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Wikipedia

Analog-to-digital converter

In electronics, an analog-to-digital converter (ADC, A/D, or A-to-D) is a system that converts an analog signal, such as a sound picked up by a microphone or light entering a digital camera, into a digital signal. An ADC may also provide an isolated measurement such as an electronic device that converts an analog input voltage or current to a digital number representing the magnitude of the voltage or current. Typically the digital output is a two's complement binary number that is proportional to the input, but there are other possibilities.

4-channel stereo multiplexed analog-to-digital converter WM8775SEDS made by Wolfson Microelectronics placed on an X-Fi Fatal1ty Pro sound card
AD570 8-bit successive-approximation analog-to-digital converter
AD570/AD571 silicon die
INTERSIL ICL7107. 31/2 digit single-chip A/D converter
ICL7107 silicon die

There are several ADC architectures. Due to the complexity and the need for precisely matched components, all but the most specialized ADCs are implemented as integrated circuits (ICs). These typically take the form of metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) mixed-signal integrated circuit chips that integrate both analog and digital circuits.

A digital-to-analog converter (DAC) performs the reverse function; it converts a digital signal into an analog signal.

Explanation

An ADC converts a continuous-time and continuous-amplitude analog signal to a discrete-time and discrete-amplitude digital signal. The conversion involves quantization of the input, so it necessarily introduces a small amount of error or noise. Furthermore, instead of continuously performing the conversion, an ADC does the conversion periodically, sampling the input, limiting the allowable bandwidth of the input signal.

The performance of an ADC is primarily characterized by its bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The bandwidth of an ADC is characterized primarily by its sampling rate. The SNR of an ADC is influenced by many factors, including the resolution, linearity and accuracy (how well the quantization levels match the true analog signal), aliasing and jitter. The SNR of an ADC is often summarized in terms of its effective number of bits (ENOB), the number of bits of each measure it returns that are on average not noise. An ideal ADC has an ENOB equal to its resolution. ADCs are chosen to match the bandwidth and required SNR of the signal to be digitized. If an ADC operates at a sampling rate greater than twice the bandwidth of the signal, then per the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem, perfect reconstruction is possible. The presence of quantization error limits the SNR of even an ideal ADC. However, if the SNR of the ADC exceeds that of the input signal, its effects may be neglected resulting in an essentially perfect digital representation of the analog input signal.

Resolution

 
Fig. 1. An 8-level ADC coding scheme

The resolution of the converter indicates the number of different, ie discrete, values it can produce over the allowed range of analog input values. Thus a particular resolution determines the magnitude of the quantization error and therefore determines the maximum possible signal-to-noise ratio for an ideal ADC without the use of oversampling. The input samples are usually stored electronically in binary form within the ADC, so the resolution is usually expressed as the audio bit depth. In consequence, the number of discrete values available is usually a power of two. For example, an ADC with a resolution of 8 bits can encode an analog input to one in 256 different levels (28 = 256). The values can represent the ranges from 0 to 255 (i.e. as unsigned integers) or from −128 to 127 (i.e. as signed integer), depending on the application.

Resolution can also be defined electrically, and expressed in volts. The change in voltage required to guarantee a change in the output code level is called the least significant bit (LSB) voltage. The resolution Q of the ADC is equal to the LSB voltage. The voltage resolution of an ADC is equal to its overall voltage measurement range divided by the number of intervals:

 

where M is the ADC's resolution in bits and EFSR is the full scale voltage range (also called 'span'). EFSR is given by

 

where VRefHi and VRefLow are the upper and lower extremes, respectively, of the voltages that can be coded.

Normally, the number of voltage intervals is given by

 

where M is the ADC's resolution in bits.[1]

That is, one voltage interval is assigned in between two consecutive code levels.

Example:

  • Coding scheme as in figure 1
  • Full scale measurement range = 0 to 1 volt
  • ADC resolution is 3 bits: 23 = 8 quantization levels (codes)
  • ADC voltage resolution, Q = 1 V / 8 = 0.125 V.

In many cases, the useful resolution of a converter is limited by the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and other errors in the overall system expressed as an ENOB.

 
Comparison of quantizing a sinusoid to 64 levels (6 bits) and 256 levels (8 bits). The additive noise created by 6-bit quantization is 12 dB greater than the noise created by 8-bit quantization. When the spectral distribution is flat, as in this example, the 12 dB difference manifests as a measurable difference in the noise floors.

Quantization error

 
Analog to digital conversion as shown with fig. 1 and fig. 2.

Quantization error is introduced by the quantization inherent in an ideal ADC. It is a rounding error between the analog input voltage to the ADC and the output digitized value. The error is nonlinear and signal-dependent. In an ideal ADC, where the quantization error is uniformly distributed between −1/2 LSB and +1/2 LSB, and the signal has a uniform distribution covering all quantization levels, the signal-to-quantization-noise ratio (SQNR) is given by

 [2]

where Q is the number of quantization bits. For example, for a 16-bit ADC, the quantization error is 96.3 dB below the maximum level.

Quantization error is distributed from DC to the Nyquist frequency. Consequently, if part of the ADC's bandwidth is not used, as is the case with oversampling, some of the quantization error will occur out-of-band, effectively improving the SQNR for the bandwidth in use. In an oversampled system, noise shaping can be used to further increase SQNR by forcing more quantization error out of band.

Dither

In ADCs, performance can usually be improved using dither. This is a very small amount of random noise (e.g. white noise), which is added to the input before conversion. Its effect is to randomize the state of the LSB based on the signal. Rather than the signal simply getting cut off altogether at low levels, it extends the effective range of signals that the ADC can convert, at the expense of a slight increase in noise. Note that dither can only increase the resolution of a sampler. It cannot improve the linearity, and thus accuracy does not necessarily improve.

Quantization distortion in an audio signal of very low level with respect to the bit depth of the ADC is correlated with the signal and sounds distorted and unpleasant. With dithering, the distortion is transformed into noise. The undistorted signal may be recovered accurately by averaging over time. Dithering is also used in integrating systems such as electricity meters. Since the values are added together, the dithering produces results that are more exact than the LSB of the analog-to-digital converter.

Dither is often applied when quantizing photographic images to a fewer number of bits per pixel—the image becomes noisier but to the eye looks far more realistic than the quantized image, which otherwise becomes banded. This analogous process may help to visualize the effect of dither on an analog audio signal that is converted to digital.

Accuracy

An ADC has several sources of errors. Quantization error and (assuming the ADC is intended to be linear) non-linearity are intrinsic to any analog-to-digital conversion. These errors are measured in a unit called the least significant bit (LSB). In the above example of an eight-bit ADC, an error of one LSB is 1/256 of the full signal range, or about 0.4%.

Nonlinearity

All ADCs suffer from nonlinearity errors caused by their physical imperfections, causing their output to deviate from a linear function (or some other function, in the case of a deliberately nonlinear ADC) of their input. These errors can sometimes be mitigated by calibration, or prevented by testing. Important parameters for linearity are integral nonlinearity and differential nonlinearity. These nonlinearities introduce distortion that can reduce the signal-to-noise ratio performance of the ADC and thus reduce its effective resolution.

