500 includes a counter 506 having outputs Q 0 to Q 3 and NQ 0 to NQ 2 where the NQ outputs are the inverse of the corresponding Q 0 output and a clock input 590 (CLK) coupled to clock 508 .
- CLK clock input 590
- Logic circuit 550 - 1 receives up to a 4-bit input L 0 to L 3
- logic circuit 550 - 1 receives up to a 4-bit input L 4 to L 7
- DAC 500 is expandable by 4-bit increments.
- the outputs of logic gates 550 - 1 to 550 -K are input to corresponding AND gates 510 - 1 to 510 -K.
- AND gates 510 - 1 to 510 -K also receive a clock signal input from clock 508 .
- the outputs of AND gates 510 - 1 to 510 -K are passed through a filter 518 to filter out any spurious signals.
- Filter 518 includes an output 567 for an analog signal based on a digital input signal via L 0 to LX.
- filter 518 is a low pass filter.
- filter 518 includes a plurality of resistors 520 - 1 to 520 -K coupled in parallel and a capacitor C 1 coupled in series with resistors 520 - 1 to 520 -K. Each resistor value is proportional to the next resistor.
- resistor 520 - 1 is equal to 16 n times the value of resistor 520 -K
- n is equal to (x ⁇ 3)/4
- Resistor 520 - 2 is equal to 16 n ⁇ 1 times the value of resistor 520 -K.
- the result is an (x+1)-bit Digital to Analog converter 500 that requires a minimum of two resistors as compared to a conventional DAC that would require a minimum of (x+1)/4 resistors to operate.
- DAC 100 described with respect to FIG. 1 is an 8-bit converter and converter 500 described with respect to FIG. 5 is an (x+1)-bit converter the described logic circuit designed may be employed to operate any sized DAC.
- FIG. 6 shows a test board schematic 600 and includes another embodiment of a DAC, shown generally at 660 and constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- the DAC 660 differs in hardware from DAC 100 shown in FIG. 1, but is functionally equivalent.
- the DAC 660 under test is implemented by: a 4-bit counter 601 , an inverter 602 , two 16-bit “parallel in-serial out” registers 603 , 604 (each of them is built up from 2 8-bit subunits 630 and 632 , and 620 and 622 respectively), two AND gates 605 , 606 , two clock inverters 607 , 608 , two resistors 609 , 611 and clock source 613 .
- DAC such as 660 : an analog signal source 614 , an Analog to Digital converter (ADC) 610 , a conventional digital to analog converter 612 and resistor 650 .
- ADC Analog to Digital converter
- DB 7 to P 7 , P 5 , P 3 , P 1 of sub-unit 630 and P 7 , P 5 , P 3 , P 1 of sub-unit 632 ; corresponding 8-bits in sub-units 630 and 632 will store the DB 7 value;
- DB 6 to P 6 , P 2 of sub-unit 630 and P 6 , P 2 of sub-unit 632 ; corresponding 4-bits in sub-units 630 and 632 will store the DB 6 value;
- DB 5 to P 4 of sub-unit 630 and P 4 of sub-unit 632 ; corresponding 2-bits in sub-units 630 and 632 will store the DB 5 value;
- DB 4 to P 0 of sub-unit 632 only; corresponding 1 bit in sub-unit 632 will store the D 4 value.
- Logic low to P 0 of sub-unit 630 is connected to ground.
- DB 3 to P 7 , P 5 , P 3 , P 1 of sub-unit 620 and P 7 , P 5 , P 3 , P 1 of sub-unit corresponding 8-bits in sub-units 620 and 622 will store the DB 3 value;
- DB 2 to P 6 , P 2 of sub-unit 620 and P 6 , P 2 of sub-unit 622 ; corresponding 4-bits in sub-units 620 and 622 will store the DB 2 value;
- DB 1 to P 4 of sub-unit 620 and P 4 of sub-unit 622 ; corresponding 2-bits in sub-units 620 and 622 will store the DB 1 value;
- DB 0 to P 0 of sub-unit 622 only; corresponding 1 bit in sub-unit 622 will store the DB 0 value.
- Logic low to P 0 of sub-unit 620 is connected to ground..
- the output labeled Q 7 of sub-unit 632 reflects the value stored from P 7 of sub-unit 632 .
- the register 603 on each clock pulse CP 1 shifts the stored values right, in turn bringing to output Q 7 of sub-unit 632 values, once stored from P 6 , P 5 , . . . P 0 of sub-unit 632 and then P 7 , P 6 , . . . P 0 of sub-unit 630 .
