Design and Optimization of Sensor Interface Circuitry and All-Digital PLL in 22nm Technology with gm/ID Methodology Using Precalculated Look-Up Tables.
| dc.contributor.advisor | Magierowski, Sebastian | |
| dc.contributor.author | Mohammadpanah, Amirhossein | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-03-10T16:22:20Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2026-03-10T16:22:20Z | |
| dc.date.copyright | 2026-01-14 | |
| dc.date.issued | 2026-03-10 | |
| dc.date.updated | 2026-03-10T16:22:19Z | |
| dc.degree.discipline | Electrical and Computer Engineering | |
| dc.degree.level | Master's | |
| dc.degree.name | MASc - Master of Applied Science | |
| dc.description.abstract | This thesis presents the design of a monolithic System-on-Chip (SoC) front-end for solid-state nanopore DNA sequencing, implemented in GlobalFoundries 22nm FD-SOI technology. A major bottleneck in portable sequencing is the massive parasitic capacitance of the sensor (approx. 5 pF), which severely limits the bandwidth required to detect rapid, picoampere-level ion currents. Additionally, designing high-performance analog interfaces in deep-submicron nodes using traditional, iterative SPICE simulations is highly inefficient. To address these challenges, this research establishes a systematic, hierarchical "Inverse Design" framework based on the gm/ID methodology. By utilizing 4D Look-Up Tables (LUTs) extracted from BSIM-IMG compact models, this flow deterministically synthesizes transistor geometries directly from system-level specifications. Crucially, the methodology integrates back-gate biasing (FBB) as a fourth design dimension to dynamically trade off leakage for speed and maximize voltage headroom. Utilizing this synthesis flow, a Transimpedance Amplifier (TIA) was designed, achieving a 1 MHz bandwidth and a 5 Mohms transimpedance gain while driving the large capacitive sensor load. To provide the low-jitter timing infrastructure required for full system integration and precise ADC sampling, a wide-range All-Digital Phase-Locked Loop (ADPLL) featuring a MASH 1-1-1 Sigma-Delta Modulator was also implemented, achieving a phase noise of -84 dBc/Hz at a 1 MHz offset. Ultimately, this work demonstrates that a deterministic LUT-based synthesis approach successfully enables robust, high-performance mixed-signal IC design for biosensors while eliminating the reliance on trial-and-error manual sizing. | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10315/43666 | |
| dc.language | en | |
| dc.rights | Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. | |
| dc.subject | Electrical engineering | |
| dc.subject.keywords | 22nm FD-SOI | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Gm/ID methodologies | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Transimpedance amplifiers | |
| dc.subject.keywords | All-digital phase-locked loops | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Nanopore DNA sequencing | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Inverse design frameworks | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Look-up tables | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Mixed-signal integrated circuits | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Back-gate biasing | |
| dc.subject.keywords | Solid-state biosensors | |
| dc.title | Design and Optimization of Sensor Interface Circuitry and All-Digital PLL in 22nm Technology with gm/ID Methodology Using Precalculated Look-Up Tables. | |
| dc.type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
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