Jitter

When digitizing a sine wave  , the use of a non-ideal sampling clock will result in some uncertainty in when samples are recorded. Provided that the actual sampling time uncertainty due to clock jitter is  , the error caused by this phenomenon can be estimated as  . This will result in additional recorded noise that will reduce the effective number of bits (ENOB) below that predicted by quantization error alone. The error is zero for DC, small at low frequencies, but significant with signals of high amplitude and high frequency. The effect of jitter on performance can be compared to quantization error:  , where q is the number of ADC bits.[citation needed]

Output size
(bits)
Signal Frequency
1 Hz 1 kHz 10 kHz 1 MHz 10 MHz 100 MHz 1 GHz
8 1,243 µs 1.24 µs 124 ns 1.24 ns 124 ps 12.4 ps 1.24 ps
10 311 µs 311 ns 31.1 ns 311 ps 31.1 ps 3.11 ps 0.31 ps
12 77.7 µs 77.7 ns 7.77 ns 77.7 ps 7.77 ps 0.78 ps 0.08 ps ("77.7fs")
14 19.4 µs 19.4 ns 1.94 ns 19.4 ps 1.94 ps 0.19 ps 0.02 ps ("19.4fs")
16 4.86 µs 4.86 ns 486 ps 4.86 ps 0.49 ps 0.05 ps ("48.5 fs")
18 1.21 µs 1.21 ns 121 ps 1.21 ps 0.12 ps
20 304 ns 304 ps 30.4 ps 0.30 ps ("303.56 fs") 0.03 ps ("30.3 fs")
24 18.9 ns 18.9 ps 1.89 ps 0.019 ps ("18.9 fs") -

Clock jitter is caused by phase noise.[3][4] The resolution of ADCs with a digitization bandwidth between 1 MHz and 1 GHz is limited by jitter.[5] For lower bandwidth conversions such as when sampling audio signals at 44.1 kHz, clock jitter has a less significant impact on performance.[6]

Sampling rate

An analog signal is continuous in time and it is necessary to convert this to a flow of digital values. It is therefore required to define the rate at which new digital values are sampled from the analog signal. The rate of new values is called the sampling rate or sampling frequency of the converter. A continuously varying bandlimited signal can be sampled and then the original signal can be reproduced from the discrete-time values by a reconstruction filter. The Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem implies that a faithful reproduction of the original signal is only possible if the sampling rate is higher than twice the highest frequency of the signal.

Since a practical ADC cannot make an instantaneous conversion, the input value must necessarily be held constant during the time that the converter performs a conversion (called the conversion time). An input circuit called a sample and hold performs this task—in most cases by using a capacitor to store the analog voltage at the input, and using an electronic switch or gate to disconnect the capacitor from the input. Many ADC integrated circuits include the sample and hold subsystem internally.

Aliasing

An ADC works by sampling the value of the input at discrete intervals in time. Provided that the input is sampled above the Nyquist rate, defined as twice the highest frequency of interest, then all frequencies in the signal can be reconstructed. If frequencies above half the Nyquist rate are sampled, they are incorrectly detected as lower frequencies, a process referred to as aliasing. Aliasing occurs because instantaneously sampling a function at two or fewer times per cycle results in missed cycles, and therefore the appearance of an incorrectly lower frequency. For example, a 2 kHz sine wave being sampled at 1.5 kHz would be reconstructed as a 500 Hz sine wave.

To avoid aliasing, the input to an ADC must be low-pass filtered to remove frequencies above half the sampling rate. This filter is called an anti-aliasing filter, and is essential for a practical ADC system that is applied to analog signals with higher frequency content. In applications where protection against aliasing is essential, oversampling may be used to greatly reduce or even eliminate it.

Although aliasing in most systems is unwanted, it can be exploited to provide simultaneous down-mixing of a band-limited high-frequency signal (see undersampling and frequency mixer). The alias is effectively the lower heterodyne of the signal frequency and sampling frequency.[7]

Oversampling

For economy, signals are often sampled at the minimum rate required with the result that the quantization error introduced is white noise spread over the whole passband of the converter. If a signal is sampled at a rate much higher than the Nyquist rate and then digitally filtered to limit it to the signal bandwidth produces the following advantages:

  • Oversampling can make it easier to realize analog anti-aliasing filters
  • Improved audio bit depth
  • Reduced noise, especially when noise shaping is employed in addition to oversampling.

Oversampling is typically used in audio frequency ADCs where the required sampling rate (typically 44.1 or 48 kHz) is very low compared to the clock speed of typical transistor circuits (>1 MHz). In this case, the performance of the ADC can be greatly increased at little or no cost. Furthermore, as any aliased signals are also typically out of band, aliasing can often be completely eliminated using very low cost filters.

Relative speed and precision

The speed of an ADC varies by type. The Wilkinson ADC is limited by the clock rate which is processable by current digital circuits. For a successive-approximation ADC, the conversion time scales with the logarithm of the resolution, i.e. the number of bits. Flash ADCs are certainly the fastest type of the three; The conversion is basically performed in a single parallel step.

There is a potential tradeoff between speed and precision. Flash ADCs have drifts and uncertainties associated with the comparator levels results in poor linearity. To a lesser extent, poor linearity can also be an issue for successive-approximation ADCs. Here, nonlinearity arises from accumulating errors from the subtraction processes. Wilkinson ADCs have the best linearity of the three.[8][9]

Sliding scale principle

The sliding scale or randomizing method can be employed to greatly improve the linearity of any type of ADC, but especially flash and successive approximation types. For any ADC the mapping from input voltage to digital output value is not exactly a floor or ceiling function as it should be. Under normal conditions, a pulse of a particular amplitude is always converted to the same digital value. The problem lies in that the ranges of analog values for the digitized values are not all of the same widths, and the differential linearity decreases proportionally with the divergence from the average width. The sliding scale principle uses an averaging effect to overcome this phenomenon. A random, but known analog voltage is added to the sampled input voltage. It is then converted to digital form, and the equivalent digital amount is subtracted, thus restoring it to its original value. The advantage is that the conversion has taken place at a random point. The statistical distribution of the final levels is decided by a weighted average over a region of the range of the ADC. This in turn desensitizes it to the width of any specific level.[10][11]

Types

These are several common ways of implementing an electronic ADC.

Direct-conversion

A direct-conversion or flash ADC has a bank of comparators sampling the input signal in parallel, each firing for a specific voltage range. The comparator bank feeds a digital encoder logic circuit that generates a binary number on the output lines for each voltage range.

ADCs of this type have a large die size and high power dissipation. They are often used for video, wideband communications, or other fast signals in optical and magnetic storage.

The circuit consists of a resistive divider network, a set of op-amp comparators and a priority encoder. A small amount of hysteresis is built into the comparator to resolve any problems at voltage boundaries. At each node of the resistive divider, a comparison voltage is available. The purpose of the circuit is to compare the analog input voltage with each of the node voltages.

The circuit has the advantage of high speed as the conversion takes place simultaneously rather than sequentially. Typical conversion time is 100 ns or less. Conversion time is limited only by the speed of the comparator and of the priority encoder. This type of ADC has the disadvantage that the number of comparators required almost doubles for each added bit. Also, the larger the value of n, the more complex is the priority encoder.