- This way the entire 16-bits bits stored in the sub-units 630 and 632 of register 603 will appear in turn on the output Q 7 output of sub-unit 632 .
- the DB 6 high value will be reflected by 4 high level pulses on output Q 7 of sub-unit 632
- the DB 5 high value will result in 2 high level pulses on output Q 7 of sub-unit 632
- the DB 4 high level will result in 1 high level pulse on output Q 7 of sub-unit 632 .
- Register 604 operates in the same way as register 603 with output on Q 7 of sub-unit 622 .
- the total width of the high level pulses on output Q 7 of sub-unit 633 is proportional to the number from 0 to 15, binary represented by 4 less significant ADC 610 output bits (DB 3 . . . DB 0 ).
- Output Q 7 of sub-unit 632 is connected to one of AND gate 605 inputs, the second input of AND gate 605 is connected to the clock inverter 608 output. This connection allows minimized pulse-to-pulse interaction that in turn allows for low frequency noise reduction.
- the output of AND gate 605 is connected to the final converter output 667 via resistor 609 .
- output Q 7 of sub-unit 622 is connected to one of AND gate 606 inputs, the second input of AND gate 606 is connected to the clock inverter 607 output.
- This connection allows minimized pulse-to-pulse interaction, which in turn allows for low frequency noise reduction.
- the output of AND gate 606 is connected to the final converter output 667 via resistor 611 .
- the resistance values for 609 and 611 relate as 1:16, thus accounting for the 16:1 weights difference between the 4 most significant bits of ADC 610 output (DB 7 -DB 4 ) and the 4 less significant bits of ADC 610 output (DB 3 -DB 0 ).
- a reference analog voltage source 614 (2.5 V sine wave plus 2.5 V DC offset) is connected to the ADC 610 input (CNVRT), and 8 inputs DB 7 . . . DB 0 of a conventional reference DAC 612 are connected to the 8 ADC 610 outputs DB 7 . . . DB 0 .
- Test board schematic 600 has been simulated using PSpice simulation. PSpice is an industry standard program that allows you to perform computer simulations of electronic circuits
- the simulation results are shown in two graphs on FIG. 3.
- the first graph marked by rectangles, shows the log power spectrum of the reference DAC 612
- the second graph marked by diamonds, reflects the log power spectrum of the output 667 of proposed converter 660 .
- both reference and proposed converters have about 60 dB of spurious free dynamic range, and for higher frequencies the proposed converter leaves only about 48 dB free of spurious. This shows the advantage in moving the noise to high frequencies.
- the hardware performance of converters 100 , 500 and 660 depends first of all on the accuracy of the resistors 120 and 122 , 520 - 1 . . . 520 -k, 609 and 611 , respectively.
- the absolute values of these resistors are less important as the linearity depends on the relative values—R120/R122, R520-1/R520-2. . . , R520-k-1/R520-k and R609/R611.
- converter 100 will be forced to run on three input code sets:
- a digital to analog converter includes a multi-bit counter and a first and a second plurality of logic gates coupled to the multi-bit counter.
- the converter further includes a digital input selectively coupled to the first and second plurality of logic gates a first AND gate coupled to an output of the first plurality of logic gates and a second AND gate coupled to an output of the second plurality of logic gates.
- the converter includes a clock coupled to an input of the first and second AND gates and a filter coupled to an output of the first and second AND gates.
- the filter includes an output for an analog signal based on the digital input.
- a method of converting a multi-bit digital input signal to an analog signal includes receiving a digital number and converting the digital number to a series of pulses. The method further includes summing the series of pulses. The pulses in a predetermined period represent the received digital number. In addition, the method includes applying a clock signal to the sum of the series of pulses to obtain an analog signal that represents the digital number.
- the digital to analog converter may be expanded from an 8 -bit DAC to an n-bit DAC by increasing the size of the multi-bit counter and adding AND gates to the first and second plurality of logic gates using the same logic scheme as used in the 8-bit DAC.
- the multi-bit counter would be increased to a 6-bit counter and the first and second plurality of logic circuits would each include 2 additional AND gates.
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Abstract
Description
- The present invention relates generally to the field of electronic circuits and in particular to digital to analog converters.
- Digital to analog converters (DACs) are well known and are used to convert digital signals representing information into analog signals representing the same information. Traditionally when converting bits of a word to an analog signal at least one resistor is needed for conversion of each bit of the word. As a result conventional current summing digital to analog converters become more and more difficult to manufacture using chip technology as the number of bits per word increases.
