31.4 A Chopper-Stabilized Amplifier with -107dB IMD and 28dB Suppression of Chopper-Induced IMD

Conference Paper (2021)
Author(s)

C.T. Rooijers (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Shoubhik Karmakar (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

Yoshinori Kusuda (Analog Devices)

J.H. Huijsing (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)

K.A.A. Makinwa (TU Delft - Microelectronics)

Research Group
Electronic Instrumentation
Copyright
© 2021 C.T. Rooijers, S. Karmakar, Yoshinori Kusuda, J.H. Huijsing, K.A.A. Makinwa
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/ISSCC42613.2021.9365790
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 C.T. Rooijers, S. Karmakar, Yoshinori Kusuda, J.H. Huijsing, K.A.A. Makinwa
Research Group
Electronic Instrumentation
Bibliographical Note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public. @en
Pages (from-to)
438-440
ISBN (electronic)
9781728195490
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Abstract

Amplifiers often employ chopping to achieve low offset and low-frequency noise. However, the interaction between the input signal and the chopper clock can cause chopper-induced intermodulation distortion (IMD) [1] -[5]. This is especially problematic for input frequencies (Fin) near even multiples of the chopping frequency (FCH), as the resulting IMD tones fold-back to low frequencies and so cannot be filtered out. In [2] -[4], spread-spectrum clocks are used to convert such tones into noise-like signals. However, this increases the noise floor and does not address the underlying problem. This paper shows that chopper-induced IMD is mainly due to amplifier delay, which results in large chopping spikes. A novel fill-in technique is proposed that mitigates these spikes, and so reduces the chopper-induced IMD. In a prototype chopper-stabilized amplifier, it reduces the chopper-induced IMD by 28dB, resulting in an IMD of -126dB for input frequencies near 4FCH (=80kHz). Similarly, it improves the chopped amplifier's two-tone IMD (79 and 80kHz) from -97dB to -107dB, thus maintaining the same IMD as the un-chopped amplifier.

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