Successive approximation

A successive-approximation ADC uses a comparator and a binary search to successively narrow a range that contains the input voltage. At each successive step, the converter compares the input voltage to the output of an internal digital-to-analog converter (DAC) which initially represents the midpoint of the allowed input voltage range. At each step in this process, the approximation is stored in a successive approximation register (SAR) and the output of the digital-to-analog converter is updated for a comparison over a narrower range.

Ramp-compare

A ramp-compare ADC produces a saw-tooth signal that ramps up or down then quickly returns to zero.[12] When the ramp starts, a timer starts counting. When the ramp voltage matches the input, a comparator fires, and the timer's value is recorded. Timed ramp converters can be implemented economically,[a] however, the ramp time may be sensitive to temperature because the circuit generating the ramp is often a simple analog integrator. A more accurate converter uses a clocked counter driving a DAC. A special advantage of the ramp-compare system is that converting a second signal just requires another comparator and another register to store the timer value. To reduce sensitivity to input changes during conversion, a sample and hold can charge a capacitor with the instantaneous input voltage and the converter can time the time required to discharge with a constant current.

Wilkinson

The Wilkinson ADC was designed by Denys Wilkinson in 1950. The Wilkinson ADC is based on the comparison of an input voltage with that produced by a charging capacitor. The capacitor is allowed to charge until a comparator determines it matches the input voltage. Then, the capacitor is discharged linearly. The time required to discharge the capacitor is proportional to the amplitude of the input voltage. While the capacitor is discharging, pulses from a high-frequency oscillator clock are counted by a register. The number of clock pulses recorded in the register is also proportional to the input voltage.[14][15]

Integrating

An integrating ADC (also dual-slope or multi-slope ADC) applies the unknown input voltage to the input of an integrator and allows the voltage to ramp for a fixed time period (the run-up period). Then a known reference voltage of opposite polarity is applied to the integrator and is allowed to ramp until the integrator output returns to zero (the run-down period). The input voltage is computed as a function of the reference voltage, the constant run-up time period, and the measured run-down time period. The run-down time measurement is usually made in units of the converter's clock, so longer integration times allow for higher resolutions. Likewise, the speed of the converter can be improved by sacrificing resolution. Converters of this type (or variations on the concept) are used in most digital voltmeters for their linearity and flexibility.

Charge balancing ADC
The principle of charge balancing ADC is to first convert the input signal to a frequency using a voltage-to-frequency converter. This frequency is then measured by a counter and converted to an output code proportional to the analog input. The main advantage of these converters is that it is possible to transmit frequency even in a noisy environment or in isolated form. However, the limitation of this circuit is that the output of the voltage-to-frequency converter depends upon an RC product whose value cannot be accurately maintained over temperature and time.
Dual-slope ADC
The analog part of the circuit consists of a high input impedance buffer, precision integrator and a voltage comparator. The converter first integrates the analog input signal for a fixed duration and then it integrates an internal reference voltage of opposite polarity until the integrator output is zero. The main disadvantage of this circuit is the long duration time. They are particularly suitable for accurate measurement of slowly varying signals such as thermocouples and weighing scales.

Delta-encoded

A delta-encoded or counter-ramp ADC has an up-down counter that feeds a DAC. The input signal and the DAC both go to a comparator. The comparator controls the counter. The circuit uses negative feedback from the comparator to adjust the counter until the DAC's output matches the input signal and number is read from the counter. Delta converters have very wide ranges and high resolution, but the conversion time is dependent on the input signal behavior, though it will always have a guaranteed worst-case. Delta converters are often very good choices to read real-world signals as most signals from physical systems do not change abruptly. Some converters combine the delta and successive approximation approaches; this works especially well when high frequency components of the input signal are known to be small in magnitude.

Pipelined

A pipelined ADC (also called subranging quantizer) uses two or more conversion steps. First, a coarse conversion is done. In a second step, the difference to the input signal is determined with a DAC. This difference is then converted more precisely, and the results are combined in the last step. This can be considered a refinement of the successive-approximation ADC wherein the feedback reference signal consists of the interim conversion of a whole range of bits (for example, four bits) rather than just the next-most-significant bit. By combining the merits of the successive approximation and flash ADCs this type is fast, has a high resolution, and can be implemented efficiently.

Sigma-delta

A sigma-delta ADC (also known as a delta-sigma ADC) oversamples the incoming signal by a large factor using a smaller number of bits than required are converted using a flash ADC and filters the desired signal band. The resulting signal, along with the error generated by the discrete levels of the flash, is fed back and subtracted from the input to the filter. This negative feedback has the effect of noise shaping the quantization error that it does not appear in the desired signal frequencies. A digital filter (decimation filter) follows the ADC which reduces the sampling rate, filters off unwanted noise signal and increases the resolution of the output.

Time-interleaved

A time-interleaved ADC uses M parallel ADCs where each ADC samples data every M:th cycle of the effective sample clock. The result is that the sample rate is increased M times compared to what each individual ADC can manage. In practice, the individual differences between the M ADCs degrade the overall performance reducing the spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR).[16] However, techniques exist to correct for these time-interleaving mismatch errors.[17]

Intermediate FM stage

An ADC with an intermediate FM stage first uses a voltage-to-frequency converter to produce an oscillating signal with a frequency proportional to the voltage of the input signal, and then uses a frequency counter to convert that frequency into a digital count proportional to the desired signal voltage. Longer integration times allow for higher resolutions. Likewise, the speed of the converter can be improved by sacrificing resolution. The two parts of the ADC may be widely separated, with the frequency signal passed through an opto-isolator or transmitted wirelessly. Some such ADCs use sine wave or square wave frequency modulation; others use pulse-frequency modulation. Such ADCs were once the most popular way to show a digital display of the status of a remote analog sensor.[18][19][20][21][22]

Time-stretch

A Time-stretch analog-to-digital converter (TS-ADC) digitizes a very wide bandwidth analog signal, that cannot be digitized by a conventional electronic ADC, by time-stretching the signal prior to digitization. It commonly uses a photonic preprocessor to time-stretch the signal, which effectively slows the signal down in time and compresses its bandwidth. As a result, an electronic ADC, that would have been too slow to capture the original signal, can now capture this slowed-down signal. For continuous capture of the signal, the frontend also divides the signal into multiple segments in addition to time-stretching. Each segment is individually digitized by a separate electronic ADC. Finally, a digital signal processor rearranges the samples and removes any distortions added by the preprocessor to yield the binary data that is the digital representation of the original analog signal.

Commercial

In many cases, the most expensive part of an integrated circuit is the pins, because they make the package larger, and each pin has to be connected to the integrated circuit's silicon. To save pins, it is common for ADCs to send their data one bit at a time over a serial interface to the computer, with each bit coming out when a clock signal changes state. This saves quite a few pins on the ADC package, and in many cases, does not make the overall design any more complex.

Commercial ADCs often have several inputs that feed the same converter, usually through an analog multiplexer. Different models of ADC may include sample and hold circuits, instrumentation amplifiers or differential inputs, where the quantity measured is the difference between two inputs.

