English

Hardware Prototype of a Time-Encoding Sub-Nyquist ADC

Signal Processing 2023-01-06 v1

Abstract

Analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are key components of digital signal processing. Classical samplers in this framework are controlled by a global clock. At high sampling rates, clocks are expensive and power-hungry, thus increasing the cost and energy consumption of ADCs. It is, therefore, desirable to sample using a clock-less ADC at the lowest possible rate. An integrate-and-fire time-encoding machine (IF-TEM) is a time-based power-efficient asynchronous design that is not synced to a global clock. Finite-rate-of-innovation (FRI) signals, ubiquitous in various applications, have fewer degrees of freedom than the signal's Nyquist rate, enabling sub-Nyquist sampling signal models. This work proposes a power-efficient IF-TEM ADC architecture and demonstrates sub-Nyquist sampling and FRI signal recovery. Using an IF-TEM, we implement in hardware the first sub-Nyquist time-based sampler. We offer a feasible approach for accurately estimating the FRI parameters from IF-TEM data. The suggested hardware and reconstruction approach retrieves FRI parameters with an error of up to -25dB while operating at rates approximately 10 times lower than the Nyquist rate, paving the way to low-power ADC architectures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2301.02012,
  title  = {Hardware Prototype of a Time-Encoding Sub-Nyquist ADC},
  author = {Hila Naaman and Nimrod Glazer and Moshe Namer and Daniel Bilik and Shlomi Savariego and Yonina C. Eldar},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2301.02012},
  year   = {2023}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T08:03:37.507Z