33 research outputs found

    Power Management ICs for Internet of Things, Energy Harvesting and Biomedical Devices

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    This dissertation focuses on the power management unit (PMU) and integrated circuits (ICs) for the internet of things (IoT), energy harvesting and biomedical devices. Three monolithic power harvesting methods are studied for different challenges of smart nodes of IoT networks. Firstly, we propose that an impedance tuning approach is implemented with a capacitor value modulation to eliminate the quiescent power consumption. Secondly, we develop a hill-climbing MPPT mechanism that reuses and processes the information of the hysteresis controller in the time-domain and is free of power hungry analog circuits. Furthermore, the typical power-performance tradeoff of the hysteresis controller is solved by a self-triggered one-shot mechanism. Thus, the output regulation achieves high-performance and yet low-power operations as low as 12 µW. Thirdly, we introduce a reconfigurable charge pump to provide the hybrid conversion ratios (CRs) as 1⅓× up to 8× for minimizing the charge redistribution loss. The reconfigurable feature also dynamically tunes to maximum power point tracking (MPPT) with the frequency modulation, resulting in a two-dimensional MPPT. Therefore, the voltage conversion efficiency (VCE) and the power conversion efficiency (PCE) are enhanced and flattened across a wide harvesting range as 0.45 to 3 V. In a conclusion, we successfully develop an energy harvesting method for the IoT smart nodes with lower cost, smaller size, higher conversion efficiency, and better applicability. For the biomedical devices, this dissertation presents a novel cost-effective automatic resonance tracking method with maximum power transfer (MPT) for piezoelectric transducers (PT). The proposed tracking method is based on a band-pass filter (BPF) oscillator, exploiting the PT’s intrinsic resonance point through a sensing bridge. It guarantees automatic resonance tracking and maximum electrical power converted into mechanical motion regardless of process variations and environmental interferences. Thus, the proposed BPF oscillator-based scheme was designed for an ultrasonic vessel sealing and dissecting (UVSD) system. The sealing and dissecting functions were verified experimentally in chicken tissue and glycerin. Furthermore, a combined sensing scheme circuit allows multiple surgical tissue debulking, vessel sealer and dissector (VSD) technologies to operate from the same sensing scheme board. Its advantage is that a single driver controller could be used for both systems simplifying the complexity and design cost. In a conclusion, we successfully develop an ultrasonic scalpel to replace the other electrosurgical counterparts and the conventional scalpels with lower cost and better functionality

    Low-Power Energy Efficient Circuit Techniques for Small IoT Systems

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    Although the improvement in circuit speed has been limited in recent years, there has been increased focus on the internet of things (IoT) as technology scaling has decreased circuit size, power usage and cost. This trend has led to the development of many small sensor systems with affordable costs and diverse functions, offering people convenient connection with and control over their surroundings. This dissertation discusses the major challenges and their solutions in realizing small IoT systems, focusing on non-digital blocks, such as power converters and analog sensing blocks, which have difficulty in following the traditional scaling trends of digital circuits. To accommodate the limited energy storage and harvesting capacity of small IoT systems, this dissertation presents an energy harvester and voltage regulators with low quiescent power and good efficiency in ultra-low power ranges. Switched-capacitor-based converters with wide-range energy-efficient voltage-controlled oscillators assisted by power-efficient self-oscillating voltage doublers and new cascaded converter topologies for more conversion ratio configurability achieve efficient power conversion down to several nanowatts. To further improve the power efficiency of these systems, analog circuits essential to most wireless IoT systems are also discussed and improved. A capacitance-to-digital sensor interface and a clocked comparator design are improved by their digital-like implementation and operation in phase and frequency domain. Thanks to the removal of large passive elements and complex analog blocks, both designs achieve excellent area reduction while maintaining state-of-art energy efficiencies. Finally, a technique for removing dynamic voltage and temperature variations is presented as smaller circuits in advanced technologies are more vulnerable to these variations. A 2-D simultaneous feedback control using an on-chip oven control locks the supply voltage and temperature of a small on-chip domain and protects circuits in this locked domain from external voltage and temperature changes, demonstrating 0.0066 V/V and 0.013 °C/°C sensitivities to external changes. Simple digital implementation of the sensors and most parts of the control loops allows robust operation within wide voltage and temperature ranges.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138743/1/wanyeong_1.pd

    Time-Domain/Digital Frequency Synchronized Hysteresis Based Fully Integrated Voltage Regulator