Applications

Music recording

Analog-to-digital converters are integral to modern music reproduction technology and digital audio workstation-based sound recording. Music may be produced on computers using an analog recording and therefore analog-to-digital converters are needed to create the pulse-code modulation (PCM) data streams that go onto compact discs and digital music files. The current crop of analog-to-digital converters utilized in music can sample at rates up to 192 kilohertz. Many recording studios record in 24-bit/96 kHz pulse-code modulation (PCM) format and then downsample and dither the signal for Compact Disc Digital Audio production (44.1 kHz) or to 48 kHz for radio and television broadcast applications.

Digital signal processing

ADCs are required in digital signal processing systems that process, store, or transport virtually any analog signal in digital form. TV tuner cards, for example, use fast video analog-to-digital converters. Slow on-chip 8-, 10-, 12-, or 16-bit analog-to-digital converters are common in microcontrollers. Digital storage oscilloscopes need very fast analog-to-digital converters, also crucial for software-defined radio and their new applications.

Scientific instruments

Digital imaging systems commonly use analog-to-digital converters for digitizing pixels. Some radar systems use analog-to-digital converters to convert signal strength to digital values for subsequent signal processing. Many other in situ and remote sensing systems commonly use analogous technology.

Many sensors in scientific instruments produce an analog signal; temperature, pressure, pH, light intensity etc. All these signals can be amplified and fed to an ADC to produce a digital representation.

Rotary encoder

Some non-electronic or only partially electronic devices, such as rotary encoders, can also be considered ADCs. Typically the digital output of an ADC will be a two's complement binary number that is proportional to the input. An encoder might output a Gray code.

Displays

Flat-panel displays are inherently digital and need an ADC to process an analog signal such as composite or VGA.

Electrical symbol

 

Testing

Testing an analog-to-digital converter requires an analog input source and hardware to send control signals and capture digital data output. Some ADCs also require an accurate source of reference signal.

The key parameters to test an ADC are:

  1. DC offset error
  2. DC gain error
  3. signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
  4. Total harmonic distortion (THD)
  5. Integral nonlinearity (INL)
  6. Differential nonlinearity (DNL)
  7. Spurious free dynamic range
  8. Power dissipation

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A very simple (nonlinear) ramp converter can be implemented with a microcontroller and one resistor and capacitor.[13]

References

  1. ^ "Principles of Data Acquisition and Conversion" (PDF). Texas Instruments. April 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved October 18, 2016.
  2. ^ Lathi, B.P. (1998). Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ "Maxim App 800: Design a Low-Jitter Clock for High-Speed Data Converters", maxim-ic.com, July 17, 2002
  4. ^ "Jitter effects on Analog to Digital and Digital to Analog Converters" (PDF). Retrieved August 19, 2012.
  5. ^ Löhning, Michael; Fettweis, Gerhard (2007). "The effects of aperture jitter and clock jitter in wideband ADCs". Computer Standards & Interfaces Archive. 29 (1): 11–18. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.3.9217. doi:10.1016/j.csi.2005.12.005.
  6. ^ Redmayne, Derek; Steer, Alison (December 8, 2008), "Understanding the effect of clock jitter on high-speed ADCs", eetimes.com
  7. ^ "RF-Sampling and GSPS ADCs – Breakthrough ADCs Revolutionize Radio Architectures" (PDF). Texas Instruments. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved November 4, 2013.
  8. ^ Knoll (1989, pp. 664–665)
  9. ^ Nicholson (1974, pp. 313–315)
  10. ^ Knoll (1989, pp. 665–666)
  11. ^ Nicholson (1974, pp. 315–316)
  12. ^ Couch - 2001 - Digital and analog communication systems - Prentice Hall - New Jersey, USA
  13. ^ "Atmel Application Note AVR400: Low Cost A/D Converter" (PDF). atmel.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  14. ^ Knoll (1989, pp. 663–664)
  15. ^ Nicholson (1974, pp. 309–310)
  16. ^ Vogel, Christian (2005). "The Impact of Combined Channel Mismatch Effects in Time-interleaved ADCs". IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement. 55 (1): 415–427. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.212.7539. doi:10.1109/TIM.2004.834046. S2CID 15038020.
  17. ^ Gabriele Manganaro; David H. Robertson (July 2015), Interleaving ADCs: Unraveling the Mysteries, Analog Devices, retrieved October 7, 2021
  18. ^ Analog Devices MT-028 Tutorial: "Voltage-to-Frequency Converters" by Walt Kester and James Bryant 2009, apparently adapted from Kester, Walter Allan (2005) Data conversion handbook, Newnes, p. 274, ISBN 0750678410.
  19. ^ Microchip AN795 "Voltage to Frequency / Frequency to Voltage Converter" p. 4: "13-bit A/D converter"
  20. ^ Carr, Joseph J. (1996) Elements of electronic instrumentation and measurement, Prentice Hall, p. 402, ISBN 0133416860.
  21. ^ "Voltage-to-Frequency Analog-to-Digital Converters". globalspec.com
  22. ^ Pease, Robert A. (1991) Troubleshooting Analog Circuits, Newnes, p. 130, ISBN 0750694998.
  • Knoll, Glenn F. (1989). Radiation Detection and Measurement (2nd ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0471815044.
  • Nicholson, P. W. (1974). Nuclear Electronics. New York: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 315–316. ISBN 978-0471636977.

Further reading

  • Allen, Phillip E.; Holberg, Douglas R. (2002). CMOS Analog Circuit Design. ISBN 978-0-19-511644-1.
  • Fraden, Jacob (2010). Handbook of Modern Sensors: Physics, Designs, and Applications. Springer. ISBN 978-1441964656.
  • Kester, Walt, ed. (2005). The Data Conversion Handbook. Elsevier: Newnes. ISBN 978-0-7506-7841-4.
  • Johns, David; Martin, Ken (1997). Analog Integrated Circuit Design. ISBN 978-0-471-14448-9.
  • Liu, Mingliang (2006). Demystifying Switched-Capacitor Circuits. ISBN 978-0-7506-7907-7.
  • Norsworthy, Steven R.; Schreier, Richard; Temes, Gabor C. (1997). Delta-Sigma Data Converters. IEEE Press. ISBN 978-0-7803-1045-2.
  • Razavi, Behzad (1995). Principles of Data Conversion System Design. New York, NY: IEEE Press. ISBN 978-0-7803-1093-3.
  • Ndjountche, Tertulien (May 24, 2011). CMOS Analog Integrated Circuits: High-Speed and Power-Efficient Design. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4398-5491-4.
  • Staller, Len (February 24, 2005). "Understanding analog to digital converter specifications". Embedded Systems Design.
  • Walden, R. H. (1999). "Analog-to-digital converter survey and analysis". IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications. 17 (4): 539–550. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.352.1881. doi:10.1109/49.761034.

