naderi
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Hello all,
I have a continuous time (CT) third order delta sigma modulator that produces SNR=98dB when the circuit noise (thermal and flicker noise) is not considered in a transient simulation. When I use transient analysis with transient noise in Cadence-spectre, the SNR drops to 60dB. Replacing the circuits with VerilogA modules (noiseless modules) showed the disturbing noise is due to the Active-RC integrator. However, small signal noise analysis of the Active-RC integrator shows an input-referred noise (IRN) < -140dB/Hz, which causes the integrated in-band noise (IBN) less than -100 dB for a BW=10kHz.
When signal power is -14dB, resulting SNR should be more than 86dB, while simulation with transient noise shows SNR=60 dB.
I cannot find any other source for the noise and I wonder if the transient noise analysis is producing correct results.
Please let me know your ideas.
Thank you,
Ali
I have a continuous time (CT) third order delta sigma modulator that produces SNR=98dB when the circuit noise (thermal and flicker noise) is not considered in a transient simulation. When I use transient analysis with transient noise in Cadence-spectre, the SNR drops to 60dB. Replacing the circuits with VerilogA modules (noiseless modules) showed the disturbing noise is due to the Active-RC integrator. However, small signal noise analysis of the Active-RC integrator shows an input-referred noise (IRN) < -140dB/Hz, which causes the integrated in-band noise (IBN) less than -100 dB for a BW=10kHz.
When signal power is -14dB, resulting SNR should be more than 86dB, while simulation with transient noise shows SNR=60 dB.
I cannot find any other source for the noise and I wonder if the transient noise analysis is producing correct results.
Please let me know your ideas.
Thank you,
Ali
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