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    abstract: Power management integrated circuit (PMIC) design is a key module in almost all electronics around us such as Phones, Tablets, Computers, Laptop, Electric vehicles, etc. The on-chip loads such as microprocessors cores, memories, Analog/RF, etc. requires multiple supply voltage domains. Providing these supply voltages from off-chip voltage regulators will increase the overall system cost and limits the performance due to the board and package parasitics. Therefore, an on-chip fully integrated voltage regulator (FIVR) is required. The dissertation presents a topology for a fully integrated power stage in a DC-DC buck converter achieving a high-power density and a time-domain hysteresis based highly integrated buck converter. A multi-phase time-domain comparator is proposed in this work for implementing the hysteresis control, thereby achieving a process scaling friendly highly digital design. A higher-order LC notch filter along with a flying capacitor which couples the input and output voltage ripple is implemented. The power stage operates at 500 MHz and can deliver a maximum power of 1.0 W and load current of 1.67 A, while occupying 1.21 mm2 active die area. Thus achieving a power density of 0.867 W/mm2 and current density of 1.377 A/mm2. The peak efficiency obtained is 71% at 780 mA of load current. The power stage with the additional off-chip LC is utilized to design a highly integrated current mode hysteretic buck converter operating at 180 MHz. It achieves 20 ns of settling and 2-5 ns of rise/fall time for reference tracking. The second part of the dissertation discusses an integrated low voltage switched-capacitor based power sensor, to measure the output power of a DC-DC boost converter. This approach results in a lower complexity, area, power consumption, and a lower component count for the overall PV MPPT system. Designed in a 180 nm CMOS process, the circuit can operate with a supply voltage of 1.8 V. It achieves a power sense accuracy of 7.6%, occupies a die area of 0.0519 mm2, and consumes 0.748 mW of power.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    Contributions to the design of energy harvesting systems for autonomous sensors in low power marine applications