External links

  • An Introduction to Delta Sigma Converters A very nice overview of Delta-Sigma converter theory.
  • Digital Dynamic Analysis of A/D Conversion Systems through Evaluation Software based on FFT/DFT Analysis RF Expo East, 1987
  • Which ADC Architecture Is Right for Your Application? article by Walt Kester
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2009-11-24) Defines commonly used technical terms
  • Introduction to ADC in AVR – Analog to digital conversion with Atmel microcontrollers
  • MATLAB Simulink model of a simple ramp ADC

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A2D redirects here For the U S Navy attack aircraft see Douglas A2D Skyshark In electronics an analog to digital converter ADC A D or A to D is a system that converts an analog signal such as a sound picked up by a microphone or light entering a digital camera into a digital signal An ADC may also provide an isolated measurement such as an electronic device that converts an analog input voltage or current to a digital number representing the magnitude of the voltage or current Typically the digital output is a two s complement binary number that is proportional to the input but there are other possibilities 4 channel stereo multiplexed analog to digital converter WM8775SEDS made by Wolfson Microelectronics placed on an X Fi Fatal1ty Pro sound card AD570 8 bit successive approximation analog to digital converter AD570 AD571 silicon die INTERSIL ICL7107 31 2 digit single chip A D converter ICL7107 silicon die There are several ADC architectures Due to the complexity and the need for precisely matched components all but the most specialized ADCs are implemented as integrated circuits ICs These typically take the form of metal oxide semiconductor MOS mixed signal integrated circuit chips that integrate both analog and digital circuits A digital to analog converter DAC performs the reverse function it converts a digital signal into an analog signal Contents 1 Explanation 1 1 Resolution 1 1 1 Quantization error 1 1 2 Dither 1 2 Accuracy 1 2 1 Nonlinearity 1 3 Jitter 1 4 Sampling rate 1 4 1 Aliasing 1 4 2 Oversampling 1 5 Relative speed and precision 1 6 Sliding scale principle 2 Types 2 1 Direct conversion 2 2 Successive approximation 2 3 Ramp compare 2 4 Wilkinson 2 5 Integrating 2 6 Delta encoded 2 7 Pipelined 2 8 Sigma delta 2 9 Time interleaved 2 10 Intermediate FM stage 2 11 Time stretch 3 Commercial 4 Applications 4 1 Music recording 4 2 Digital signal processing 4 3 Scientific instruments 4 4 Rotary encoder 4 5 Displays 5 Electrical symbol 6 Testing 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksExplanation EditAn ADC converts a continuous time and continuous amplitude analog signal to a discrete time and discrete amplitude digital signal The conversion involves quantization of the input so it necessarily introduces a small amount of error or noise Furthermore instead of continuously performing the conversion an ADC does the conversion periodically sampling the input limiting the allowable bandwidth of the input signal The performance of an ADC is primarily characterized by its bandwidth and signal to noise ratio SNR The bandwidth of an ADC is characterized primarily by its sampling rate The SNR of an ADC is influenced by many factors including the resolution linearity and accuracy how well the quantization levels match the true analog signal aliasing and jitter The SNR of an ADC is often summarized in terms of its effective number of bits ENOB the number of bits of each measure it returns that are on average not noise An ideal ADC has an ENOB equal to its resolution ADCs are chosen to match the bandwidth and required SNR of the signal to be digitized If an ADC operates at a sampling rate greater than twice the bandwidth of the signal then per the Nyquist Shannon sampling theorem perfect reconstruction is possible The presence of quantization error limits the SNR of even an ideal ADC However if the SNR of the ADC exceeds that of the input signal its effects may be neglected resulting in an essentially perfect digital representation of the analog input signal Resolution Edit Fig 1 An 8 level ADC coding scheme The resolution of the converter indicates the number of different ie discrete values it can produce over the allowed range of analog input values Thus a particular resolution determines the magnitude of the quantization error and therefore determines the maximum possible signal to noise ratio for an ideal ADC without the use of oversampling The input samples are usually stored electronically in binary form within the ADC so the resolution is usually expressed as the audio bit depth In consequence the number of discrete values available is usually a power of two For example an ADC with a resolution of 8 bits can encode an analog input to one in 256 different levels 28 256 The values can represent the ranges from 0 to 255 i e as unsigned integers or from 128 to 127 i e as signed integer depending on the application Resolution can also be defined electrically and expressed in volts The change in voltage required to guarantee a change in the output code level is called the least significant bit LSB voltage The resolution Q of the ADC is equal to the LSB voltage The voltage resolution of an ADC is equal to its overall voltage measurement range divided by the number of intervals Q E F S R 2 M displaystyle Q dfrac E mathrm FSR 2 M where M is the ADC s resolution in bits and EFSR is the full scale voltage range also called span EFSR is given by E F S R V R e f H i V R e f L o w displaystyle E mathrm FSR V mathrm RefHi V mathrm RefLow where VRefHi and VRefLow are the upper and lower extremes respectively of the voltages that can be coded Normally the number of voltage intervals is given by N 2 M displaystyle N 2 M where M is the ADC s resolution in bits 1 That is one voltage interval is assigned in between two consecutive code levels Example Coding scheme as in figure 1 Full scale measurement range 0 to 1 volt ADC resolution is 3 bits 23 8 quantization levels codes ADC voltage resolution Q 1 V 8 0 125 V In many cases the useful resolution of a converter is limited by the signal to noise ratio SNR and other errors in the overall system expressed as an ENOB Comparison of quantizing a sinusoid to 64 levels 6 bits and 256 levels 8 bits The additive noise created by 6 bit quantization is 12 dB greater than the noise created by 8 bit quantization When the spectral distribution is flat as in this example the 12 dB difference manifests as a measurable difference in the noise floors Quantization error Edit Analog to digital conversion as shown with fig 1 and fig 2 Quantization error is introduced by the quantization inherent in an ideal ADC It is a rounding error between the analog input voltage to the ADC and the output digitized value The error is nonlinear and signal dependent In an ideal ADC where the quantization error is uniformly distributed between 1 2 LSB and 1 2 LSB and the signal has a uniform distribution covering all quantization levels the signal to quantization noise ratio SQNR is given by S Q N R 20 log 10 2 Q 6 02 Q d B displaystyle mathrm SQNR 20 log 10 2 Q approx 6 02 cdot Q mathrm dB 2 where Q is the number of quantization bits For example for a 16 bit ADC the quantization error is 96 3 dB below the maximum level Quantization error is distributed from DC to the Nyquist frequency Consequently if part of the ADC s bandwidth is not used as is the case with oversampling some of the quantization error will occur out of band effectively improving the SQNR for the bandwidth in use In an oversampled system noise shaping can be used to further increase SQNR by forcing more quantization error out of band Dither Edit Main article dither In ADCs performance can usually be improved using dither This is a very small amount of random noise e g white noise which is added to the input before conversion Its effect is to randomize the state of the LSB based on the signal Rather than the signal simply getting cut off altogether at low levels it extends the effective range of signals that the ADC can convert at the expense of a slight increase in noise Note that dither can only increase the resolution of a sampler It cannot improve the linearity and thus accuracy does not necessarily improve Quantization distortion in an audio signal of very low level with respect to the bit depth of the ADC is correlated with the signal and sounds distorted and unpleasant With dithering the distortion is transformed into noise The undistorted signal may be recovered accurately by averaging over time Dithering is also used in integrating systems such as electricity meters Since the values are added together the dithering produces results that are more exact than the LSB of the analog to digital converter Dither is often