- When designing circuits space is at a premium. As a result, the space used for digital to analog converters should be carefully controlled. In some systems, both analog and digital signals are used. In such “mixed-mode” systems, digital to analog (D/A) and/or analog to digital (A/D) converters are used in the circuit to allow the mixed-mode system on a single chip. In addition to space requirements, other issues such as problems with wiring and routing are often found when utilizing discrete components. In addition, the cost of manufacturing units having discrete components as compared to chip technology is high. Further, the number of possible error locations also increases with discrete components as compared with a single chip. Even when employing separate chips for the D/A and the A/D converters has the drawback of requiring an interface between the chips. Some existing DACs use pulse width modulation to generate a proportional analog output. Unfortunately, these DACs often introduce a significant amount of low frequency noise into the analog signals.
- For the reasons stated above, and for other reasons stated below which will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading and understanding the present specification, there is a need in the art for improvements in digital to analog converters.
- The above mentioned problems with digital to analog converters in current chip technology and other problems are addressed by embodiments of the present invention and will be understood by reading and studying the following specification.
- In one embodiment, a digital to analog converter is provided. The converter includes a multi-bit counter and a first and a second plurality of logic gates coupled to the multi-bit counter. The converter further includes a digital input selectively coupled to the first and second plurality of logic gates a first AND gate coupled to an output of the first plurality of logic gates and a second AND gate coupled to an output of the second plurality of logic gates. In addition, the converter includes a clock coupled to an input of the first and second AND gates and a filter coupled to an output of the first and second AND gates. The filter includes an output for an analog signal based on the digital input.
- In another embodiment, a method of converting a multi-bit digital input signal to an analog signal is provided. The method includes receiving a digital number and converting the digital number to a series of pulses. The method further includes summing the series of pulses. The pulses in a predetermined period represent the received digital number. In addition, the method includes applying a clock signal to the sum of the series of pulses to obtain an analog signal that represents the digital number.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of an embodiment of a digital to analog converter according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIGS. 2 a-f are graphs that illustrate an example of the resulting signal of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 2 h is a graph that illustrates and example of a clock signal.
- FIG. 3 is a graph that illustrates an example of an analog output signal of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 4 is a graph that illustrates an example of a filtered analog output signal of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram of another embodiment of a digital to analog converter according to the teachings of this invention.
- FIG. 6 is a schematic of one embodiment of a test board having a digital to analog converter constructed according to the teachings of this invention.
- In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration specific illustrative embodiments in which the invention may be practiced. These embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention, and it is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and that logical, mechanical and electrical changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. The following detailed description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense.
- FIG. 1 is an illustration of one embodiment of a digital to analog converter (DAC) indicated generally at 100 and constructed according to the teachings of the present invention.
DAC 100 generates a train of pulses that are substantially spread over a time interval with the number of pulses based on the digital input number that is being converted to an analog representation. The time interval is affected by a clock input that aids in converting low frequency harmonics to high frequency. The high frequency harmonics are then easily filtered out using a simple low pass filter. -
Converter 100 includes acounter 106 that is coupled to a first and a second plurality of 102 and 104, respectively. In one embodiment,logic gates counter 106 is a 4-bit counter. In one embodiment,counter 106 includes clock input 190 (CLK). In one embodiment,counter 106 includes seven separate outputs Q0 to Q3 and NQ0 to NQ2 wherein the NQ outputs are the inverse of the corresponding Q output. For example when Q0 is 1 then NQ0 is 0 and vice versa. In another embodiment,counter 106 is a 4-bit counter representing Q0 to Q3 and includes three inverters to convert Q0 to Q2 to NQ0 to Q2. - The first plurality of
