Vendor: Fraunhofer Institute Integrated Circuits and Systems (IIS) Category: ADC

11 Bit 100 kS/s Ultra-Low Power SAR ADC on GlobalFoundries 22FDSOI

The ADC IP is a general-purpose successive approximation converter for low-power medium resolution applications.

GlobalFoundries 22nm FDX Silicon Proven View all specifications

Overview

The ADC IP is a general-purpose successive approximation converter for low-power medium resolution applications. Sample rate, resolution and power consumption are configurable.

It is built using typical differential capacitor-DAC architecture, clocked comparator and bootstrapped switches. No additional reference voltage is required, achieving lmost rail-to-rail input. The target applications are environmental and biomedical signal processing.

The ADC is silicon proven using the GlobalFoundries 22FDSOI process. Measurement results and samples are available.

Fraunhofer IIS provides a detailed documentation and support for the IP integration. Modifications, extensions and technology ports of the IP are available on request.

Key features

  • Resolution: 11 bit 
  • Conversion rate: 100 kSps 
  • Power consumption: 2.5 µW @ 0.8V 
  • ENOB: 8.8  bit 
  • Operation clock: 2.0 MHz 
  • Input voltage range: 0.4 V ± 0.35 V 
  • Operating temperature -40 – 125°C 
  • Technology: cmos22fdsoi 

Block Diagram

Benefits

  • Accelerated design service 
  • Design safety (first-time-right) 
  • Customer-specific flexible IPs 
  • Automated DfR and verification 
  • Seamless technology migration 

What’s Included?

  • GDSII data 
  • Simulation model 
  • Documentation 
  • Integration and customizing support

Files

Note: some files may require an NDA depending on provider policy.

Silicon Options

Foundry Node Process Maturity
GlobalFoundries 22nm FDX Silicon Proven

Specifications

Identity

Part Number
ADC11b100kS22nm
Vendor
Fraunhofer Institute Integrated Circuits and Systems (IIS)

Provider

Fraunhofer Institute Integrated Circuits and Systems (IIS)
HQ: Germany
The Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits (IIS) offers core components for ASIC and FPGA solutions. The cores are developed by Fraunhofer IIS in Erlangen, Germany and selected partners. Over 25 years of system and design know-how, analog and digital design experience, and the needs of our customers have influenced the methodology to develop these cores. Each core has been verified with sophisticated test procedures at Fraunhofer IIS before it is offered to the customers. As a result, the cores are of high quality and proven technology. Many components are parameterizable and allow the designer to tailor each component to the needs of the application. Therefore, using our components saves lots of design and verification effort.

Learn more about ADC IP core

Uncertainty-Guided Live Measurement Sequencing for Fast SAR ADC Linearity Testing

This paper introduces a novel closed-loop testing methodology for efficient linearity testing of high-resolution Successive Approximation Register (SAR) Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs). Existing test strategies, including histogram-based approaches, sine wave testing, and model-driven reconstruction, often rely on dense data acquisition followed by offline post-processing, which increases overall test time and complexity.

Three ways of looking at a sigma-delta ADC device

The growing availability of digital ICs like microcontrollers, microprocessors, and field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) allows developers to use complex digital processing techniques rather than analog signal conditioning. For this reason, analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) have become a widely-used component in mixed-signal circuits.

Specifying a PLL Part 1: Calculating PLL Clock Spur Requirements from ADC or DAC SFDR

In high end RF systems, such as 5G radios, the requirements are so stringent that the source of this strongest unwanted tone can be the PLL. This article outlines how spurs in the input clock to the ADC or DAC may limit the SFDR. This in turn will set the requirements for the spurs for the input clock (from a PLL), in order to achieve a specific SFDR.

Save power in IoT SoCs by leveraging ADC characteristics

Power-sensitive applications such as Internet-of-Things (IoT) require a comprehensive power savings strategy within the system-on-chip (SoC). Techniques relying solely on the use of traditional power down modes and low supply voltage may not be enough to achieve the required power targets. The analog block is often assumed to be too sensitive and not compatible with aggressive power management techniques.

High Speed ADC Data Transfer

When continuously running a high speed ADC, it can be a challenge to deal with the firehose of raw data available at the output. To use City Semiconductor’s 2.5 GS/s 12-bit ADC, for example, 30 gigabits per second of data have to be accepted.

Frequently asked questions about ADC IP cores

What is 11 Bit 100 kS/s Ultra-Low Power SAR ADC on GlobalFoundries 22FDSOI?

11 Bit 100 kS/s Ultra-Low Power SAR ADC on GlobalFoundries 22FDSOI is a ADC IP core from Fraunhofer Institute Integrated Circuits and Systems (IIS) listed on Semi IP Hub. It is listed with support for globalfoundries Silicon Proven.

How should engineers evaluate this ADC?

Engineers should review the overview, key features, supported foundries and nodes, maturity, deliverables, and provider information before shortlisting this ADC IP.

Can this semiconductor IP be compared with similar products?

Yes. Buyers can compare this product with similar semiconductor IP cores or IP families based on category, provider, process options, and structured technical specifications.

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