applied when quantizing photographic images to a fewer number of bits per pixel the image becomes noisier but to the eye looks far more realistic than the quantized image which otherwise becomes banded This analogous process may help to visualize the effect of dither on an analog audio signal that is converted to digital Accuracy Edit An ADC has several sources of errors Quantization error and assuming the ADC is intended to be linear non linearity are intrinsic to any analog to digital conversion These errors are measured in a unit called the least significant bit LSB In the above example of an eight bit ADC an error of one LSB is 1 256 of the full signal range or about 0 4 Nonlinearity Edit All ADCs suffer from nonlinearity errors caused by their physical imperfections causing their output to deviate from a linear function or some other function in the case of a deliberately nonlinear ADC of their input These errors can sometimes be mitigated by calibration or prevented by testing Important parameters for linearity are integral nonlinearity and differential nonlinearity These nonlinearities introduce distortion that can reduce the signal to noise ratio performance of the ADC and thus reduce its effective resolution Jitter Edit When digitizing a sine wave x t A sin 2 p f 0 t displaystyle x t A sin 2 pi f 0 t the use of a non ideal sampling clock will result in some uncertainty in when samples are recorded Provided that the actual sampling time uncertainty due to clock jitter is D t displaystyle Delta t the error caused by this phenomenon can be estimated as E a p x t D t 2 A p f 0 D t displaystyle E ap leq x t Delta t leq 2A pi f 0 Delta t This will result in additional recorded noise that will reduce the effective number of bits ENOB below that predicted by quantization error alone The error is zero for DC small at low frequencies but significant with signals of high amplitude and high frequency The effect of jitter on performance can be compared to quantization error D t lt 1 2 q p f 0 displaystyle Delta t lt frac 1 2 q pi f 0 where q is the number of ADC bits citation needed Output size bits Signal Frequency1 Hz 1 kHz 10 kHz 1 MHz 10 MHz 100 MHz 1 GHz8 1 243 µs 1 24 µs 124 ns 1 24 ns 124 ps 12 4 ps 1 24 ps10 311 µs 311 ns 31 1 ns 311 ps 31 1 ps 3 11 ps 0 31 ps12 77 7 µs 77 7 ns 7 77 ns 77 7 ps 7 77 ps 0 78 ps 0 08 ps 77 7fs 14 19 4 µs 19 4 ns 1 94 ns 19 4 ps 1 94 ps 0 19 ps 0 02 ps 19 4fs 16 4 86 µs 4 86 ns 486 ps 4 86 ps 0 49 ps 0 05 ps 48 5 fs 18 1 21 µs 1 21 ns 121 ps 1 21 ps 0 12 ps 20 304 ns 304 ps 30 4 ps 0 30 ps 303 56 fs 0 03 ps 30 3 fs 24 18 9 ns 18 9 ps 1 89 ps 0 019 ps 18 9 fs Clock jitter is caused by phase noise 3 4 The resolution of ADCs with a digitization bandwidth between 1 MHz and 1 GHz is limited by jitter 5 For lower bandwidth conversions such as when sampling audio signals at 44 1 kHz clock jitter has a less significant impact on performance 6 Sampling rate Edit Main article Sampling rate An analog signal is continuous in time and it is necessary to convert this to a flow of digital values It is therefore required to define the rate at which new digital values are sampled from the analog signal The rate of new values is called the sampling rate or sampling frequency of the converter A continuously varying bandlimited signal can be sampled and then the original signal can be reproduced from the discrete time values by a reconstruction filter The Nyquist Shannon sampling theorem implies that a faithful reproduction of the original signal is only possible if the sampling rate is higher than twice the highest frequency of the signal Since a practical ADC cannot make an instantaneous conversion the input value must necessarily be held constant during the time that the converter performs a conversion called the conversion time An input circuit called a sample and hold performs this task in most cases by using a capacitor to store the analog voltage at the input and using an electronic switch or gate to disconnect the capacitor from the input Many ADC integrated circuits include the sample and hold subsystem internally Aliasing Edit Main article Aliasing An ADC works by sampling the value of the input at discrete intervals in time Provided that the input is sampled above the Nyquist rate defined as twice the highest frequency of interest then all frequencies in the signal can be reconstructed If frequencies above half the Nyquist rate are sampled they are incorrectly detected as lower frequencies a process referred to as aliasing Aliasing occurs because instantaneously sampling a function at two or fewer times per cycle results in missed cycles and therefore the appearance of an incorrectly lower frequency For example a 2 kHz sine wave being sampled at 1 5 kHz would be reconstructed as a 500 Hz sine wave To avoid aliasing the input to an ADC must be low pass filtered to remove frequencies above half the sampling rate This filter is called an anti aliasing filter and is essential for a practical ADC system that is applied to analog signals with higher frequency content In applications where protection against aliasing is essential oversampling may be used to greatly reduce or even eliminate it Although aliasing in most systems is unwanted it can be exploited to provide simultaneous down mixing of a band limited high frequency signal see undersampling and frequency mixer The alias is effectively the lower heterodyne of the signal frequency and sampling frequency 7 Oversampling Edit Main article Oversampling For economy signals are often sampled at the minimum rate required with the result that the quantization error introduced is white noise spread over the whole passband of the converter If a signal is sampled at a rate much higher than the Nyquist rate and then digitally filtered to limit it to the signal bandwidth produces the following advantages Oversampling can make it easier to realize analog anti aliasing filters Improved audio bit depth Reduced noise especially when noise shaping is employed in addition to oversampling Oversampling is typically used in audio frequency ADCs where the required sampling rate typically 44 1 or 48 kHz is very low compared to the clock speed of typical transistor circuits gt 1 MHz In this case the performance of the ADC can be greatly increased at little or no cost Furthermore as any aliased signals are also typically out of band aliasing can often be completely eliminated using very low cost filters Relative speed and precision Edit The speed of an ADC varies by type The Wilkinson ADC is limited by the clock rate which is processable by current digital circuits For a successive approximation ADC the conversion time scales with the logarithm of the resolution i e the number of bits Flash ADCs are certainly the fastest type of the three The conversion is basically performed in a single parallel step There is a potential tradeoff between speed and precision Flash ADCs have drifts and uncertainties associated with the comparator levels results in poor linearity To a lesser extent poor linearity can also be an issue for successive approximation ADCs Here nonlinearity arises from accumulating errors from the subtraction processes Wilkinson ADCs have the best linearity of the three 8 9 Sliding scale principle Edit The sliding scale or randomizing method can be employed to greatly improve the linearity of any type of ADC but especially flash and successive approximation types For any ADC the mapping from input voltage to digital output value is not exactly a floor or ceiling function as it should be Under normal conditions a pulse of a particular amplitude is always converted to the same digital value The problem lies in that the ranges of analog values for the digitized values are not all of the same widths and the differential linearity decreases proportionally with the divergence from the average width The sliding scale principle uses an averaging effect to overcome this phenomenon A random but known analog voltage is added to the sampled input voltage It is then converted to digital form and the equivalent digital amount is subtracted thus restoring it to its original value The advantage is that the conversion has taken place at a random point The statistical distribution of the final levels is decided by a weighted average over a region of the range of the ADC This in turn desensitizes it to the width of any specific level 10 11 Types EditThese are several common ways of implementing an electronic ADC Direct conversion Edit Main article Flash ADC A direct conversion or flash ADC has a bank of comparators sampling the input signal in parallel each firing for a specific voltage range The comparator bank feeds a digital encoder logic circuit that generates a binary number on the output lines for each voltage range ADCs of this type have a large die size and