B.A. Hutchins, T.N. Rhodin, et al.
Surface Science
We describe the design of a new oversampled analog-to-digital converter (ADC) based on phase modulation-demodulation (PMD) architecture. In a PMD ADC, the analog input signal modulates the phase of a periodic stream of fluxons applied to a modulator circuit for subsequent demodulation in a clocked synchronizer circuit to produce a digital code. The new modulator provides a way to quadruple the average fluxon transport rate, and hence the input dynamic range, by replacing the single junction interferometer with a high-speed symmetric divide-by-4 circuit. The divider acts as a 1:4 asynchronous demultiplexer which distributes incoming fluxons among its four quarter-rate outputs. This four-fold rate reduction, at the modulator output, allows one to increase the ADC maximum input slew rate to 2 fluxons per clock period, achieving 2 additional bits of resolution at the same sampling clock frequency. We have designed and fabricated a quarter-rate ADC front-end and present low frequency test results for the same. The ADC comprises a quarter-rate quantizer which has been successfully tested at an input frequency of 81.92 GHz. © 2007 IEEE.
B.A. Hutchins, T.N. Rhodin, et al.
Surface Science
J.H. Stathis, R. Bolam, et al.
INFOS 2005
Joy Y. Cheng, Daniel P. Sanders, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2008
S.F. Fan, W.B. Yun, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE 1989