logic gates 104 includes four 111, 113, 115 and 117 and one ORAND gates gate 119. ORgate 119 is coupled to the output of 111, 113, 115 and 117. The second plurality ofAND gates logic gates 102 includes four 101, 103, 105 and 107 and one ORAND gates gate 109. ORgate 109 is coupled to the output of 101, 103, 105 and 107.AND gates - Each AND
111, 113, 115 and 117of the first plurality ofgate 104 and 101, 103, 105 and 107 of the second plurality oflogic gates logic gates 102 produces pulses at a different frequency. Further, no pulses of the first plurality oflogic gates 104 overlap in time and no pulses of the second plurality oflogic gates 102 overlap in time. In one embodiment, each AND gate of the first or second plurality of 104 or 102 produces pulses with frequencies that are multiples of 2 of the other frequencies, e.g. the frequency of the output oflogic gates AND gate 117 is twice the frequency of the output ofAND gate 115 which is twice the frequency ofAND gate 113 which is twice the frequency of AND gate 111. In one embodiment, based on the frequency of the clock (ƒclock) ofcounter 106 the frequency of the outputs of AND gates of the first or second plurality of 104 or 102 are equal to the following: ƒAND117=ƒclock/2,ƒAND115=ƒclock/4,ƒAND113=ƒclock/8,ƒAND111=ƒclock/16. Again, no pulses overlap in time due to the selection of inputs provided bylogic gates counter 106. Since the pulses do not overlap in time the outputs of the AND gates, e.g., 111 , 113, 115 and 117 can be summed with and OR logic gate such as 119. - The output of the first plurality of
logic gates 104 is coupled to an input ofAND gate 110. The output of the second plurality oflogic gates 102 is coupled to an input ofAND gate 112. A second input ofAND gate 110 is coupled to aclock 108. A second input of ANDgate 112 is also coupled toclock 108. TheCLK input 190 ofcounter 106 is coupled toclock 108. The outputs of AND 110 and 112 are coupled to agates filter 118.Filter 118 includes anoutput 167 for an analog signal based on a digital input signal via L0 to L7. In one embodiment,filter 118 is a low pass filter. In one embodiment,filter 118 comprises afirst resistor 120 coupled to the output of ANDgate 110 and asecond resistor 122 coupled to the output of ANDgate 112. 120 and 122 are coupled in parallel and are coupled in series with aResistor capacitor 124. In one embodiment,resistor 120 is sixteen times the value ofresistor 122, as further described below. - In operation, counter 106 counts between 0 and 15 on the output of Q0 to Q3, changing the state on each clock pulse coming from
CLK input 190. The binary outputs ofcounter 106 are represented in Table 1 beginning with 0 (0000) and going up to 15 (1111). Ascounter 106 operates, information is input to the first and second plurality of 104 and 102 via inputs L0 to L7. L7 representing the most significant bit and L0 the least significant bit in an 8-bit word that is to be converted from a digital word to an analog output. The voltage measured on the output oflogic gates converter 100 is proportional to the value input via L0 to L7. For example, if operating on a 0 to 5 volt scale to representment 0 to 255 received on the input L0 to L7 is represented by approximately 0.02 volts on the output.TABLE 1 Q3 Q2 Q1 Q0 NQ2 NQ1 NQ0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 3 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 5 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 6 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 8 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 9 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 10 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 11 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 12 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 13 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 14 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 - The first and the second plurality of
104 and 102 each perform pulse width modulation on the received input signals L0 to L3 and L4 to L7, respectively. By example, for an input of 15 wherein L0, L1, L2 and L3 are all high or 1's the output of ANDlogic gates 111, 113, 115, and 117 asgates counter 106 counts between 0 and 15 are graphically depicted in FIGS. 2a, 2 b, 2 c, and 2 d, respectively. When L3 and L2 are high and L1 and L9 are low (1100) representing thenumber 12 the sum of pulse widths of the output of ORgate 119 sums to 12 pulse from AND 117 and 115. The output is graphically depicted in FIG. 2e. The total pulse width of the pulses shown adds to 12. When L3 and L1 are high and L1 and L2 are low (1001) representing thegates number 9 the sum of the pulse widths of the output of ORgate 119 sums to 9. The output is graphically depicted in FIG. 2f. Theclock input 190 is graphically depicted in FIG. 2h. - The plurality of