high power dissipation They are often used for video wideband communications or other fast signals in optical and magnetic storage The circuit consists of a resistive divider network a set of op amp comparators and a priority encoder A small amount of hysteresis is built into the comparator to resolve any problems at voltage boundaries At each node of the resistive divider a comparison voltage is available The purpose of the circuit is to compare the analog input voltage with each of the node voltages The circuit has the advantage of high speed as the conversion takes place simultaneously rather than sequentially Typical conversion time is 100 ns or less Conversion time is limited only by the speed of the comparator and of the priority encoder This type of ADC has the disadvantage that the number of comparators required almost doubles for each added bit Also the larger the value of n the more complex is the priority encoder Successive approximation Edit A successive approximation ADC uses a comparator and a binary search to successively narrow a range that contains the input voltage At each successive step the converter compares the input voltage to the output of an internal digital to analog converter DAC which initially represents the midpoint of the allowed input voltage range At each step in this process the approximation is stored in a successive approximation register SAR and the output of the digital to analog converter is updated for a comparison over a narrower range Ramp compare Edit A ramp compare ADC produces a saw tooth signal that ramps up or down then quickly returns to zero 12 When the ramp starts a timer starts counting When the ramp voltage matches the input a comparator fires and the timer s value is recorded Timed ramp converters can be implemented economically a however the ramp time may be sensitive to temperature because the circuit generating the ramp is often a simple analog integrator A more accurate converter uses a clocked counter driving a DAC A special advantage of the ramp compare system is that converting a second signal just requires another comparator and another register to store the timer value To reduce sensitivity to input changes during conversion a sample and hold can charge a capacitor with the instantaneous input voltage and the converter can time the time required to discharge with a constant current Wilkinson Edit The Wilkinson ADC was designed by Denys Wilkinson in 1950 The Wilkinson ADC is based on the comparison of an input voltage with that produced by a charging capacitor The capacitor is allowed to charge until a comparator determines it matches the input voltage Then the capacitor is discharged linearly The time required to discharge the capacitor is proportional to the amplitude of the input voltage While the capacitor is discharging pulses from a high frequency oscillator clock are counted by a register The number of clock pulses recorded in the register is also proportional to the input voltage 14 15 Integrating Edit An integrating ADC also dual slope or multi slope ADC applies the unknown input voltage to the input of an integrator and allows the voltage to ramp for a fixed time period the run up period Then a known reference voltage of opposite polarity is applied to the integrator and is allowed to ramp until the integrator output returns to zero the run down period The input voltage is computed as a function of the reference voltage the constant run up time period and the measured run down time period The run down time measurement is usually made in units of the converter s clock so longer integration times allow for higher resolutions Likewise the speed of the converter can be improved by sacrificing resolution Converters of this type or variations on the concept are used in most digital voltmeters for their linearity and flexibility Charge balancing ADC The principle of charge balancing ADC is to first convert the input signal to a frequency using a voltage to frequency converter This frequency is then measured by a counter and converted to an output code proportional to the analog input The main advantage of these converters is that it is possible to transmit frequency even in a noisy environment or in isolated form However the limitation of this circuit is that the output of the voltage to frequency converter depends upon an RC product whose value cannot be accurately maintained over temperature and time Dual slope ADC The analog part of the circuit consists of a high input impedance buffer precision integrator and a voltage comparator The converter first integrates the analog input signal for a fixed duration and then it integrates an internal reference voltage of opposite polarity until the integrator output is zero The main disadvantage of this circuit is the long duration time They are particularly suitable for accurate measurement of slowly varying signals such as thermocouples and weighing scales Delta encoded Edit A delta encoded or counter ramp ADC has an up down counter that feeds a DAC The input signal and the DAC both go to a comparator The comparator controls the counter The circuit uses negative feedback from the comparator to adjust the counter until the DAC s output matches the input signal and number is read from the counter Delta converters have very wide ranges and high resolution but the conversion time is dependent on the input signal behavior though it will always have a guaranteed worst case Delta converters are often very good choices to read real world signals as most signals from physical systems do not change abruptly Some converters combine the delta and successive approximation approaches this works especially well when high frequency components of the input signal are known to be small in magnitude Pipelined Edit A pipelined ADC also called subranging quantizer uses two or more conversion steps First a coarse conversion is done In a second step the difference to the input signal is determined with a DAC This difference is then converted more precisely and the results are combined in the last step This can be considered a refinement of the successive approximation ADC wherein the feedback reference signal consists of the interim conversion of a whole range of bits for example four bits rather than just the next most significant bit By combining the merits of the successive approximation and flash ADCs this type is fast has a high resolution and can be implemented efficiently Sigma delta Edit Main article Delta sigma modulation A sigma delta ADC also known as a delta sigma ADC oversamples the incoming signal by a large factor using a smaller number of bits than required are converted using a flash ADC and filters the desired signal band The resulting signal along with the error generated by the discrete levels of the flash is fed back and subtracted from the input to the filter This negative feedback has the effect of noise shaping the quantization error that it does not appear in the desired signal frequencies A digital filter decimation filter follows the ADC which reduces the sampling rate filters off unwanted noise signal and increases the resolution of the output Time interleaved Edit A time interleaved ADC uses M parallel ADCs where each ADC samples data every M th cycle of the effective sample clock The result is that the sample rate is increased M times compared to what each individual ADC can manage In practice the individual differences between the M ADCs degrade the overall performance reducing the spurious free dynamic range SFDR 16 However techniques exist to correct for these time interleaving mismatch errors 17 Intermediate FM stage Edit An ADC with an intermediate FM stage first uses a voltage to frequency converter to produce an oscillating signal with a frequency proportional to the voltage of the input signal and then uses a frequency counter to convert that frequency into a digital count proportional to the desired signal voltage Longer integration times allow for higher resolutions Likewise the speed of the converter can be improved by sacrificing resolution The two parts of the ADC may be widely separated with the frequency signal passed through an opto isolator or transmitted wirelessly Some such ADCs use sine wave or square wave frequency modulation others use pulse frequency modulation Such ADCs were once the most popular way to show a digital display of the status of a remote analog sensor 18 19 20 21 22 Time stretch Edit A Time stretch analog to digital converter TS ADC digitizes a very wide bandwidth analog signal that cannot be digitized by a conventional electronic ADC by time stretching the signal prior to digitization It commonly uses a photonic preprocessor to time stretch the signal which effectively slows the signal down in time and compresses its bandwidth As a result an electronic