Marcel J. M. Pelgrom

#Analog
#Digital
#Conversion
#PCB
This textbook is appropriate for use in graduate-level curricula in analog-to-digital conversion, as well as for practicing engineers in need of a state-of-the-art reference on data converters. It discusses various analog-to-digital conversion principles, including sampling, quantization, reference generation, Nyquist architectures and sigma-delta modulation. This book presents an overview of the state-of-the-art in this field and focuses on issues of optimizing accuracy and speed, while reducing the power level.
This new, fourth edition emphasizes novel calibration concepts, the specific requirements of systems, the consequences of advanced technology and the need for a more statistical approach to accuracy. Pedagogical enhancements to this edition include additional, new exercises, solved examples to introduce all key, new concepts and warnings, remarks and hints, from a practitioner's perspective, wherever appropriate. Considerable background information and practical tips, from designing a PCB, to lay-out aspects, to trade-offs on system level, complement the discussion of basic principles, making this book a valuable reference for the experienced engineer.
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
2 Mathematics
3 Electrical Theory
4 Semiconductors
5 Electronic Circuits
6 Accuracy: Deterministic and Random Errors
7 Sampling
8 Sample-and-Hold Circuits
9 Quantization
10 Reference Circuits
11 Digital-to-Analog Conversion
12 Comparators
13 Flash Analog-to-Digital Conversion
14 Subranging and Two-Step Analog-to-Digital Conversion
15 Pipeline Analog-to-Digital Conversion
16 Successive Approximation Conversion
17 Linear and Time-Based Conversion
18 Time-Interleaving
19 Time-Discrete Modulation
20 Time-Continuous Modulation
21 Mitigation of Errors
22 Characterization and Measurement
Marcel Pelgrom received his B.EE, M.Sc, and PhD from the University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands. In 1979, he joined the Philips Research Laboratories, where his research has covered topics such as charge coupled devices, MOS matching properties, analog-to-digital conversion, digital image correlation, and various analog building block techniques. He has headed several project teams and was a team leader for highspeed analog-to-digital conversion. From 1996 until 2003, he was a department head for mixed-signal electronics. In addition to various activities concerning industry-academic relations, he was a Philips Research Fellow, which research topics on the edge of design and technology. In 2003, he spent a sabbatical in Stanford University where he served as a consulting professor and in 2014 as a lecturer. From 2006 until 2013, he has been a member of the technical staff at NXP Semiconductors. Dr. Pelgrom was twice an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer and has written over40 publications and seven book chapters, and he holds 37 US patents. He currently lectures at Delft University of Technology, the University of Twente and for MEAD Inc, next to consulting in various companies. He is the 2017 recipient of the IEEE field award Gustav R. Kirchhoff.