logic gates 104 operate on 4-bits L3L2L1L0 and the plurality oflogic gates 102 operate on a second 4-bits L7L6L5L4. Digital toanalog converter 106 is capable of converting up to an 8-bit word. The first and second plurality of 104 and 102 include the same hardware, four AND logic gates and 1 OR logic gate configured the same and receiving the corresponding inputs, Q0 to Q4 and NQ0 to NQ2 fromlogic gates counter 106. The first and 104 and 102 differ in that they operate on different 4-bit inputs L0 to L3 and L4 to L7, respectively. The ORsecond logic gates 119 and 109 of plurality ofgates 104 and 102, respectively, each receives the outputs of their respective AND gates, adds the outputs together, and transmits the resulting sum to associated ANDlogic gates 110 and 112 respectively.gates - The outputs of AND
110 and 112 depend on the outputs of ORgates 119 and 109, respectively, and on the output ofgates clock 108. The clock pulses ofclock 108, acting on the other inputs of AND 110 and 112 prevent the outputs of ANDgates 110 and 112 from depending on transient events which take place ingates counter 106 and in sets of 102 and 104. As a result, the low frequency noise from the transients is not allowed to reachlogic gates analog output 167. - The outputs of AND gate 111 for the least significant bit L0 of the 4-bit input L3L2L1L0 is the same as the output of AND
gate 101 for the least significant bit L4 of the 4-bit input L7L6L5L4 when L0 and L4 are both high or both low. In order to represent an analog output which corresponds to the 8-bit digital input (L7L6L5L4L3L2L1L0) the voltage output for the plurality oflogic gates 102 has to be increased by a proportional amount or the voltage output for the plurality oflogic gates 104 has to be decreased by a proportional amount. Each bit L0 to L7 represents a number twice as large as the next higher bit. For example if L0 represents 1 then, L1 represents 2L0 (2), L2 represents 2L1 (4) or 4L0, L3 represents 2L2 (8) or 8L0, L4 represents 2L3 (16) or 16L0, L5 represents 2L4 (32) or 32L0, L6 represents 2L5(64) or 64L0 and L7 represents 2L6 (128) or 128 L0. In one embodiment, in order to represent the output of the second plurality oflogic gates 102 in relationship to the output of the first plurality oflogic gates 104, each bit of 4-bit input L3L2L1L0 can be represented with respect to each bit of the 4-bit input L7L6L5L4 as follows: - 16L3=L7
- 16L2=L6
- 16L1=L5
- 16L0=L4
- Resistors 120 and 122 are sized to compensate for this difference in value. For example, the value for 122 is {fraction (1/16)}th of the value for
resistor 120. Thus the same clock can be use for each of 102 and 104. Advantageously, an 8-bit output is produced using only a 4-logic circuits bit clock counter 106 during 16 clock periods. - In one embodiment, AND
110 and 112 each receive two inputs. One input from their respective plurality ofgates 104 and 102 and another from alogic gates common clock 108. ANDgate 110 takes an output such as that depicted in FIG. 2e, and produces an output to resistor 120 based onclock 108. As thesame clock 108 affects thecounter 106 simultaneously with AND 110 and 112, the shape of the pulses coming out of ANDgates 110 and 112 do not depend on various transients. As a result output pulses of ANDgates 110 and 112 are of the same shape.gates - By example the graph marked by diamonds of FIG. 3 is a graph that illustrates the log power spectrum of the
analog output 167 based on a representative digital input. The graph includes high frequency harmonics that are then filtered out by a low pass filter such as 118. The resultant output is illustrated by the graph marked by diamonds of FIG. 4 where the high frequency signals have been filtered out leaving only the analog output signal having good spectral purity. - FIG. 5 is an illustration of another embodiment of a digital to analog converter indicated generally at 500 and constructed according to the teachings of the present invention. DAC 500 includes a plurality of 4-bit logic circuits 550-1 to 550-K. Each logic circuit 550-1 to 550-K includes a plurality of logic gates such as 104 as described with respect to FIG. 1 above. DAC 500 includes a