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    Tesi en modalitat de compendi de publicacionsOceanographic sensor platforms provide biological and meteorological data to help understand changes in marine environment and help to preserve it. Lagrangian drifters are autonomous passive floating platforms used in climate research to obtain surface marine data. They are low-cost, versatile, easy-to-deploy and can cover large extensions of the ocean when deployed in group. These deployments can last for years, so one of the main design challenges is the autonomy of the drifter. Several energy harvesting (EH) sources are being explored to reduce costs in battery replacement maintenance efforts such as solar panels. Drifters must avoid the impact of the wind because this may compromise proper surface current tracking and therefore, should ideally be mostly submerged. This interferes with the feasibility of solar harvesting, so other EH sources are being explored such as the oscillatory movement of the drifter caused by ocean waves. Wave energy converters (WEC) are the devices that turn this movement into energy. The motion of the drifter can principally be described by 3 oscillatory degrees of freedom (DoF); surge, heave and pitch. The heave motion includes the buoyancy’s response of the drifter, which can be explained by a mass-spring-damping model. By including the wave’s hydrodynamic load in this model, it is converted into a nonlinear system whose frequency response includes the wave’s frequency and the natural frequencies from the linear system. A smart option to maximize the captured energy is to design the inner WEC with a natural frequency similar to that of the drifter's movement. In this thesis, a 4 DoF model is obtained. This model includes the heave, the surge and the pitch motion of the drifter in addition to the inner pendulum motion relative to the buoy. Simultaneously, different pendulum-type WECs for small-size oceanic drifters are proposed. One of these converters consists of an articulated double-pendulum arm with a proof mass that generates energy through its relative motion with the buoy. Different experimental tests are carried out, with a prototype below 10 cm in diameter and 300 g of total mass, proving the capability of harvesting hundreds of microwatts in standard sea conditions EH sources require an additional power management unit (PMU) to convert their variable output into a constant and clean source to be able to feed the sensor electronics. PMUs should also ensure that the maximum available energy is harvested with a maximum power point tracking (MPPT) algorithm. Some sources, such as WECs, require fast MPPT as its output can show relatively rapid variations. However, increasing the sampling rate may reduce the harvested energy. In this thesis, this trade-off is analyzed using the resistor-based fractional open circuit voltage-MPPT technique, which is appropriate for low-power EH sources. Several experiments carried out in marine environments demonstrate the need for increasing the sampling rate. For this purpose, the use of a commercial PMU IC with additional low-power circuitry is proposed. Three novel circuits with a sampling period of 60 ms are manufactured and experimentally evaluated with a small-scale and low-power WEC. Results show that these configurations improve the harvested energy by 26% in comparison to slow sampling rate configurations. Finally, an EH-powered oceanographic monitoring system with a custom wave measuring algorithm is designed. By using the energy collected by a small-size WEC, this system is capable of transmitting up to 22 messages per day containing data on its location and measured wave parameters.Les plataformes d’observació oceanogràfiques integren sensors que proporcionen dades físiques i biogeoquímiques de l’oceà que ajuden a entendre canvis en l’entorn marí. Un exemple d’aquestes plataformes són les boies de deriva (drifters), que són dispositius autònoms i passius utilitzats en l’àmbit de la recerca climàtica per obtenir dades in-situ de la superfície marina. Aquests instruments són de baix cost, versàtils, fàcils de desplegar i poden cobrir grans superfícies quan s’utilitzen en grup. L’autonomia és un dels principals desafiaments en el disseny de drifters. Per tal d’evitar els costos en la substitució de bateries, s’estudien diferents fonts de captació d’energia com per exemple la solar. Els drifters utilitzats per l’estudi dels corrents marins superficials han d’evitar l’impacte directe del vent ja que afecta al correcte seguiment de les corrents i, per tant, cal que estiguin majoritàriament submergides. Això compromet la viabilitat de l’energia solar, fet que requereix l’estudi d’altres fonts de captació com el propi moviment de la boia causat per les onades. Els convertidors d’energia de les onades (WEC, wave energy converters) compleixen aquesta funció. El moviment dels drifters pot explicar-se bàsicament a través de 3 graus de llibertat oscil·latoris: la translació vertical i la horitzontal i el balanceig. La translació vertical inclou la flotabilitat del dispositiu, que es pot descriure mitjançant el model massamolla- amortidor. Incloure la càrrega hidrodinàmica de l’onada en aquest model el converteix en un sistema no lineal amb una resposta freqüencial que inclou la de l’onada i les naturals del sistema lineal. Una opció per maximitzar l’energia captada és dissenyar el WEC amb una freqüència natural similar a la del moviment de la boia. En aquesta tesis es proposa un model de 4 graus de llibertat per a l’estudi del moviment del drifter. Aquest inclou els 3 graus de llibertat de la boia i el moviment del pèndul relatiu a ella. En paral·lel, es proposen diferents WEC del tipus pendular per drifters de reduïdes dimensions. Un d’aquests WEC consisteix en un doble braç articulat amb massa flotant que genera energia a través del seu moviment relatiu al drifter. S’han dut a terme diferents proves experimentals amb un prototip inferior a 10 cm de diàmetre i 300 g de massa, les quals demostren la seva capacitat de captar centenars de microwatts en condicions marines estàndard. Utilitzar fonts de captació d’energia requereix incloure una unitat gestora de potència (PMU, power management unit) per tal de convertir la seva sortida variable en una font constant i neta que alimenti l’electrònica dels sensors. Les PMU també tenen la funció d’assegurar que es recull la màxima energia mitjançant un algoritme de seguiment del punt de màxima potència. Els WEC requereixen un seguiment d’aquest punt ràpid perquè la seva sortida consta de variacions relativament ràpides. Tanmateix, augmentar la freqüència de mostreig pot reduir l’energia captada. En aquesta tesi, s'analitza a fons aquesta relació utilitzant la tècnica de seguiment de la tensió en circuit obert fraccionada basada en resistències, que és molt adequada per a fonts de baixa potència. Diversos experiments realitzats en el medi marí mostren la necessitat d'augmentar la freqüència de mostreig, així que es proposa l'ús de PMU comercials amb una electrònica addicional de baix consum. S’han fabricat tres circuits diferents amb un període de mostreig de 60 ms i s’han avaluat experimentalment en un WEC de reduïdes dimensions. Els resultats mostren que aquestes configuracions milloren l'energia recollida en un 26% en comparació a PMU amb mostreig més lent. Finalment, s’ha dissenyat un sistema autònom de monitorització marina que inclou un algoritme de mesura d'ones propi. Aquest sistema és capaç de transmetre fins a 22 missatges al diaPostprint (published version

    Power Management Circuits for Energy Harvesting Applications

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    Energy harvesting is the process of converting ambient available energy into usable electrical energy. Multiple types of sources are can be used to harness environmental energy: solar cells, kinetic transducers, thermal energy, and electromagnetic waves. This dissertation proposal focuses on the design of high efficiency, ultra-low power, power management units for DC energy harvesting sources. New architectures and design techniques are introduced to achieve high efficiency and performance while achieving maximum power extraction from the sources. The first part of the dissertation focuses on the application of inductive switching regulators and their use in energy harvesting applications. The second implements capacitive switching regulators to minimize the use of external components and present a minimal footprint solution for energy harvesting power management. Analysis and theoretical background for all switching regulators and linear regulators are described in detail. Both solutions demonstrate how low power, high efficiency design allows for a self-sustaining, operational device which can tackle the two main concerns for energy harvesting: maximum power extraction and voltage regulation. Furthermore, a practical demonstration with an Internet of Things type node is tested and positive results shown by a fully powered device from harvested energy. All systems were designed, implemented and tested to demonstrate proof-of-concept prototypes

