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A Four-Channel 32-Gb/s Transceiver With Current-Recycling Output Driver and On-Chip AC Coupling in 65-nm CMOS Process
15
Citations
11
References
2014
Year
Low-power ElectronicsElectrical EngineeringOn-chip Ac CouplingEngineeringVlsi DesignCircuit SystemFour-channel 32-Gb/s TransceiverMixed-signal Integrated CircuitAnalog DesignPrototype ChipComputer EngineeringOverall TransceiverCommunication CircuitDigital Circuit DesignPower ElectronicsMicroelectronicsCurrent-recycling Output DriverOutput Swing
This brief describes the design of a four-channel 32-Gb/s serial link transmitter with a current-recycling output driver and an on-chip ac-coupled receiver. The proposed output driver significantly reduces power dissipation in the final stage of the transmitter by reusing the natural current flow through the four-channel outputs. It also eliminates the voltage regulation circuit and the current source circuitry for generating low-swing outputs. Since the four-channel outputs are stacked from the ground to the supply rail with different common-mode output levels, the receiver should include an ac-coupling circuit to establish the desired common-mode voltage level for the receive amplifier in each channel. A long-time constant is realized in the ac-coupling circuit with small on-chip capacitors. The prototype chip has been fabricated in the 65-nm low-power CMOS process, and the transmitter supports an output swing of 300 <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="TeX">$\hbox{mV}_{{\rm pp}, \,{\rm diff}}$</tex-math></inline-formula> at a data rate of 8 Gb/s. The four stacked output drivers only consume a total static power of 1.8 mW, and the overall transceiver, including an equalization of 7 dB, exhibits a normalized power dissipation of 2.04 mW/Gb/s.
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