counter 506 having outputs Q0 to Q3 and NQ0 to NQ2 where the NQ outputs are the inverse of the corresponding Q0 output and a clock input 590 (CLK) coupled toclock 508. Logic circuit 550-1 receives up to a 4-bit input L0 to L3, logic circuit 550-1 receives up to a 4-bit input L4 to L7 and logic circuit 550-K receives up to a 4-bit input Lx-3 to Lx (Lx being the most significant bit), x represents the maximum number of bits minus one (Bmax−1). So for a 16 bit input x=(Bmax−1) therefore x=(16−1)=15. DAC 500 is expandable by 4-bit increments. The outputs of logic gates 550-1 to 550-K are input to corresponding AND gates 510-1 to 510-K. AND gates 510-1 to 510-K also receive a clock signal input fromclock 508. The outputs of AND gates 510-1 to 510-K are passed through afilter 518 to filter out any spurious signals.Filter 518 includes an output 567 for an analog signal based on a digital input signal via L0 to LX. In one embodiment,filter 518 is a low pass filter. In one embodiment,filter 518 includes a plurality of resistors 520-1 to 520-K coupled in parallel and a capacitor C1 coupled in series with resistors 520-1 to 520-K. Each resistor value is proportional to the next resistor. For example resistor 520-1 is equal to 16n times the value of resistor 520-K, n is equal to (x−3)/4. Resistor 520-2 is equal to 16n−1 times the value of resistor 520-K. The result is an (x+1)-bit Digital to Analog converter 500 that requires a minimum of two resistors as compared to a conventional DAC that would require a minimum of (x+1)/4 resistors to operate. - It is understood that although
DAC 100 described with respect to FIG. 1 is an 8-bit converter and converter 500 described with respect to FIG. 5 is an (x+1)-bit converter the described logic circuit designed may be employed to operate any sized DAC. - FIG. 6 shows a
test board schematic 600 and includes another embodiment of a DAC, shown generally at 660 and constructed according to the teachings of this invention. TheDAC 660 differs in hardware fromDAC 100 shown in FIG. 1, but is functionally equivalent. TheDAC 660 under test is implemented by: a 4-bit counter 601, an inverter 602, two 16-bit “parallel in-serial out” registers 603, 604 (each of them is built up from 2 8- 630 and 632, and 620 and 622 respectively), two ANDbit subunits 605, 606, twogates 607, 608, twoclock inverters resistors 609, 611 and clock source 613. - The following parts are added for testing the quality of a DAC such as 660: an analog signal source 614, an Analog to Digital converter (ADC) 610, a conventional digital to
analog converter 612 andresistor 650. - The 4-bit counter 601 has a clock input labeled CP, an overflow output labeled TC. The overflow output TC is activated once per 16 clocks. The CP input of counter 601 is connected to an output of clock source 613 that is in turn connected to inputs of
607 and 608, and to clock inputs labeled CP1 of bothclock inverters 630 and 632 and 620 and 622 of 16-subunits bit registers 603 and 604, respectively. The TC output of counter 601 is connected to an input of inverter 602. An output of inverter 602 is connected to a start command input (CNVRT) of theADC 610 and to store command inputs PE both 630 and 632 and 620 and 622 of 16-subunits bit registers 603 and 604, respectively. This allows registers 603 and 604 to store the resent output code ofADC 610 whileADC 610 starts to prepare the next output code. - Four most significant bits DB 7, DB6, DB5 and DB4 of the output of
ADC 610 are connected to 15 of the total 16 parallel inputs P7-P0 of 630 and 632 of the 6-bit register 603 in the following manner”sub-unit - DB 7 to P7, P5, P3, P1 of
sub-unit 630 and P7, P5, P3, P1 ofsub-unit 632; corresponding 8-bits in 630 and 632 will store the DB7 value;sub-units - DB 6 to P6, P2 of
sub-unit 630 and P6, P2 ofsub-unit 632; corresponding 4-bits in 630 and 632 will store the DB6 value;sub-units - DB 5 to P4 of
sub-unit 630 and P4 ofsub-unit 632; corresponding 2-bits in 630 and 632 will store the DB5 value;sub-units - DB 4 to P0 of
sub-unit 632 only; corresponding 1 bit insub-unit 632 will store the D4 value. Logic low to P0 ofsub-unit 630 is connected to ground. - Four less significant bits DB 3, DB2, DB1, DB0 of the output of
ADC 610 are connected to 15 of total 16 parallel inputs P7 . . . P0 ofsub-unit 620 and P7 . . . P0 ofsub-unit 622 of the 16-bit register 604 in the following manner: - DB 3 to P7, P5, P3, P1 of
sub-unit 620 and P7, P5, P3, P1 of sub-unit corresponding 8-bits in 620 and 622 will store the DB3 value;sub-units - DB 2 to P6, P2 of
sub-unit 620 and P6, P2 ofsub-unit 622; corresponding 4-bits in 620 and 622 will store the DB2 value;sub-units - DB 1 to P4 of
sub-unit 620 and P4 ofsub-unit 622; corresponding 2-bits in 620 and 622 will store the DB1 value;sub-units - DB 0 to P0 of
sub-unit 622 only; corresponding 1 bit insub-unit 622 will store the DB0 value. Logic low to P0 ofsub-unit 620 is connected to ground.. - As the store command PE of register 603 goes high, the output labeled Q7 of
