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Pulse-width modulation pre-emphasis applied in a wireline transmitter, achieving 33 dB loss compensation at 5-Gb/s in 0.13-μm CMOS
Schrader, J.-R.   Klumperink, E.A.M.   Visschers, J.L.   Nauta, B.  
IC Design Group, Twente Univ., Enschede, Netherlands;

This paper appears in: Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
Publication Date: April 2006
Volume: 41,  Issue: 4
On page(s): 990- 999
ISSN: 0018-9200
INSPEC Accession Number: 8942908
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/JSSC.2006.870897
Current Version Published: 2006-03-27

Abstract
A transmitter pre-emphasis technique for copper cable equalization is presented that is based on pulse-width modulation (PWM). This technique is an alternative to the usual 2-tap symbol-spaced FIR (SSF) pre-emphasis. The technique uses timing resolution instead of amplitude resolution to adjust the filter transfer function, and therefore fits well with future high-speed low-voltage CMOS processes. Spectral analysis and time domain simulations illustrate that PWM pre-emphasis offers more relative high frequency boost than 2-tap SSF. Only one coefficient needs to be set to fit the equalizer transfer function to the channel, which makes convergence of an algorithm for automatic adaptation straightforward. A proof-of-concept 0.13-μm CMOS transmitter achieves in excess of 5 Gb/s (2-PAM) over 25 m of standard RG-58U low-end coaxial copper cable with 33 dB of channel loss at the Nyquist frequency (2.5 GHz). Measured BER at this speed and channel loss is <10-12.

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