ADC that would have been too slow to capture the original signal can now capture this slowed down signal For continuous capture of the signal the frontend also divides the signal into multiple segments in addition to time stretching Each segment is individually digitized by a separate electronic ADC Finally a digital signal processor rearranges the samples and removes any distortions added by the preprocessor to yield the binary data that is the digital representation of the original analog signal Commercial EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message In many cases the most expensive part of an integrated circuit is the pins because they make the package larger and each pin has to be connected to the integrated circuit s silicon To save pins it is common for ADCs to send their data one bit at a time over a serial interface to the computer with each bit coming out when a clock signal changes state This saves quite a few pins on the ADC package and in many cases does not make the overall design any more complex Commercial ADCs often have several inputs that feed the same converter usually through an analog multiplexer Different models of ADC may include sample and hold circuits instrumentation amplifiers or differential inputs where the quantity measured is the difference between two inputs Applications EditMusic recording Edit Analog to digital converters are integral to modern music reproduction technology and digital audio workstation based sound recording Music may be produced on computers using an analog recording and therefore analog to digital converters are needed to create the pulse code modulation PCM data streams that go onto compact discs and digital music files The current crop of analog to digital converters utilized in music can sample at rates up to 192 kilohertz Many recording studios record in 24 bit 96 kHz pulse code modulation PCM format and then downsample and dither the signal for Compact Disc Digital Audio production 44 1 kHz or to 48 kHz for radio and television broadcast applications Digital signal processing Edit ADCs are required in digital signal processing systems that process store or transport virtually any analog signal in digital form TV tuner cards for example use fast video analog to digital converters Slow on chip 8 10 12 or 16 bit analog to digital converters are common in microcontrollers Digital storage oscilloscopes need very fast analog to digital converters also crucial for software defined radio and their new applications Scientific instruments Edit Digital imaging systems commonly use analog to digital converters for digitizing pixels Some radar systems use analog to digital converters to convert signal strength to digital values for subsequent signal processing Many other in situ and remote sensing systems commonly use analogous technology Many sensors in scientific instruments produce an analog signal temperature pressure pH light intensity etc All these signals can be amplified and fed to an ADC to produce a digital representation Rotary encoder Edit Some non electronic or only partially electronic devices such as rotary encoders can also be considered ADCs Typically the digital output of an ADC will be a two s complement binary number that is proportional to the input An encoder might output a Gray code Displays Edit Flat panel displays are inherently digital and need an ADC to process an analog signal such as composite or VGA Electrical symbol Edit Testing EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Testing an analog to digital converter requires an analog input source and hardware to send control signals and capture digital data output Some ADCs also require an accurate source of reference signal The key parameters to test an ADC are DC offset error DC gain error signal to noise ratio SNR Total harmonic distortion THD Integral nonlinearity INL Differential nonlinearity DNL Spurious free dynamic range Power dissipationSee also EditAdaptive predictive coding a type of ADC in which the value of the signal is predicted by a linear function Audio codec Beta encoder Integral linearity ModemNotes Edit A very simple nonlinear ramp converter can be implemented with a microcontroller and one resistor and capacitor 13 References Edit Principles of Data Acquisition and Conversion PDF Texas Instruments April 2015 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 18 2016 Lathi B P 1998 Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems 3rd ed Oxford University Press Maxim App 800 Design a Low Jitter Clock for High Speed Data Converters maxim ic com July 17 2002 Jitter effects on Analog to Digital and Digital to Analog Converters PDF Retrieved August 19 2012 Lohning Michael Fettweis Gerhard 2007 The effects of aperture jitter and clock jitter in wideband ADCs Computer Standards amp Interfaces Archive 29 1 11 18 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 3 9217 doi 10 1016 j csi 2005 12 005 Redmayne Derek Steer Alison December 8 2008 Understanding the effect of clock jitter on high speed ADCs eetimes com RF Sampling and GSPS ADCs Breakthrough ADCs Revolutionize Radio Architectures PDF Texas Instruments Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved November 4 2013 Knoll 1989 pp 664 665 Nicholson 1974 pp 313 315 Knoll 1989 pp 665 666 Nicholson 1974 pp 315 316 Couch 2001 Digital and analog communication systems Prentice Hall New Jersey USA Atmel Application Note AVR400 Low Cost A D Converter PDF atmel com Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Knoll 1989 pp 663 664 Nicholson 1974 pp 309 310 Vogel Christian 2005 The Impact of Combined Channel Mismatch Effects in Time interleaved ADCs IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement 55 1 415 427 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 212 7539 doi 10 1109 TIM 2004 834046 S2CID 15038020 Gabriele Manganaro David H Robertson July 2015 Interleaving ADCs Unraveling the Mysteries Analog Devices retrieved October 7 2021 Analog Devices MT 028 Tutorial Voltage to Frequency Converters by Walt Kester and James Bryant 2009 apparently adapted from Kester Walter Allan 2005 Data conversion handbook Newnes p 274 ISBN 0750678410 Microchip AN795 Voltage to Frequency Frequency to Voltage Converter p 4 13 bit A D converter Carr Joseph J 1996 Elements of electronic instrumentation and measurement Prentice Hall p 402 ISBN 0133416860 Voltage to Frequency Analog to Digital Converters globalspec com Pease Robert A 1991 Troubleshooting Analog Circuits Newnes p 130 ISBN 0750694998 Knoll Glenn F 1989 Radiation Detection and Measurement 2nd ed New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0471815044 Nicholson P W 1974 Nuclear Electronics New York John Wiley amp Sons pp 315 316 ISBN 978 0471636977 Further reading EditAllen Phillip E Holberg Douglas R 2002 CMOS Analog Circuit Design ISBN 978 0 19 511644 1 Fraden Jacob 2010 Handbook of Modern Sensors Physics Designs and Applications Springer ISBN 978 1441964656 Kester Walt ed 2005 The Data Conversion Handbook Elsevier Newnes ISBN 978 0 7506 7841 4 Johns David Martin Ken 1997 Analog Integrated Circuit Design ISBN 978 0 471 14448 9 Liu Mingliang 2006 Demystifying Switched Capacitor Circuits ISBN 978 0 7506 7907 7 Norsworthy Steven R Schreier Richard Temes Gabor C 1997 Delta Sigma Data Converters IEEE Press ISBN 978 0 7803 1045 2 Razavi Behzad 1995 Principles of Data Conversion System Design New York NY IEEE Press ISBN 978 0 7803 1093 3 Ndjountche Tertulien May 24 2011 CMOS Analog Integrated Circuits High Speed and Power Efficient Design Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4398 5491 4 Staller Len February 24 2005 Understanding analog to digital converter specifications Embedded Systems Design Walden R H 1999 Analog to digital converter survey and analysis IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications 17 4 539 550 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 352 1881 doi 10 1109 49 761034 External links Edit Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Analog and Digital Conversion An Introduction to Delta Sigma Converters A very nice overview of Delta Sigma converter theory Digital Dynamic Analysis of A D Conversion Systems through Evaluation Software based on FFT DFT Analysis RF Expo East 1987 Which ADC Architecture Is Right for Your Application article by Walt Kester ADC and DAC Glossary at the Wayback Machine archived 2009 11 24 Defines commonly used technical terms Introduction to ADC in AVR Analog to digital conversion with Atmel microcontrollers Signal processing and system aspects of time interleaved ADCs MATLAB Simulink model of a simple ramp ADC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Analog to digital converter amp oldid 1130311827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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