    Hydrogen Research for Spaceport and Space-Based Applications: Hydrogen Sensors and Systems

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    The activities presented are a broad based approach to advancing key hydrogen related technologies in areas such as fuel cells, hydrogen production, and distributed sensors for hydrogen-leak detection, laser instrumentation for hydrogen-leak detection, and cryogenic transport and storage. Presented are the results from research projects, education and outreach activities, system and trade studies. The work will aid in advancing the state-of-the-art for several critical technologies related to the implementation of a hydrogen infrastructure. Activities conducted are relevant to a number of propulsion and power systems for terrestrial, aeronautics and aerospace applications. Sensor systems research was focused on hydrogen leak detection and smart sensors with adaptive feedback control for fuel cells. The goal was to integrate multifunction smart sensors, low-power high-efficiency wireless circuits, energy harvesting devices, and power management circuits in one module. Activities were focused on testing and demonstrating sensors in a realistic environment while also bringing them closer to production and commercial viability for eventual use in the actual operating environment

    Intelligent Circuits and Systems

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    ICICS-2020 is the third conference initiated by the School of Electronics and Electrical Engineering at Lovely Professional University that explored recent innovations of researchers working for the development of smart and green technologies in the fields of Energy, Electronics, Communications, Computers, and Control. ICICS provides innovators to identify new opportunities for the social and economic benefits of society.  This conference bridges the gap between academics and R&D institutions, social visionaries, and experts from all strata of society to present their ongoing research activities and foster research relations between them. It provides opportunities for the exchange of new ideas, applications, and experiences in the field of smart technologies and finding global partners for future collaboration. The ICICS-2020 was conducted in two broad categories, Intelligent Circuits & Intelligent Systems and Emerging Technologies in Electrical Engineering

    GESTÃO DE ENERGIA EM REDES DE SENSORES SEM FIOS

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    A energia é um recurso limitado em redes de sensores sem fios, pelo que uma gestão eficiente da energia disponível é crucial para aumentar o seu tempo de vida operacional. Assim, a gestão de energia em redes de sensores sem fios tem estado focada no desenvolvimento de mecanismos de activação sincronizada de nós “adormecidos” e de tecnologias de captação de energia do meio envolvente. O objectivo deste trabalho consistiu em explorar estas duas abordagens para criar condições de disponibilidade contínua de energia nos nós de redes sem fios: em primeiro lugar, explorando tecnologias de captação de energia de importantes fontes no meio envolvente: luz solar, diferenciais térmicos e campos electromagnéticos, e, também, cultivando métodos e tecnologias de despertar por radiofrequência (wake-up radio) como forma mais adequada de gerir as oportunidades de operação dos nós de uma rede, poupando energia no tempo restante. São apresentados estudos e soluções realizadas no âmbito industrial, bem como os métodos e resultados da análise realizada para a sua validação. Assim, conseguiu-se: Uma solução baseada na captação de energia solar, com uma eficiência superior a 70% (desde a saída do painel fotovoltaico), capaz de suportar sensores e repetidores numa rede, acumulando energia correspondente a autonomias de 16 e 40 horas, respectivamente, numa aplicação de diagnóstico de seccionadores de alta-tensão em subestações de distribuição de electricidade; Uma solução de captação de energia de diferenciais térmicos, para suportar sensores de diagnóstico do estado de funcionamento de purgadores, em linhas industriais de distribuição de vapor, permitindo uma disponibilidade permanente de energia, mesmo para diferenças de temperatura de uns meros 20 °C; Uma solução de captação de energia de campos magnéticos gerados por correntes eléctricas intensas, para aplicação em sensores sem fios a utilizar em redes de distribuição de electricidade, que, nas circunstâncias dos trabalhos propostos, amplamente demonstrou a viabilidade do conceito e foi industrialmente incorporado numa unidade sem fios para a monitorização de correntes eléctricas e o diagnóstico do estado de fusíveis em postos de transformação; Duas soluções de despertar por radiofrequência, sem prejuízo da latência de comunicação: (i) despertar colectivo, sincronizado para todos os nós da rede no volume de alcance-rádio do emissor, que se revelou eficaz até aos 37 metros, no interior, consumindo 7 μA e (ii) despertar selectivo, individualizando o nó a activar, com um alcance de 33 metros, igualmente no interior, consumindo 5 μA — em campo aberto, o alcance foi de 10 metros. Em suma: as soluções industriais realizadas no âmbito deste trabalho demonstram a viabilidade de suportar a alimentação em potência de nós de redes sem fios operando em diferentes regimes e dependendo de diversas fontes de energia, em natureza e potência disponível, que, no nosso entender constitui condição necessária ao sucesso industrial das redes de objectos sem fios
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