sub-unit 632 reflects the value stored from P7 ofsub-unit 632. Immediately after the store command PE goes low, the register 603 on each clock pulse CP1 shifts the stored values right, in turn bringing to output Q7 ofsub-unit 632 values, once stored from P6, P5, . . . P0 ofsub-unit 632 and then P7, P6, . . . P0 ofsub-unit 630. This way the entire 16-bits bits stored in the sub-units 630 and 632 of register 603 will appear in turn on the output Q7 output ofsub-unit 632. Due to the connections between the outputs of theADC 610—DB7, DB6, DB5, DB4 and the register 603 parallel inputs P7.. P0 (sub-unit 630), P7 . . . P0 (sub-unit 632) as described above, the high level on DB7 stored to 8 bits—P7, P5, P3, P1 ofsub-unit 630 and P7, P5, P3, P1 ofsub-unit 632 will result in 8 high level pulses on the register on output Q7 ofsub-unit 632. Similarly, the DB6 high value will be reflected by 4 high level pulses on output Q7 ofsub-unit 632, the DB5 high value will result in 2 high level pulses on output Q7 ofsub-unit 632, the DB4 high level will result in 1 high level pulse on output Q7 ofsub-unit 632. All together in each period of 16 clock pulses there will be between 0 and 15 high level pulses on output Q7 ofsub-unit 632; the total width of the high level pulses being proportional to the number from 0 to 15, binary represented by four most significant bits DB7 . . . DB4 ofADC 610 output code. -
Register 604 operates in the same way as register 603 with output on Q7 ofsub-unit 622. The total width of the high level pulses on output Q7 of sub-unit 633 is proportional to the number from 0 to 15, binary represented by 4 lesssignificant ADC 610 output bits (DB3 . . . DB0). - Output Q 7 of
sub-unit 632 is connected to one of ANDgate 605 inputs, the second input of ANDgate 605 is connected to theclock inverter 608 output. This connection allows minimized pulse-to-pulse interaction that in turn allows for low frequency noise reduction. The output of ANDgate 605 is connected to the final converter output 667 viaresistor 609. - In the same manner, output Q 7 of
sub-unit 622 is connected to one of ANDgate 606 inputs, the second input of ANDgate 606 is connected to theclock inverter 607 output. This connection allows minimized pulse-to-pulse interaction, which in turn allows for low frequency noise reduction. The output of ANDgate 606 is connected to the final converter output 667 via resistor 611. - The resistance values for 609 and 611 relate as 1:16, thus accounting for the 16:1 weights difference between the 4 most significant bits of
ADC 610 output (DB7-DB4) and the 4 less significant bits ofADC 610 output (DB3-DB0). - To check the proposed converter quality, a reference analog voltage source 614 (2.5 V sine wave plus 2.5 V DC offset) is connected to the
ADC 610 input (CNVRT), and 8 inputs DB7 . . . DB0 of aconventional reference DAC 612 are connected to the 8ADC 610 outputs DB7 . . . DB0.Test board schematic 600 has been simulated using PSpice simulation. PSpice is an industry standard program that allows you to perform computer simulations of electronic circuits - The simulation results are shown in two graphs on FIG. 3. The first graph, marked by rectangles, shows the log power spectrum of the
reference DAC 612, the second graph, marked by diamonds, reflects the log power spectrum of the output 667 of proposedconverter 660. As it's seen, for frequencies below 0.4 MHz both reference and proposed converters have about 60 dB of spurious free dynamic range, and for higher frequencies the proposed converter leaves only about 48 dB free of spurious. This shows the advantage in moving the noise to high frequencies. - The hardware performance of
100, 500 and 660 depends first of all on the accuracy of theconverters 120 and 122, 520-1 . . . 520-k, 609 and 611, respectively. The absolute values of these resistors are less important as the linearity depends on the relative values—R120/R122, R520-1/R520-2. . . , R520-k-1/R520-k and R609/R611. The coarse tuning of these relative values is provided by the resistor design, e.g. by buying orresistors building 8 equal resistors having a value R and connecting 4 of them serially to get R120=4R, another 4 in parallel to get R122=R/4. Finally R120/R122=4R/(R/4)=16. For fine tuning, for example,converter 100 will be forced to run on three input code sets: - 0000 0000 in L7 . . . L0, the
corresponding output 107 voltage U0 is measured; - 0000 1111 in L7 . . . L0, the
corresponding output 107 voltage U15 is measured; and - 0001 0000 in L7 . . . L0, the
corresponding output 107 voltage U16 is measured. - The sign of the equation: {(U 16-U0)/(U15-U0)-16/15} indicates, which of R120 or R122 has to be increased (alternatively which of R122, R120 has to be decreased). A 1% mismatch in the R122/R120 relative value will result in peak error of approximately 0.16 of the least significant bit and a root mean square error of approximately 0.05 of least significant bit, that being more than acceptable.
- In one embodiment, a digital to analog converter has been described. The converter includes a multi-bit counter and a first and a second plurality of logic gates coupled to the multi-bit counter. The converter further includes a digital input selectively coupled to the first and second plurality of logic gates a first AND gate coupled to an output of the first plurality of logic gates and a second AND gate coupled to an output of the second plurality of logic gates. In addition, the converter includes a clock coupled to an input of the first and second AND gates and a filter coupled to an output of the first and second AND gates. The filter includes an output for an analog signal based on the digital input.
