Sigma Delta A/D Conversion for Signal Conditioning von Kathleen Philips | ISBN 9789048171699

Sigma Delta A/D Conversion for Signal Conditioning

von Kathleen Philips und Arthur H.M. van Roermund
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinKathleen Philips
Autor / AutorinArthur H.M. van Roermund
Buchcover Sigma Delta A/D Conversion for Signal Conditioning | Kathleen Philips | EAN 9789048171699 | ISBN 90-481-7169-5 | ISBN 978-90-481-7169-9

Sigma Delta A/D Conversion for Signal Conditioning

von Kathleen Philips und Arthur H.M. van Roermund
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinKathleen Philips
Autor / AutorinArthur H.M. van Roermund
1.1 Background Moore’s Law predicts a decrease by a factor of two in the feature size of CMOS te- nology every three years and has been valid for years. It implies a doubling of the - eration speed and a four times higher transistor count per unit of area, every three years. The combination leads to an eight times higher processing capability per unit of area. This on-going miniaturization allows the integration of complex electronic systems with millions of transistors (Very-Large-Scale-Integration) and enables the integration of el- tronic systems. An electronic system A generic picture of an integrated electronic system is shown in ? g. 1.1. The heart of the system is the signal processing core. This core supports a wide variety of functions, such as customization and programmability of multiple applications, channel coding, the de? nition of the user interface, etc. These functions are enabled by DSP, a controller CPU and various blocks of memory. In advanced ICs these blocks provide (almost) all signal processing and usually dominate in the overall power and area consumption of integrated systems. The huge data rates involved, require high-speed busses for communication between these blocks. A power-management unit fuels the system by providing the - propriate supply voltages and currents.