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A 0.47–0.66 pJ/bit, 4.8–8 Gb/s I/O Transceiver in 65 nm CMOS
51
Citations
25
References
2013
Year
Low-power ElectronicsElectrical EngineeringOutput/input MultiplexingReceiver Equalizer OutputVlsi DesignEngineeringClock RecoveryGb/s I/o TransceiverMixed-signal Integrated CircuitNm CmosAnalog DesignComputer Engineering\Rm PpdDigital Circuit DesignMicroelectronicsAnalog-to-digital ConverterElectronic Circuit
A low-power forwarded-clock I/O transceiver architecture is presented that employs a high degree of output/input multiplexing, supply-voltage scaling with data rate, and low-voltage circuit techniques to enable low-power operation. The transmitter utilizes a 4:1 output multiplexing voltage-mode driver along with 4-phase clocking that is efficiently generated from a passive poly-phase filter. The output driver voltage swing is accurately controlled from 100–200 <formula formulatype="inline" xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"><tex Notation="TeX">${\rm mV}_{\rm ppd}$</tex></formula> using a low-voltage pseudo-differential regulator that employs a partial negative-resistance load for improved low frequency gain. 1:8 input de-multiplexing is performed at the receiver equalizer output with 8 parallel input samplers clocked from an 8-phase injection-locked oscillator that provides more than 1UI de-skew range. In the transmitter clocking circuitry, per-phase duty-cycle and phase-spacing adjustment is implemented to allow adequate timing margins at low operating voltages. Fabricated in a general purpose 65 nm CMOS process, the transceiver achieves 4.8–8 Gb/s at 0.47–0.66 pJ/b energy efficiency for <formula formulatype="inline" xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"><tex Notation="TeX">${\rm V}_{\rm DD}=0.6$</tex></formula> –0.8 V.
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