- In another embodiment, a method of converting a multi-bit digital input signal to an analog signal has been described. The method includes receiving a digital number and converting the digital number to a series of pulses. The method further includes summing the series of pulses. The pulses in a predetermined period represent the received digital number. In addition, the method includes applying a clock signal to the sum of the series of pulses to obtain an analog signal that represents the digital number.
- Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that any arrangement, which is calculated to achieve the same purpose, may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. For example, in one embodiment, the digital to analog converter may be expanded from an 8-bit DAC to an n-bit DAC by increasing the size of the multi-bit counter and adding AND gates to the first and second plurality of logic gates using the same logic scheme as used in the 8-bit DAC. To increase the 8-bit DAC to a 12-bit converter the multi-bit counter would be increased to a 6-bit counter and the first and second plurality of logic circuits would each include 2 additional AND gates. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the present invention. Therefore, it is intended that this invention be limited only by the claims and the equivalents thereof.
Claims (55)
Priority Applications (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/829,554 US6476747B1 (en) | 2001-04-10 | 2001-04-10 | Digital to analog converter |
| AU2002302865A AU2002302865A1 (en) | 2001-04-10 | 2002-04-09 | Digital to analog converter |
| PCT/IB2002/001131 WO2002084881A2 (en) | 2001-04-10 | 2002-04-09 | Digital to analog converter |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/829,554 US6476747B1 (en) | 2001-04-10 | 2001-04-10 | Digital to analog converter |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US6476747B1 US6476747B1 (en) | 2002-11-05 |
| US20020171576A1 true US20020171576A1 (en) | 2002-11-21 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/829,554 Expired - Fee Related US6476747B1 (en) | 2001-04-10 | 2001-04-10 | Digital to analog converter |
Country Status (3)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US6476747B1 (en) |
| AU (1) | AU2002302865A1 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2002084881A2 (en) |
Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20040213356A1 (en) * | 2003-04-24 | 2004-10-28 | Burke Joseph Patrick | Combined digital-to-analog converter and signal filter |
| US20090140901A1 (en) * | 2007-11-30 | 2009-06-04 | Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. | Risa controller for an rf integrated circuit (rfic) having improved execution speed |
Families Citing this family (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN116248119B (en) * | 2022-12-28 | 2025-09-09 | 骏盈半导体(上海)有限公司 | Digital-to-analog conversion circuit, chip and electronic equipment for PWM conversion analog output |
Family Cites Families (6)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3789393A (en) * | 1972-10-26 | 1974-01-29 | Inductosyn Corp | Digital/analog converter with amplitude and pulse-width modulation |
| JPS5827430A (en) * | 1981-08-11 | 1983-02-18 | Nakamichi Corp | Digital-to-analog converting method |
| CA1289666C (en) * | 1983-10-25 | 1991-09-24 | Masashi Takeda | Digital-to-analog converting system |
| JPS61256826A (en) * | 1985-05-09 | 1986-11-14 | Sony Corp | Digital-analog converter |
| GB2288932A (en) * | 1994-04-21 | 1995-11-01 | Peter John Warren | Fast settling pulse width modulated digital to analogue conversion |
| KR0145622B1 (en) * | 1995-11-28 | 1998-12-01 | 김광호 | Pwm signal output circuit |
-
2001
- 2001-04-10 US US09/829,554 patent/US6476747B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
-
2002
- 2002-04-09 WO PCT/IB2002/001131 patent/WO2002084881A2/en not_active Ceased
- 2002-04-09 AU AU2002302865A patent/AU2002302865A1/en not_active Abandoned
Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20040213356A1 (en) * | 2003-04-24 | 2004-10-28 | Burke Joseph Patrick | Combined digital-to-analog converter and signal filter |
| US20090140901A1 (en) * | 2007-11-30 | 2009-06-04 | Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. | Risa controller for an rf integrated circuit (rfic) having improved execution speed |
| US7579972B2 (en) * | 2007-11-30 | 2009-08-25 | Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. | Risa controller for an RF integrated circuit (RFIC) having improved execution speed |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US6476747B1 (en) | 2002-11-05 |
| WO2002084881A2 (en) | 2002-10-24 |
| WO2002084881A3 (en) | 2003-03-13 |
| AU2002302865A1 (en) | 2002-10-28 |
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